Many people clean up their diet and still deal with bloating, cramping, reflux, constipation, loose stools, or a heavy feeling after meals. That can be frustrating. It may also lead someone to think, "I am eating healthy, so why does my stomach still hurt?" The answer is often that food quality matters, but food quality is only one part of digestion. Gut pain can continue when the deeper problem is not the diet itself, but a hidden issue such as intestinal permeability, food sensitivities, low stomach acid, poor enzyme output, bacterial overgrowth, chronic stress, or nervous system imbalance. Integrative care looks for the deeper causes rather than just chasing symptoms. (Conlon & Bird, 2014; Functional Health Center, n.d.; Nourishing Meals, 2025). Eating "Healthy" Does Not Always Mean Digesting Well A person can eat vegetables, lean protein, smoothies, and whole grains and still feel awful after meals. That is because digestion depends on more than choosing ...
Athletes often ask an important question: "Do I need to stop training completely while I am being treated?" In many cases, the answer is no. Most athletes can continue some level of practice, conditioning, or sport-specific movement while under the care of an integrative chiropractor, but the activity usually needs to be adjusted. The goal is not to ignore pain or force the body through injury. The goal is to use the right amount of movement at the right time so that healing can occur without losing strength, mobility, timing, or confidence (New Hope Physio, 2025; Rehabilitation of the Athlete, 2018). This idea fits with a modern sports medicine principle called "optimal loading." Instead of complete rest for every injury, athletes often recover better when tissues are subjected to controlled stress that promotes circulation, movement, and repair without overloading the damaged area. Relative rest protects the injury, but modified activity helps prevent deconditioni...