As the vagus nerve gains traction in the chiropractic world, so does the temptation to reduce it to yet another thing to “stimulate,” “hack,” “override,” or “manage.”
It’s showing up in ads, seminar promotions, and even coaching programs that claim to be “philosophy-based”—yet they talk about the vagus nerve like it’s a button to push for better outcomes.
Let’s be clear:
That’s a pathogenic lens masquerading as progress.
In a salutogenic framework, vagal tone isn’t something to manipulate. It’s data—deeply intelligent, biologically ancient, and incredibly useful if you know how to read it.
It tells us how someone is doing—not just mechanically, but neurobiologically and relationally.
And that’s not something you “adjust into place.” That’s something you learn to co-regulate with.
Your Premise Drives Your Behavior
The real issue?
Most chiropractors—even those who call themselves “principled”—have been steeped in a pathogenic paradigm:
- Taught to fix
- Trained to correct
- Pressured to produce results fast
The language follows suit. So do the techniques. And the nervous system can tell the difference.
If you keep practicing with the same currency the world uses—fix, fix, fix—you can’t diversify the portfolio of what your office truly offers: regulation, safety, and connection.
We’re Not Teaching Vagus Nerve 101
The vagus nerve isn’t new.
But learning how to adjust and communicate through a Polyvagal lens absolutely is.
That’s what we’re teaching at our upcoming first-ever hybrid event in Amsterdam—where you’ll learn:
- How to assess and adjust through the lens of safety, not just alignment
- How to communicate a modern, nervous-system-forward message
- How to create a chiropractic experience that’s relevant to today’s dysregulated world
If the Vagus Isn’t a Spinal Nerve…
Let this sink in:
- The vagus makes up 75% of the parasympathetic nervous system
- It is 80% sensory
- It launches four separate autonomic states
- And it is not a spinal nerve
Maybe it’s time we stop pretending we can fix it with a bone-on-nerve narrative and start listening to what it’s actually telling us.
If you say you “own the nervous system,” then it’s time to understand the system you claim to serve.
We can help.



