
I’ve always been fascinated by the way we carry ourselves through the world. It’s something I witness every day in my work as a chiropractor.
The way we hold our shoulders, the curve of our spine, the tilt of our head. It’s a language without words. It’s the story of our life, not written in a book, but embodied in our very structure.
We are taught to think of posture as a mechanical thing, a matter of sitting up straight. But I believe it is so much more profound than that.
Our bodies are living libraries, and our posture is the way we shelve the stories of our past. Every joy, every sorrow, every moment of fear or resilience is stored within our physical form.
Think of the times you have felt the weight of the world on your shoulders. Where did you feel it? The body doesn’t just experience these moments; it remembers them.
It learns the shape of our burdens and our heartbreaks. A rounded back might be the story of a heart that has learned to protect itself. A tense jaw might be the story of words left unspoken.
This isn’t a story of blame or failure. It is a story of survival. Our bodies are incredibly intelligent, and they adapt to help us navigate our experiences. The posture we hold is the shape that has helped us get through.
What happens when we are ready to write a new chapter? What happens when the armour that once protected us now feels like a cage, restricting our movement and our breath?
This is where I see so many of us get stuck. We are living in a physical form that is still telling an old story. Our nervous system has learned these patterns of tension so well that they have become our unconscious reality. We are trapped in the past, so to speak, and our bodies are the constant reminder.
My work as a chiropractor has taught me that we cannot simply command the body to let go. We must first help it to feel safe.
The chiropractic adjustment, for me, is an act of deep listening. It is a gentle conversation with the nervous system. It’s a way of saying, “I see this pattern you are holding. I understand why it was necessary. But perhaps it is safe to let it go now.”
The adjustment isn’t about forcing a change. It is about creating a moment of new possibility.
As these old patterns of trauma and stress are released from the system, we create space. Space to breathe more deeply. Space to move with more freedom. Space to stand in the world in a way that feels more authentic to who we are today, not who we had to be in the past.
It’s an interruption of the old, familiar signal of stress and a reminder of a deeper state of ease. In that moment, the body has a chance to remember its own innate wisdom, its own natural state of balance.
This is the journey of true healing. It is not about achieving a ‘perfect’ posture. It is about having the freedom to stand tall in your own truth. It is about allowing your physical self to be a reflection, not of your old wounds, but of your present strength and sovereignty.
It is about rewriting your story from the inside out.
Much love always to our Wildheart Tribe xx