Bill Hartman 35:05–35:50
Okay. Do you have towels where you work? Yes. Awesome. Okay. You can start to induce the AP expansion. So I take towels and I put it under one side of his pelvis and I put it under one side of his thorax and that creates this gentle little turn that's probably still within his helical orientation. Okay. And I start to do this one side at a time. So if I can create that shape and it doesn't bother him, I'm creating the same shape inside the spinal canal. Okay. So he starts like this. You see this? Okay. And I build up one side. And so this, so this is the side that's going down to the table. This is the side that is built up. I'm talking like you fold a towel, maybe a quarter it. You slide it underneath there. It's almost nothing. He goes, yeah, I'm fine with that. Okay. So the towel and the wedge are on the same side. Yes sir. Yeah. I want, I want to go all the way up because I'm trying to, I'm trying to create, I'm trying to create turns. Sure. Which will, which will, in an alternating manner, create that shape. Yup. And then that's it. I got you. You see the turn? Yep. Okay. So I start to do this, but see, every time I do that, I get expansion, right? Every time I do that, I get expansion. You see it. And so you're basically just doing this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this. and try to get them to their side. Yeah, what you may have to do, what you may have to do, if you put them on a side, if you put them on a side, you gotta make sure that there might be something between his knees to keep him in that ER space.
AP expansionhelical orientationspinal canalthoraxpelvis