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    Busiest Month of the Year? Help Your Breath, Back, and Belly Cope

    Published by The Doctors at Sentinel

    The holidays bring twinkling lights and fun plans, but they also bring crowded airports, long car rides, late dinners, and bills that add up, and your body can feel all of it at once. When your mind keeps solving money and travel problems, you may notice that your breath moves up into your chest, as if a gentle hand is pressing on your ribs. Maybe your back gets stiff holding you upright, and your stomach feels under par. Stress shows up in these very real, physical ways. Tense muscles, faster breathing, and a touchy gut are common signs of it, because the body thinks it needs to stay “on” to get through the day, making you feel sick.

    What Holiday Stress Does To The Body

    Think of your diaphragm as a pump that sits under your ribs and helps each breath move like a soft wave. When the diaphragm works well, it supports calm, steady breathing and helps your body relax. For example, simple “belly breathing” can lower heart rate and invite that relaxed state.

    When stress pulls the breath high into the chest, the pump loses power and pressure builds in the middle of your body, which keeps your system on alert and makes it harder to settle down. Practicing slow, diaphragmatic breathing brings the pump back online and tells your nervous system that you are safe to “rest and digest.” 

    Travel adds another layer of stress. Sitting for long periods will trim the space at the front of the hips and the low back will brace. Lifting bags above your head or twisting in tight aisles can also strain the neck and mid-back. Simple travel posture tips (like keeping the natural curve in your lower back with a small pillow and avoiding heavy overhead lifts) reduce the strain you carry off the plane or out of the car. 

    Lastly, late, rich meals and lying down soon after eating can push acid back toward your throat, which is why reflux tends to flare during parties and late nights; finishing dinner earlier and choosing lighter options when you can helps lower that pressure and cut burning after meals. 

    What Chiropractic Care Does

    Chiropractic adjustments return movement to the places that act like stuck links in a chain—your mid-back, ribs, pelvis, and upper neck—so your ribcage can open like a book on the inhale and settle on the exhale. When that motion comes back, the diaphragm pumps with less effort, breathing slows, and your nervous system reads “safe,” which usually shows up as easier posture and steadier digestion after you eat. The vagus nerve, which helps manage heart rate, breathing, and digestion, can then signal more clearly, and your body shifts toward calm more quickly.

    How Applied Kinesiology Helps With Stress

    Applied Kinesiology looks for the priority, or the first place to help so the rest of the body can relax instead of fighting to keep up. The chiropractor uses an indicator muscle to check how your nervous system is organizing movement; then they give you tiny “challenges,” like a light joint pressure or a reflex touch, to see what brings that muscle back to full, smooth strength. 

    By following those tests, care starts where it matters most for you, not with a one-size plan, which helps changes last instead of fading by the next week. When the body gets help in the right order, it spends less energy bracing and more energy doing what you want like carrying bags, standing in lines, and enjoying a long dinner without payback later.

    Simple Support Tips For The Holidays

    1. Plan around travel: book an adjustment during the week before you go and another within a week after you return, so you leave with good rib and pelvic motion and don’t keep the miles in your spine.
    1. Hydrate through the day: keep water nearby and sip; add extra on flight days or when indoor heat is high.
    1. Eat with attention: start your day with some protein and plants; if reflux shows up, try to finish dinner earlier and keep most fluids between meals.
    1. Use slow nasal breathing as a reset: inhale for 4, exhale for 6–8, feeling your side ribs widen and then settle; a minute before meals, in a line, or in bed can calm the system and support sleep. 
    1. Keep a steady wake time: even if bedtime moves, dim lights in the hour before bed and wake at the same time to give your body a clear daily rhythm.

    What A Chiropractic Visit Feels Like

    Care is precise, not forceful. You’ll see how your ribs expand, how your diaphragm drops, how your pelvis carries weight, and which muscles are doing too much or too little. Adjustments are light and targeted to restore motion; soft-tissue work helps the diaphragm and nearby muscles move again. Many people describe a warm, roomy feeling through the chest and belly on the table and notice steadier energy the next day, as if background noise turned down and the body could finally exhale.

    Book Your Next Chiropractic Appointment

    Money can feel tight, plans can change, and travel can be long but your body does not have to carry that stress the same way. With a few steady habits and a well-timed adjustment, the season becomes easier to enjoy—because your body has the room it needs to relax and recover.

    Ready for a pre-travel tune-up or a post-trip reset?

    Book with Dr. Gillian in Georgia ›

    Book with Dr. Phil in New Jersey ›

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