Statement of Clinical Objective
by Dr. Catherine Hondorp

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My purpose in sharing this 'Statement of Clinical Objective', is to offer clarity about my approach to healing, and how I see the relationship between myself as a Wellness Facilitator and the person seeking care. I have found that understanding the objectives of care allows to align together in fully engaging in this healing path from the beginning.

First off, there is an innate intelligence of the body, which animates, coordinates, repairs, renews, empowers, heals and keeps us alive.

  • The nervous system is a main coordinating system and distribution center for this innate intelligence.

  • Alteration in the shape, position, tone, or tension of the nervous system, at the spinal level, will block, inhibit, or redirect the expression of this intelligence.

  • Spinal cord compression, elongation, or other distortion is a detriment to the proper functioning of the nervous system and its ability to send, receive, and coordinate life force and intelligence.

  • Proper coordination, repair, movement, inspiration, empowerment, healing, can not be expressed when this life power and intelligence is blocked, or redirected.

  • One of the purposes of Network spinal entrainments given in this office is to release adverse mechanical tension of the spinal cord, freeing the body-mind from a posture and state of defense, then allowing and encouraging it to entrain to its own inner biological signal and rhythms, thus empowering a greater communication of this life power and coordinating intelligence, therefore promoting a healthier spine and nervous system, and enhanced health and quality of life.

  • Everyone, regardless of specific symptoms or ailments, can benefit from a more flexible, elastic, and aware spine and nervous system.

  • Symptoms are not necessarily a sign of illness. They can occur to alert the individual of the need for change.

  • Specific location of symptoms does not correlate to specific spinal distortion patterns being addressed during an entrainment. Severity of symptoms does not correlate to severity of spinal cord tension. The reduction of symptoms is not an effective indicator of improved health.

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