There is good reason for this. But the body needs strong acid in the stomach in order to fully and properly digest food...this is critical.
Consider this, instead of weakening the acid that is causing damage to the body, what if there was a way to prevent the acid from ever-rising up in the first place?
So I hope you can clearly see that the answer to relieving your symptoms does not lie in managing the symptoms, but instead lies in reversing the hiatal hernia.
Did you know that at the top of your stomach there is a valve known as the Lower Esophageal Sphincter? Let's call him Les.
Les's job is to clamp down tight and keep the contents of the stomach in the stomach... a very important job! A hiatal hernia is one of the number one culprits that gets in the way of Les's ability to effectively do his job, due to the anatomical pressure that the hernia puts on the lower esophageal sphincter.
Did you also know that there is a nerve that travels from your brain down along your esophagus and stomach and intestines and other vital organs called the vagus nerve? Let's call him Gus. Gus has many vital responsibilities within the human body as well. But like any nerve, when it has pressure on it long-term, a variety of symptoms and problems can occur throughout the human body. A hiatal hernia, again can put a lot of ongoing long-term anatomical pressure on this nerve.
Along my own healing journey, I discovered that chiropractors claim they can make an adjustment that un herniates a hiatal hernia. Many of the exercises I developed and used to reverse my own hiatal hernia were based on these teachings...
They differ in that they can be done personally without the help of a chiropractor, and, they differ in that what I teach is a more gentle and consistent approach as opposed to an aggressive one-time approach.
In other words, when you go to a chiropractor for this type of an adjustment, it's not uncommon to be symptomatic again by the time you get back home.
This is because many to most Hiatal hernias are what are called "sliding hiatal hernias", which means they move in and out of the herniated position.
This is why it's important for individuals with hiatal hernia to learn how to do this manipulation on themselves.
The biggest thing that makes my protocol unique is the connection that I made with the contraction of the abdominal muscles and the hiatal hernia itself. Besides getting the stomach to move down, the student must learn how to strengthen the hiatus. A strong Hiatus will help prevent future herniation from happening. But for those of us with a hiatal hernia, we cannot strengthen our diaphragm with conventional diaphragmatic breathing exercises and techniques.
I understand that you are desperate for relief, and I want to help you get that relief naturally and effectively. I am not here to help you try out remedies that may or may not manage some of your symptoms.
What I teach is not symptom "management". But instead, what I teach is how to move the stomach down and out of the herniated position, and strengthen the diaphragm so that the herniation can not reoccur.
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