Author Topic: Instinctive Sleeping ; an anthropological and zoological approach  (Read 2393 times)

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Offline Aura

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Instinctive sleeping and resting postures: an anthropological and zoological approach to treatment of low back and joint pain
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If you are a medical professional and have been trained in a “civilised” country you probably know next to nothing about the primate Homo sapiens and how they survive in the wild. You probably do not know that nature has provided an automatic manipulator to correct most spinal and peripheral joint lesions in primates. In common with millions of other so called civilised people you suffer unnecessarily from musculoskeletal problems and are discouraged about how to treat the exponential rise in low back pain throughout the developed world. Humans are one of 200 species of primates.1 All primates suffer from musculoskeletal problems; nature, recognising this fact, has given primates a way to correct them.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1119282/

Offline Aura

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Re: Instinctive Sleeping ; an anthropological and zoological approach
« Reply #1 on: October 03, 2013, 04:17:58 am »
How do you sleep?

 

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