Next week, a few thousand chiropractic professionals will attend a chiropractic seminar called Cal Jam sponsored by the Dead Chiropractic Society. (Some of us from PM&A will be attending as well as a number of the offices with whom we work.)
Cal Jam is what could be called a disruptive event.
I take this from a term used in technology called “disruptive technology” or “disruptive innovation.” It refers to a product or discovery that forever changes the future. It creates a true paradigm shift. For example, the automobile, telephone, and of course, the Internet. We see this happening with FaceBook and soon, perhaps with Bitcoin, drone home deliveries, and other culture shifting technologies.
Cal Jam is a seminar that is unlike all past seminars I have attended or know about. It is, in itself, a paradigm shift. I have been traveling off to chiropractic seminars for few years now. The first one I attended was back in 84 or 85 when Dr. Parker (Dr. James Parker) had it in Reno one year. Had the chance to talk to him then up in his suite. Since then, I have been to maybe a 100 or more over the years. Cal Jam is dif-er-ent.
Petty Michel & Associates is not really a seminar company, but we encourage them. Seminars can be useful for teaching, motivating, selling, and networking, but we find that the real work begins and ends in the office, where you work on the office. Like the old phrase: “Education Begins at Home.”
But Cal Jam is unique.
- As a whole, Cal Jam is not about itself. There may be speakers or vendors that have invested a great deal and need to promote themselves, but the theme is not about Cal Jam or any one management company or product. It is really about the bigger issues of Chiropractic and Health. So, there is kind of a lack of self-importance which is very refreshing. It genuinely puts chiropractic and the health of your family, friends and community first.
- Cal Jam starts with chiropractic and then takes off to vital issues affecting health. It takes on critical – and controversial — health subjects that go way beyond the conventional and challenges you to learn how they affect your patients and what you can do about these issues.
- Principles and history. It has presenters that deeply discuss chiropractic principles and history, the foundation for your profession which is often overlooked and, in our years of on-site work, a major reason for many floundering practices.
- Totally classy. In fact, the digs are luxurious. The venue is in a modern performing arts center that is nothing short of first class.
- All done by just one practicing Doc. It is championed by just one person, Billy DeMoss (supported by Mary Jane), a practicing chiropractor who lives and works in an office just like all the tens of thousands of other chiropractors. Chiropractors like you. He is not school president, he is not a practice management seminar speaker, and he is not selling supplements or equipment. So, in many ways, he is just like you.
- Purpose. Except for this: he is authentically driven by a greater purpose to promote chiropractic and good health to such an extent that is is creating this thing called Cal Jam. And by his actions, he sets an example for you. You have to ask yourself: “Besides growing my own business, what could I also be doing to significantly help others?”
- Rock and Roll. Lastly, I have never attended a rock concert that was also a seminar. This is my 4th Cal Jam. It is fun!
It is not too late to hop on a plane and attend Cal Jam. The seminar is modestly priced. Go to Cal Jam.
But if you can’t, you can apply its spirit – the spirit of honestly helping others improve their health. And being disruptive. This may go beyond your comfort zone, but it will be worth it. It is no news that chiropractic is, and always has been, a disruptive health system. Imagine, adjusting someone rather than having them receive back surgery! Back surgery brings in a lot of money to hospitals yet at least one study cited estimates as much as 90% are unnecessary. I am you as doctors see this first hand. But chiropractic has frightened and upset the medical monopoly for years, as evidenced in the 1988 Wilk vs AMA case.
Be just a bit disruptive. Have fun and be friendly and don’t take yourself too seriously. But be something new and fresh in your office and in your town. Get people off the couch, off their drugs, get them adjusted, educated and moving. This is what people, more and more, know they need. For that IS the spirit of chiropractic, in my opinion.
And if you want, turn up the jute box – or Internet radio. Get your patients dancing to some rock and roll music*… and you can have the spirit of Cal Jam every day.
*“Just let me hear some of that rock and roll music, anyway you choose it,
It’s got a back beat, you can’t lose it, Any old time you use it.” (Chuck Berry)
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