Families & Kids
Up before the kids. Answering messages while making lunchboxes. School run, meetings, pickups, dinner, bath, repeat. Running on empty and pushing through — because who else is going to do it? We get it. Not from a brochure. From actually living this way.
Does This Sound Familiar?
The migraine that won’t shift but there’s no time to deal with it today
A back that seizes mid-week doing something completely ordinary
Going back to work after a baby and realising your body isn’t coping the way you expected
The morning you can’t pick up your toddler without wincing
Knowing something isn’t right, but telling yourself everyone feels like this
Getting to the end of the day and having nothing left for yourself
You’re not unwell. You’re just carrying too much, for too long, without anyone asking how you’re actually going. That’s where Wild comes in.
What Wild Understands
The physical load of a busy household is real and cumulative. Most people carrying it don’t realise how much has built up until something finally makes them stop.
The signals often show up as
Most people put these down to getting older, being out of shape or not exercising enough. But they’re often something else entirely.
The body doesn't separate emotional stress from structural load. When the nervous system is under sustained pressure, it shows up physically, and not always where you'd expect. What feels like tired muscles or a niggly back is often the body signalling that the system underneath is working harder than it should have to.
Wild’s job is to help you see the pattern, not just treat the symptom that finally got loud enough to notice.
And One More Thing
When a parent starts moving better, sleeping more consistently and carrying less physical tension, the household notices — even if nobody names it. More patience. More energy. A version of you that’s actually present. But that’s not the reason to come. The reason to come is because you matter too.
Wild Chiropractic, Shenton Park
Your first visit is a conversation. We’ll listen to what’s been going on, look at what’s happening in your body, and be honest about what we find.