Pre-Existing Conditions (PEC) really came into the public consciousness with Covid. PEC’s are also known as comorbidities. PEC’s can be any health condition you can imagine – common examples are cancer, diabetes, asthma and depression. What makes a PEC a PEC is that it is an unresolved, unhealed situation, condition, illness; something that was there before a new health concern emerges.
PEC’s are usually being “managed” by a host of medications. These medications are mostly to help with suppressing symptoms, not to actually address the underlying cause of the condition.
This practice of “management” has become so common that the thought that a PEC could be healed isn’t even considered. It’s been like this for so long that management through medication is seen as the ONLY option.
Addressing someone’s lifestyle, trauma, or even their capacity to heal is not examined. Age is said to be a determining factor in PEC’s, even though the underlying factor is time and not age.
This all paints a very sad and limiting picture of what’s actually real. All kinds of people are walking around with PEC’s not knowing that many of them could be helped; resigned to the reality that they will have this PEC for the rest of their lives.
The presence of a PEC actually indicates that a person is in a state of high sympathetic activity, chronic stress or survival mode. If the body wasn’t in this mode, it would be more likely to be able to heal and resolve the PEC.
The presence of a PEC indicates that the body is compromised, only able to work at less than 100%. It’s like trying to fight with one arm tied behind your back.
This doesn’t have to necessarily be the case. For example, NSO can be very helpful in helping the body to switch out of survival mode and to help heal and become stronger, less compromised. Oftentimes, the presence of a PEC also indicates that the person has developed some unhealthy lifestyle habits, mainly diet, which put a heavier burden on the body, impairing its ability to heal and get stronger.
With NSO care, a person has more access to their PreFrontal Cortex, which helps them make more rational, less emotional decisions. Or at least the decision is based on different emotions. For example, rather than choosing to eat fast food, a person can choose to eat more healthily in order to feel more vibrant.
If you know someone who has one or multiple PEC’s, you may want to mention NeuroSpinal Optimization care to them. It could help turn their life around. If they knew that there was a possible solution, would they be willing to make the change?