Razi Ann Berry, Publisher

 

Before medicine had metrics, it had stories built on observation that carried clinical truths in plain words.

One of them still teaches a rule of clinical success.

Build foundations, then treat.

The Three Little Pigs understood the Therapeutic Order.

The tale of the three little pigs, carried through oral tradition since the 18th century, is a cautionary tale about indolence versus preparation, taking shortcuts versus building a foundation. We read it to children as entertainment, yet it compresses a medical education into three minutes.

Three pigs, three materials, one inevitable threat. The first pig chooses straw because it is fast. The second pig chooses sticks because they are stronger than straw and still go up quickly. Only the third pig chooses bricks, understanding the power of a real foundation.

This children’s tale predicts treatment success better than many diagnostic algorithms. Two decades of clinical cases in our journal support the pattern.

Walk into any practitioner’s office and you will see all three houses under construction. The straw house is the two thousand dollar protocol that addresses everything except the actual foundations. Sleep remains disrupted. Stress remains unmanaged. Movement remains absent. Relationships remain toxic. Sunlight remains inadequate. The patient receives comprehensive supplementation for a body that lacks the basic requirements to use any of it. It looks like medicine. It collapses like straw.

The stick house is better. The practitioner addresses sleep hygiene and prescribes magnesium. They recommend probiotics and talk about stress management. The foundation gets mentioned and even prioritized, yet the execution lacks commitment. Half measures on foundational issues produce half results. The structure holds longer than straw, yet it still collapses when real pathology tests it.

The brick house takes longer to build and requires uncomfortable conversations. The practitioner addresses the job that is destroying the patient’s sleep. They talk about the relationship that keeps the nervous system in a constant threat response. They deal with the trauma that makes the body feel fundamentally unsafe. Only after establishing these foundations do they introduce supportive interventions. It is the structure that holds when the wolf arrives.

Drugs and surgery are also part of the Therapeutic Order, but after the foundations of health are built.

That’s why our 20-year archive and fruiting of cases utilizing the Naturopathic Therapeutic Order is such a powerful tool for a spectrum of practitioners involved in patient care.

The wolf is disease, and he is patient, stealthy, and resolved. He will wait for shortcuts. The question is not whether he is coming. The question is whether we are building with straw, sticks or bricks.

______

Razi Berry is the founder and publisher of Naturopathic Doctor News & Review (NDNR), which she co-founded in 2005 with Dr. David Tallman. NDNR publishes Applied Natural Medicine and provides continuing education to healthcare providers.

She has produced continuing education programs, multiple health summits, and a docuseries, and has hosted the annual Physicians Choice Awards since 2014. She founded The Vis Network Mastermind for naturopathic doctors and consults for natural products, nutraceutical, and device companies.

Her work has been recognized with the Champion of Naturopathic Medicine Award (2017) and Corporation of the Year Award (2009) from the American Association of Naturopathic Physicians, and the Rising Tide Award (2019) and Impact Award for Best Digital Media (2016) from the Mindshare Collaborative.

Advertisement

Current Issue

Table of Contents

Advertisement

Trending Articles

The Quiet Surge in Demand for Psychiatric Drug Tapering

The Quiet Surge in Demand for Psychiatric Drug Tapering

Razi Ann Berry, Publisher   We Became a Medicated Society More than one in ten American adults now take prescription medication for depression. Women receive these prescriptions at double the rate of men. Add in antipsychotics, stimulants, mood stabilizers, and...

Gentle

Gentle

Razi Ann Berry, Publisher   Why Starting Gentle Is Actually Radical The order you do things matters. When baking bread, repairing an engine, building a house; do it out of order and it fails. In medicine, we’ve reversed the order. We start with the strongest...

Your n=1 study doesn’t count.

Your n=1 study doesn’t count.

Razi Ann Berry, Publisher   After 20 years publishing NDNR monthly, I've heard this dismissal of case reports countless times. But I've come to believe we're overlooking something critical: Medicine has always been built on careful observation of individual...

Psudoscience

Psudoscience

Razi Ann Berry, Publisher   After 20 years publishing NDNR’s Applied Naturopathic Medicine journal, I've watched "dangerous pseudoscience" become the standard of care. You may remember we were called irresponsible for publishing IV nutrient protocols. Now there's...

Homeopathy

Homeopathy

Razi Ann Berry, Publisher   We started publishing homeopathic medicine cases in 2005. Many told me I would kill our credibility, that it was “pseudoscience” or that no  serious medical journal would touch it. I was told I’d never attract conventional doctors as...

We were just early

We were just early

Razi Ann Berry, Publisher   47% of our readers are MDs and DOs. Why are conventional doctors reading a naturopathic journal? When we started Applied Natural Medicine in 2005 ( then NDNR), our audience was almost entirely naturopathic physicians. Twenty years...

Custom Publishing

Quantum Fields and Frequency Medicine

Quantum Fields and Frequency Medicine

RAZI BERRY Quantum Fields and Frequency Medicine A Conversation with Philipp Samor von Holtzendorff Fehling on Remote Quantum Technology and Human Performance Interest in frequency medicine and subtle energy technologies continues to grow within integrative and...

IS TYLENOL SAFE DURING PREGNANCY?

IS TYLENOL SAFE DURING PREGNANCY?

Understanding Risk Factors, Not Causation Learn how much Tylenol pregnant women can safely take, what risk factors matter, and why glutathione status—not acetaminophen itself—determines safety during pregnancy.   IN THIS ARTICLE • Key Takeaways: Tylenol Safety...

Featured News

Allergy Research News Release

Allergy Research News Release

RAZI BERRY Allergy Research Group Announces Peer-Reviewed Publication Advancing Thyroid and Endocrine Integration Science Collaborative research led by ARG’s Medical Affairs and Scientific Advisory Board reinforces the company’s commitment to thyroid category...