SPEAKER_02 1:08:33–1:11:13
So some of that is going to depend on the individual. Some people are going to be better at accessing it from the ground up. Some people are going to be better. But the general representation is that if you change one of them, they all change to a degree. That's the goal. And that's why we use these representations. So again, my answer is, yes, that's what you do. It's like a gray, dirty answer. Number one, as long as you understand the representation that you have in front of you, it just becomes the experiment as to, okay, which one is more meaningful to this person? Which one do they have better access to? But I would encourage you to look at this from the axial skeletal position first because that's what controls the internal forces, which you have to manage no matter what you can create. You can create compensatory strategies that actually make people feel better, but do not restore the relative motions that you're after. If I give you a strong IR strategy, that's more forced into the ground, right? And that might actually alleviate some of the stress that people are feeling when they come in complaining of pain, because it distributes the force that they're using to somewhere else. And that feels good, right? Somebody walks in with like a left-sided low back pain, right? And they're using, let's just say that they're using like a left extended spine. And they come in and they say, it hurts right here. They point to their left low back and you go, oh, you're just driving a ton of IR there. Well, let's drive a ton of IR with a forward head. Cool. You just alleviated the need to use all the IR in one place. You just distributed it, which is kind of what we want to do in the first place, right? But it's still not good relative motion recapture, right? But you took the stress away and somebody goes, wow, Johnny, you're like the best ever. And then you're kicking yourself going, I know, but it didn't get what I wanted because I didn't get the ER effect. But it might provide you an opportunity then to access something that they were protecting themselves against. And now you go after that ER relative motion that you're going to need to create space to move in. Does that help you?
compensatory strategiesaxial skeletal controlrelative motion recaptureinternal force distribution