The human body is a symphony of movement. |
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The following analogy may help you understand what has diminished our natural ability to maintain and repair ourselves.
Musculoskeletal homeostasis refers to the body's ongoing effort to achieve balance and adaptation by using our muscles, bones, and connective tissues as a personal 'GPS.'
The Car's GPS:
• Goal-Oriented Navigation: GPS guides the car to a specific destination. If the route changes due to traffic, detours, or road closures, the GPS recalculates and adapts the path to stay on course.
• Constant Adjustments: The system continuously monitors the car's position and provides real-time corrections to ensure the car stays on track.
• Compensation for Errors: When the driver veers off the suggested path, the GPS compensates by recalculating, sometimes leading to longer, less efficient routes.
Musculoskeletal Homeostasis:
• Striving for Balance: The body uses its muscles to maintain equilibrium, ensuring that posture, movement, and internal processes support optimal function. Like the GPS, it continuously recalculates muscle tension to achieve this balance. This is called the vestibular righting reflex.
• Constant Adaptation: Muscles, bones, and connective tissues adjust in response to external forces, habitual movements, injuries, or imbalances. These adaptations are the body's way of "re-routing" to maintain functionality.
• Compensation and Tension: Just as a GPS might take a more complicated route to avoid obstacles, the body compensates for structural or functional imbalances by recruiting different muscles or altering movement patterns. This can lead to muscular tension, overuse, and even chronic pain as the body tries to "correct" itself.
The Result:
While the car eventually reaches its destination, repeated recalculations can lead to inefficiencies in the journey. Similarly, the body's continuous adjustments to maintain homeostasis may result in muscular tension and compensation patterns.
This continuously activates the vestibular reflex until core muscular-skeletal balance and homeostasis are restored.
Until those are restored, the bodies 'I'm falling reflex' remains 'Stuck' in the active mode while your nervous system responds thinking you are falling, and that creates interference with various processes throughout the body. Over time, these ongoing compensatory patterns can disrupt the body's natural equilibrium, leading to discomfort or dysfunction.
This analogy underscores the importance of addressing the root causes of imbalance in the musculoskeletal system, just as proactive driving and accurate GPS inputs prevent unnecessary detours.
The core principles of The Berry Method® acknowledge, respect, and respond to how muscular adaptations and compensations create an underlying tension that impacts the entire body.
'Stuck' is not healthy.
Taum’s upcoming ‘Rebalancing the Lower Back and Hips’ class focuses on reducing those core muscular adaptations and compensations.
Indications that the stabilizing 'core' muscles in your Lower Back and Hips are out of Balance:
- Chronic Pain: Persistent discomfort in areas like the lower back, neck, shoulders, or hips can signal imbalances or compensations in the musculoskeletal system.
- Postural Misalignment: Visible imbalances such as rounded shoulders, a forward head position, uneven hips, leg length differential, or an exaggerated curvature of the spine (lordosis, kyphosis, or scoliosis).
- Restricted Range of Motion: Difficulty moving joints freely or stiffness in areas like the shoulders, hips, or spine.
- Uneven Muscle Tone: Overdeveloped or underdeveloped muscles on one side of the body, often due to compensatory patterns or poor biomechanics.
- Frequent Injuries: Recurring injuries such as sprains, strains, or overuse injuries, which can result from improper load distribution via ‘Core’ imbalance.
- Fatigue or Weakness: A general sense of muscular fatigue or instability during daily activities or exercise, indicating poor core or foundational strength.
- Balance Issues: Difficulty maintaining balance or coordination during static positions (like standing) or dynamic movements.
- Breathing Patterns: Shallow, chest-dominant breathing instead of diaphragmatic breathing, often linked to tension in the core muscles.
- Gait Abnormalities: Changes in walking patterns, such as limping, uneven stride length, or excessive pronation/supination of the feet.
- Joint Pain or Clicking: Pain, stiffness, or audible clicking in joints like the knees, hips, or shoulders, indicating misalignment or strain.
- Headaches: Tension headaches caused by muscle tightness in the neck, shoulders, or jaw.
- Digestive or Pelvic Dysfunction: Issues such as constipation, bloating, or pelvic floor dysfunction, which can be influenced by improper core muscular engagement and alignment.
Addressing these signs through targeted interventions like those taught in The Berry Method® can help restore balance and improve overall well-being.

Within his classes or individual sessions, Taums' unique approach to helping things move unleashes the body's natural healing ability and a return to healthy, pain-free living. |
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Taum Sayers, CMT |
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