If meals leave you bloated or crampy, you’re not broken. Digestive trouble usually starts when stress keeps the body in fight-or-flight mode, and the diaphragm stays tight. Chiropractic care calms the nerves and frees up the mid-back and ribs so food moves the way it should. The goal is simple: less pressure after meals and steadier, easier digestion.
Your gut has its own nervous system that coordinates movement and secretions. It also communicates with the brain through the vagus nerve. When the body feels safe, that pathway signals “rest and digest,” acid and enzymes flow, and food moves along. When stress ramps up, the signal flips and symptoms of poor digestion begin to surface.
Breathing mechanics also play a role in digestion. The diaphragm sits over the stomach like a pump, and each easy breath massages the esophagus and intestines. If your ribs are stiff and your breath stays shallow, the pump underperforms and the gut-brain conversation lags
It can be a powerful helper. We work where the gut and mechanics meet: the mid-back, ribs, diaphragm, and abdominal wall. Gentle adjustments restore motion, soft-tissue release frees the diaphragm, and acupuncture helps the nervous system downshift. Applied Kinesiology guides us toward the exact corrections your body needs. Many patients report fewer reflux flares, less post-meal pressure, and more regular rhythm in the bathroom.
Bloating usually comes from a mix of stress and tight torso mechanics. A clenched nervous system slows stomach emptying and makes the gut more sensitive. A snug diaphragm compresses the abdomen and can change how the stomach and intestines move. Long days of sitting make this worse.
Add in modern eating patterns with ultra-processed snacks, low fiber, alcohol, and irregular meal timing, and you get a perfect storm. Medications (like certain pain relievers or frequent antacids) and food reactions can layer on, too. We look for the combination at work in your case, to unwind all of these things.
Yes, and it’s not in your head. When stress increases, your body flips into “fight or flight,” which nudges blood away from the gut and scrambles acid and enzyme timing. The result can be a bowel that either slams the brakes or floors the gas. If that’s your daily baseline, the gut learns to stay jumpy. A few slow nasal exhales before you eat can act like a small reset button and tell your system, “We’re safe, go ahead and digest.”
Absolutely. A forward slump compresses the abdomen and tugs on the diaphragm. The esophageal valve can also feel more pressure in that position, which isn’t great news for acid reflux. Restoring head and rib alignment and sitting up straight reduces strain across the system, so the stomach and intestines can move the way they were built to.
Your gut runs on a rhythm. Between meals, a “housekeeping wave” clears the line so the next meal can move along. When eating times bounce around, fiber stays low, or the diaphragm is braced, that rhythm gets choppy. Some bodies slow to a crawl, others rush. We’ll map what your system is doing and ease it back toward a steady, predictable pace.
Chronic digestive cases usually involve layers of compensation. The body braces to protect sore or stiff areas, then builds habits around that brace. Once those layers are released, gently and in order, the gut can respond quickly. Even long-standing reflux or IBS may improve when the underlying mechanics and stress load are addressed.
Here’s a pared-down list you can screenshot. Start with gentle foods, add fiber slowly, and keep an eye on what your body likes.
Use with care: peppermint can relax spasms but may loosen the valve at the top of the stomach; alcohol, ultra-processed snacks, and late heavy dinners commonly aggravate symptoms.
We start with a full assessment: your history, posture, breath mechanics, rib and spinal motion, and how the abdominal wall responds to stimuli. You’ll feel light, precise corrections rather than any forceful cracking. Care typically includes gentle adjustments, diaphragm and psoas release, and targeted techniques to improve vagal tone. We’ll outline a simple plan, with more stable digestion developing over a few sessions throughout the next month.
A short walk after meals helps food move along. Before you eat, pause for a few slow nasal breaths to invite the ability to “rest and digest.” Chew thoroughly, and set a relaxed pace at the table. If acid reflux bothers you, it may be best to drink fluids between meals. Left-side sleeping can soften nighttime reflux.
Aim for regular eating times so your gut can keep a steady schedule. And at your desk, bring the screen to eye level and stack your shoulders over your hips. A small footstool in the bathroom also improves alignment for easier elimination.
Digestive symptoms are the body’s way of asking for support. When we listen and correct the right pieces, relief is possible. If you’ve been living with pressure or bathroom uncertainty, let’s figure it out together.