Nervous System Focused Chiropractic
Free Guide
What your nervous system is actually running when your neck stays tight
You've tried stretching it, rolling your shoulders, adjusting your pillow. It feels better for a day or two, and then it's right back where it started. If that cycle sounds familiar, you're not alone.
A quick look at what is inside your guide.
Chronic Stiffness
Tightness and reduced range of motion that keeps returning even after massage or stretching.
Upper Neck and Base of Skull Pain
Tension concentrated at the top of the cervical spine, often connected to headaches, sleep quality, and stress.
Pain That Radiates Into the Shoulder
Nerve pressure in the upper cervical area that travels down into the shoulder or arm.
Tech Neck and Forward Head Posture
Postural patterns that add weight load to the cervical spine, increasing muscular strain and nervous system tension.
Neck Pain After Waking
Morning stiffness and aching that eases through the day, often a sign of sustained nervous system tension during rest.
"We don't chase the tension. We start with a neurological assessment to understand what your nervous system is doing, then work with it to help the pattern release, rather than force it."
Here's what most people aren't told: your nervous system controls every muscle in your neck. The tension, the stiffness, the way your head sits on your shoulders, all of it runs through the same nervous system. When that system has been under sustained stress, it sends a constant signal to hold on, brace, guard. Stretching overrides that output temporarily. But the signal driving it is still running in the background.
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About Us
Dr. Saylor, Dr. Zach, and Dr. John provide gentle, nervous system-focused chiropractic care for the whole family. They work with people navigating stress, tension, sleep challenges, developmental concerns, pregnancy, pain, and the daily demands that can keep the nervous system stuck in overdrive.
Their approach uses low-force techniques that communicate directly with the nervous system. No cracking, twisting, or popping. Just gentle, specific input that helps the body's own regulatory systems come back online.