• The Miracle Man
Dr. Clarence Gonstead
by Dr. Peter G. Fernandez
In 1961 while still in Chiropractic College, I heard rumors about a
chiropractic "miracle man"- a great healer - who practiced in a
little farming community somewhere up north. No one knew much about
him or his practice except that his adjusting techniques worked
miracles ... and that he was brilliant. Brilliant bordering on
genius.
An unusual man in many respects, he never
finished seeing patients on the same day he started. A typical
practice day began at 8 AM and ended at 3 AM the following day. He
subsisted on only 4 hours sleep per day. Grabbing sleep when he
could, he would sleep for the seven seconds it took for an adjusting
table to lower from a fully extended position. The town he practiced
in only had 1400 residents, yet he saw over 200 patients per day,
seven days a week. He never advertised. Yet, he consistently drew
patients (via word of mouth) from several hundred miles away as well
as around the world.
With a background in mechanical engineering, he
saw the human spine as an intricate engineering wonder and he
studied it every chance he had. As a licensed pilot, he would fly
from his own airstrip, located at his Frank Floyd Wright designed
home, to the laboratory of Lincoln College of Chiropractic. There,
he would dissect, study, stain, photograph and then reconstruct
cadaver spines. The end result was one of the most precise studies
of the effects of spinal derangement ever produced.
His work with thousands of spinal cases, his
constant clinical studies of the spine, and his own innate knowledge
of how the spine works explains his ingenuity in finding,
identifying and fixing subluxations no one else could. This, coupled
with his special gift of caring, gave him the ability to stop pain
and promote the healing process. That's what earned him the
reputation as a "miracle man."
In the early 60's, an article appeared in
Chiropractic Ethics and Economics with a headline, which said
something like "We found the man!" It was a story about the "miracle
man" who was; it turned out, Dr. Clarence S. Gonstead of Mt. Horeb,
Wisconsin. The article explained that his original clinic was a
small one-room office above a bank in downtown Mt. Horeb, where his
wife served as his assistant. He had so many patients that they were
often found sitting in the stairwell to his office. In fact, they
were spilling out of his office, all the way down the stairs and
onto the sidewalk. He saw he had to expand. Gonstead built a
beautiful and much larger clinic for his patients at another
location in downtown Mt. Horeb. Within a few years his practice was
to outgrow these facilities also. Next, he began designing the
largest, most complete chiropractic clinic in the world for his
patients, just outside Mt. Horeb, Wisconsin ... population
approximately 1400. The article went on to say that he not only
existed, but, at that point in time, he had begun teaching and was
well on his way to becoming internationally acclaimed. He was most
notably recognized for his research studies; his uncanny technique,
which healed patients in one-third the time that it took most other
treatment programs; as well as his reputation for treating problem
cases. What earned him the most acclaim though, was the number of
fellow chiropractors he treated. He was earning the reputation of
being the chiropractor's chiropractor.
In 1966 I came face-to-face with the man. I had
ruptured a disc in my back and was in severe pain. My practice was
suffering because I was unable to stand for more than a few minutes
per day. I was receiving two adjustments a day; taking 18 pills; and
getting four shots per day, just to keep the pain down. The pain was
incredible. So bad that at one point, I had to physically crawl from
my car to my home. I was unable to even walk. In addition to my
private practice, I was a team physician for a professional football
team. The team also had a M.D. who happened to be a good friend of
mine. He noticed my condition one-day said, "Enough is enough," and
gave me an exam. After he examined me, I asked for his
recommendations. Was surgery necessary? I just wanted the pain to
stop.
"Don't ever let anyone do surgery on you, Pete,"
the M.D. said. At his specific recommendation, I was put on a plane
that same evening to see the chiropractor I had heard about five
years earlier. The so-called "miracle man", the one man, this M.D.
knew could help me without using surgery. After one week with two
adjustments per day, I was headed back to my own practice in
Florida. No surgery. No drugs. Just pure chiropractic healing. His
philosophy was, "Find the problem. Fix it. Then leave it alone."
I had been a personal witness to the fact that
there was indeed chiropractic "miracle man". By the mid-70's Dr.
Gonstead's reputation had grown right along with the size of his
clinic. Doctors and patients from all over the United States and
Canada eagerly sought his expertise. He provided seminars to share
his techniques with other doctors. These techniques were rooted in
his extensive knowledge of the precise workings of the human spine
using sound mechanical and biological principles.
The size of his once humble clinic grew to 19,000
square feet with seating for 106 patients in the reception area. To
have the reception room filled to capacity was not unusual. Dr.
Gonstead plainly needed help. Help did arrive. Dr. Alex Cox, a
Palmer Chiropractic College graduate, began studying with Dr.
Gonstead in 1962 and joined the Gonstead Clinic staff in 1964. His
brother, Dr. Douglas Cox, a Palmer graduate also, joined the
teaching staff of the Gonstead seminars in 1963. In 1967, he left
his private practice and teaching responsibilities at Palmer (where
he taught the Gonstead technique) to join the Gonstead Clinic staff.
It was no small task for the Cox brothers to
teach and record everything that Dr. Clarence Gonstead worked on,
studied, developed and cared for over his 54 years in chiropractic.
Dr. Gonstead's mind raced faster than he could verbalize his
thoughts. So, it was up to the Cox brothers to listen, observe,
document and record as much as they could of what was to become a
premier chiropractic healing method ... The Gonstead Technique.
Having both come from teaching backgrounds, the Cox brothers were
knowledgeable in the methods needed to organize Dr. Gonstead's
studies. Interestingly, for a year the Cox brothers had someone with
a video camera follow Dr. Gonstead as he lectured to his seminar
classes. Whenever he did anything unusual, he was questioned about
it then and there. "Why did you do that? What did you find? What
caused you to make that determination?" Gonstead would explain then
go on lecturing. He of course, thought it was a nuisance. But at the
end of that year, the Cox brothers had all that knowledge recorded
and were able to precisely document his work.
Dr. Gonstead in 1974, passed control of the
Gonstead clinic and seminar program on to Alex and Doug Cox. The
question on many people's minds at the time was... could they handle
it? Could they continue what Clarence Gonstead had started? What
were the odds that these doctors could take over and maintain the
huge practice of "the Miracle Man" of chiropractic? They not only
could... they did. And in a big way.
The Cox brothers have achieved a tremendous
amount since 1974. Not only have they maintained Dr. Gonstead's
practice, but they have also expanded it. The Cox brothers, with the
help of three additional staff doctors, increased the patient volume
per day by 75 percent. While most practices attract patients from a
five-mile radius, 88 percent of the Gonstead clinic's patients now
travel over a hundred miles. Through the Cox brothers' excellence in
care, patients now come from every state in the union, and all the
provinces in Canada, and 25 foreign countries. In addition, they
have also become known as the chiropractor's chiropractors. |