About Dr. Skip Wyss:
Dr. Skip’s healing hands, warm heart, and deep concern for his patients make him the most sought after chiropractor in the Green Bay community, where he has been practicing with his wife for more than eight years. Their two amazing kids, Peyton and Breckin, are living life interference-free! Dr. Skip is an active member of his community, and holds advanced certification in pediatric and prenatal care from the ICPA and is certified in the Webster technique. He includes cranial and extremity adjusting and neurosensory integration as part of his chiropractic care. Dr. Skip is board-certified in nutrition. He’s an author and internationally recognized speaker on pregnancy and pediatrics.
Resources:
Show Transcript:
Dr. Ed:
Alright [TCP] listeners I have an incredible guest today and that is, actually, Dr. Skip Wyss. Doc, how you doing today?
Dr. Skip Weiss:
I’m doing awesome Ed. How are you?
Dr. Ed:
I’m amazing. I didn’t … I got your name right. Didn’t I?
Dr. Skip Weiss:
You nailed it, yeah. You nailed it.
Dr. Ed:
Three hundred interviews later, you know, and I’m still not getting names right. So- [crosstalk] So, I got to tell you, I’m excited about this episode today. Number one, I get to talk about the thing that I love, which is pediatric chiropractic. But before we go there … That’s my little hook for everyone that’s listening. Before we go there, you know, tell us a little bit about you as a chiropractor, as a man, and then also as a leader in our profession today.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
You know, I’ve been in practice for about 10 years, a little bit over. My wife and I, pretty much, started straight out of school. I’m a huge family guy. I’m a huge kid person. As I proceed through life, I kind of look at things as trying to enjoy myself as much as possible and not let everything destroy me. I think that when you’re in practice the stresses mount up on you really, really quickly. I think a lot of Docs have a tendency to tell you the amazing sides of practice and not tell you the really, really crappy sides of practice, and trying to remain a giant kid at heart is massive for me.
We pretty much … Julie and I, pretty much started from nothing and worked our way to a very, very successful office that takes care of tons of children and the stuff that’s come in and out of our office has been … would blow your mind, as far as, we don’t see your every day, run of the mill child anymore. We see the kids that are really, really sick that are coming in with major problems from giant scoliosis to major neuro developmental issues, which we see in so many children today. And instead of trying to pitch and pull our office in just the neuro developmental office, or just a scoliosis clinic, or something like that, we run the most well rounded family based office as we possibly can. We love that. I get to play every day, Dr. Ed. Every day, man, I get to play. In fact, I like to live my life by a certain way and it’s pretty much the secret of genius is to carry the spirit of the child into old age. Which means, never losing your enthusiasm for what you do and always looking at the imaginative side of things.
Case I point, I got these new kids in the other day and, apparently, my entire adjustment bay is hot lava. So they were jumping rocks like toadstools from table to table. Of course, one wipes out right after their adjustment so we’re going to check him again right. The imagination of kids is what’s going to save us man.
Dr. Ed:
Yeah, I agree. I know that one of the favorite … So I am a chiropractor, clearly, and then my kids have got-
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Yeah, right.
Dr. Ed:
… Yeah, I have a five and a seven year old, so they love going to the chiropractor. It’s like the highlight of their week. It’s …
Dr. Skip Weiss:
It’s mine, too.
Dr. Ed:
Okay, so let’s head into a quote. Positive words of meaning and affirmation. Do you have some special drop on DOTS?
Dr. Skip Weiss:
I think one of the biggest things I’ve learned, and my grandpa taught me way back in the 80s, was people will spend their money if they see value in you. As long as, they don’t have to spend tons of their time.
Dr. Ed:
Hmm.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Their time is so incredibly important. Especially now that they will … Patients … As long as you take care of them to the absolute best of your ability, and you’re so confident in what they do, and you get them in, and you don’t take up tons and tons of their time, they will come to you the rest of their life because their coming in to get themselves better and not take extra time sitting around. I think that’s one of the biggest things that I always try to strive for, is never taking more of my patients time than what they need to clear out and get healthy. That’s massive for me.
Dr. Ed:
Yeah, that could be a really great debate on social media right now. If we posted that …
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Yeah, probably.
Dr. Ed:
… Because I would have that, right. I mean, or that … that’s how I felt in practice. I always felt like, look, you can’t have care be inconvenient. You know it has to be-
Dr. Skip Weiss:
No.
Dr. Ed:
… it has to be on the … You know, the people come in, they get what they need, and then they’re gone, and you love on them when they’re there. That was always my philosophy and it was never more about, like how … how can I give them … like how … It was never about the time issue. It was about the quality of time that you spent with them. Kind of like family.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Exactly. That’s exactly it, man. That’s exactly it. It’s not all the extra stuff that you can get them to do. It’s being specific and very, very fundamentally sound in what you do, that they just keep coming back because that’s what they want. They want clarity, they want genuineness, and they want you to be a real person. And I’m never afraid to give somebody my opinion because I feel that, that’s the reason why they’re in my door, in the first place, and it’s having that quality interaction with them. Whether it’s two minutes, three minutes, five minutes, if that’s what they need on that day I’m going to take it. But, I never want to waste their time with making them do something extra that I don’t feel is going to help them out.
Dr. Ed:
Agreed. Time, it’s the most valuable asset.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Time, man.
Dr. Ed:
It doesn’t matter what business you’re in. It doesn’t matter who it is. I always … You know, it’s the most precious commodity that we have.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
It is.
Dr. Ed:
Lets hit on struggle. So, you know, one of the things that really connects us and bonds us together is, as I believe … You know, as a profession, as doctors, as chiropractors is that we all experience one thing and that is struggle. So, was there ever a time where you experienced, just a ton of resistance? You were in the pit, could be personally or professionally, what you learned from that experience? The gift that you took from it and how you apply that to business or life today.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
So, I’ll go back to my first few months in practice. Julie … and if I get emotional I apologize because this one is really tough. One of the biggest things that I’ve realized is, from being a man and growing up is, that men will never change until they are, basically, on the edge of the cliff falling off, or have hit rock bottom, literally. Before they pick themselves up by their pants, pull their pants up, and start actually doing their job, and being a man. What happened was, we were six months in the practice and we were struggling. Julie and I were trying to find a direction of where we wanted our clinic. We were already … We were coaching with an excellent coach out of Canada who was giving us some amazing procedures and we still use these procedures to this day, but it’s getting that clarity. What happened six months in the practice is Julie and I were … I was sitting in front of my computer, and I just wrote out our last lease check, and I had 50 dollars left in our bank account when I wrote that check out.
The next day I came in to the office and we were robbed. Somebody broke in, busted into the back window, came inside, took our last 200 dollars we had in our cash box, and left. Trashed our office. Cut himself coming in. He was a meth addict. The only reason that I know this is because the cops caught him and I, actually, went to his trial hearing because they wanted me to testify, because nobody else would testify. He had broke in, he was looking for meth, and took that last little bit of money.
I remember walking in that day and my office smelled like chlorine bleach, and I was like, what? This is weird the office smelled like a pool and I said, “Well maybe it’s the X-ray chemicals that I’d just changed.”, I remember the thought. I can still smell it right now just thinking about it. Then I started looking down the hallway and there was one light on at the end of the hallway and it was in my office. Our office is just, basically, set up like your typical start out office. Where it’s just a bunch of rooms on each side, right.
I looked down and there’s this bracket sitting in the middle of the hallway. Of course, I look up at the ceiling, like a dumb ass, and like a bracket could even fall from the ceiling, and then I looked down, I’m like that … that’s my cash box. And then … Then all of a sudden everything goes from tunnel vision to this giant panoramic of your eyes catching everything in the room and all of a sudden you see things smashed, and computers flipped upside down, and then you start to see blood on the wall, and … because this guy cut himself … he squeezed himself through a 12 inch hole, Dr. Ed, and this guys about a buck 35, five foot six … My kids couldn’t even fit through that … and it’s just jagged glass he squeezed himself through so he cut himself up. He bled on everything and from that point forward I walk into the back and I can hear … I know exactly the music that was on, it was this Cry Me a River song by Justin Timberlake. Get that, okay.
Then I feel this cold breeze coming through the window on my face, and I’m like, you got to be kidding me. To be honest with you, we ran the insurance claim to fix the carpet, and fix everything in the office, and I had the … The insurance company came in, they declared the office … the carpet was a total loss, I think, with blood, and bleach, and everything. So I was like, alright. So I had this really good carpet cleaner come by and clean everything, and after we had the insurance quote go through, and he got everything spotless.
Our insurance cut check that showed up, was 4000 dollars, to pay for carpet and all sorts of stuff, and I used it to pay rent the next month. From that point forward, I looked at myself in the mirror, and I said, “Never again, will I allow this to happen to me or my family.”, and it was that point that I got clarity that there was too many people that needed my help. That I was limiting myself, from the getting to, and having access to us and our clinic. That’s when I just got la-
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Having access to us and our clinic. And that’s when I just got laser focused, and I said this ain’t happening again. Our community relies on us way too much to keep their kids healthy and to keep people working properly, that I can’t let this happen.
I cannot go bankrupt because my community needs me more than anything else, and so does my family. And man, I pulled it up, I buttoned up my bootstraps, and I started pushing forward as hard as I could and just dove into pediatrics.
And tried to figure out what I could do to help children, and at that time in 2008, you see autism, ADD, ADHD, ADHD and ADD have been around forever. But autism is this new beast that showed up in the last, I would say 12 to 15 years and it’s really come on really, really strong in the last five. And it’s this spectrum of disorder with these kids neurologically but it’s also a spectrum of the gut and all sorts of things.
But from a chiropractic perspective, you see we can change this, we can change the way their bodies function, because what do we do? We clear the nervous system so it’s always communicating at 100% with the brain, and make sure that brain is fully functioning, always telling the body what to do. We see that clears up major anxiety on the inside of these children and I knew, I was like man, I got to get this done.
So that’s what’s drove me since then. And because of that struggle, I’ve been able to help a lot of docs get through hard times, and understanding when we get patients, and this is the thing man, it’s being human because when patients come in and they’re going through major things, major struggle, whether it’s financial or emotional and pivotal.
Julie and I also own a company called, not own, we started a charity called Spine Project, which takes care of all of our military vets at no cost. And we’ve been doing it for ten years, it’s just we finally got it done two years ago, but the thing is, is that it allows me to know what these people are going through and help and understand that there’s such an emotional component to how their neurology works and get where they’re coming from when they’re sitting in front of me.
And then I’m never trying to sell them anything, I’m always giving them what they need and not sit there hoping that they sign up for the next care plan, because that’s not how we work.
I think a lot of chiro’s get stuck in that mantra of, next patient up, next care plan in, and instead of looking at them as the whole patient and what we can do to help support their family. Does that make sense?
Dr. Ed:
Yeah, yeah, and I mean, it sounds like you’re obsessed with helping other doctors, not just reach success, but pediatric family success, right? So I think that’s a perfect transition into what you’re working on and how you’re helping doctors.
Why don’t you explain a little bit about, you call it a passion project, but tell us a little bit about how you’re helping other doctors.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Well, I help other doctors through practice evolution prime, and prime pediatric program, and what it’s set up to do is give them the precise clinical skills they need to have the most confidence that they can in practice and see, when students get out of school, the last thing a student wants to do is learn because their head is full already, and we know that.
And they want to grow a practice so they’re going to start putting money into marketing and into external and internal marketing, growing their brand, which I fully get and understand. But, if you path your doors, if you path your office with people, the first and second day in office, you don’t have the right clinical knowledge and wherewithal, you just destroyed your name with all those people that came in because, for a lack of a better term, you look like an idiot, and that’s not okay.
So my job with prime pediatrics is what we do, is we set these students up and these doctors up to actually get them the better clinical knowledge so they can have the best confidence in what they do. The last thing I want to do is make the next best marketer. I think we have amazing guys in our profession right now to help us market and help us create funnel, like yourself, and to help us really expand our reach externally.
But internally, nobody wants to concentrate on themselves and making themselves the best doctor possible. And they’re avoiding the hard conversation of do I really know how to take care of this patient properly? Do I really know how to look at them and assess proper care and how often they need to be seen, how they actually get neurology to reset in the body, and in the spine, and frequency of care.
Nobody wants to talk about frequency of care. Nobody wants to talk about how often you actually need to see these patients to get things to change in their body without having to put tons and tons of things externally into them to make them work properly.
So what we do with this program is we make them the better doctor, we make them the best doctor possible. I mean, make it convenient, what I mean by that is that sometimes when I talk to doctors, and it happens a lot, I shouldn’t say sometimes.
They’ll have issues with patients and they’ll say okay Skip, how do I fix this? And I say well what are your metrics? Where is your basis of this? What are your exam findings? What is your neurology tell you? What are the primitive reflexes showing you? And what breaks my heart is on the other end of the phone I just get silence.
And I’ll say to them okay, so where did you start with this patient? Well they came in and I checked their spine and I got them adjusted, I did a little postural analysis and we were good. And I said so what drives that posture? What drives that body sitting up? The neurology, right? So then the body, didn’t the body develop with certain checks and balances to keep itself working properly that we can find? They’re called primitive reflexes in children.
And to me those are the alarm systems that show up, I like to think of it as Jurassic Park when they shut down all the electricity and then they got to go chase away from the raptors to turn everything back on. Well she turns that main switch right?
And boom, all the power comes on to the circuit board. And then they’re looking and they’re like okay, there’s a problem right here at the raptor fence, I can get everything to turn on but the raptor fence. Well that’s that primitive reflex that’s not integrated in that kid.
That’s that primitive reflex that integrated too quickly or it’s still prevalent in an adult and that’s why they’re not moving to the next higher function, right? So that’s where this program is a step ahead of everything else, and doctors have to want to be the best doctor and not take a paint by numbers approach to anybody’s health care.
There’s a lot of people out there that can say do this, and do this because these colors look this way on this scan. And I get that, scanning technology’s really important, but there’s so much more, and I can tell you right now and I get a kick out of it because I’m actually getting a chance to say this on your podcast, but I finally got scanning technology four and a half years ago.
So for six years I built a massive pediatric practice with having a badass neurological exam on children so I can have the utmost confidence as possible, and then I should tell that parent exactly what I need to do to get that child to heal like they’re supposed to. Without having to rely on extra tests, that just deal with the technology that’s already built into the body.
Dr. Ed:
I love this.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
If you’re willing to do that, then if you’re willing to do that, you can go anywhere and practice, that’s the thing. That’s what bugs me, is like okay, so you’re going to get me really going here, I’m going to slow down.
But what gets me is that we rely so much on technology to tell us what to do with our patients that inside of them is the computer that we’re trying to look at externally to tell us what to do instead of looking inside that patient and seeing exactly where that neuro input is and where it’s not being expressed.
And what we have to do to restore that communication. And you can go to an island in the middle of Fiji where there’s no power, and take care of every person that comes in contact with you, because all those checks and balance systems are in the body already, you just have to know where to look for it.
That’s what makes me tick and that’s what makes me push forward because here’s the thing Ed, this is the thing, I don’t want my children to be alone in this world being they’re the only ones getting adjusted. You see, our kids, mine, yours, everybody, every chiropractor who has kids and adjusts our kids, and adjusts their kids and takes care of them, we can’t be the rarity anymore.
Our kids are seen as the weird ones because they’re not sick anymore. Our kids are seen as weird because every kid at their school right now got a flu shot and they’re out sick, and my kids are in school right now. And my daughter goes to me, she goes, why is everybody getting sick daddy? How come whenever we come back to school, nobody stays in school for the first month?
And I said honey, that’s the stuff that’s getting put into their body and it’s affecting how they’re…and I said Peyton, you’re different, you’re adjusted. And I don’t want that anymore for my kids, I want all these kids to have that same opportunity and that same health, so my kids aren’t, our kids aren’t the freaks anymore.
Dr. Ed:
The weird ones.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
You know? The weird ones because they don’t get sick or when they get sick we let them have a fever and we let them sweat and we let them get uncomfortable because we know, and this is just like in business Ed, anything that is anything worth actual growth requires you to be uncomfortable and it’s the same thing with health.
You’re going to be uncomfortable ea little bit when you’re sick, but guess what? If you let the body do its job, you’re going to kick it in the butt and you’re not going to be sick anymore, that’s how it works, right?
Dr. Ed:
Yeah, one thing I’m pulling from this and there were so many, but one thing, I’ve got a full page of notes, but is that-
Dr. Skip Weiss:
I apologize.
Dr. Ed:
There’s the confidence aspect that people, so many docs just thing, I just need to do my marketing, that’s it, right? I just need to market more and market more. But heres the thing is that if you’re confident, and maybe your self confidence but your clinical confidence or whatever, that is linked to your marketing.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Yeah.
Dr. Ed:
Yeah, part of the reason why I’m a great marketer is because I show up confidently. Right.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Exactly, exactly.
Dr. Ed:
Yeah, it’s confidence.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
And then-
Dr. Ed:
Right.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Exactly. Exactly.
Dr. Ed:
Yeah, it’s confidence. I love that.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
It’s confidence and you have tried and true skills that you know work. And that’s the thing Ed, you know what you do works. You don’t have to, when you’re really confidant in what you do, whether it’s your clinical skills or seeing people change. What changed my confidence was when I started changing frequency of care for patients and actually seeing them, how their body needed to be seen instead of what an insurance system told me that they needed to be seen for.
Dr. Ed:
Yeah.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
When I saw 22 degrees scoliosis change in 16 weeks, to go down to 8 degrees. Or I see a kid that suffers from seizures and after his second adjustment the seizures are gone and within two weeks his EEG is completely clear; those are the things that I started seeing as results that actually made my confidence increase. And then, to me, I don’t really give a crap what people think about me anymore because I just want to get them better and if they choose not to take my care, that’s okay with me.
Dr. Ed:
Right.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
I know that somebody else will be able to serve that audience is looking for but that confidence in knowing what you’re doing is so key because almost those people … you can almost say people pay, people buy your confidence. They pay for you for your confidence in getting them better. But the caveat to that to is to be quite frank, that there’s a lot of confident people who are confident in their own shit that doesn’t necessarily work all the time.
Dr. Ed:
That’s very true. It does … you do need to have results. Confidence with results, I like that.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
That’s how I see it.
Dr. Ed:
I want to make sure I get some, I get somewhere where Docs who are listening and they are like on the edge of their seat where they can actually go to and check this out. So, primepediatricprogram.com, so that’s primepediatricprogram.com and now, if you’re listening actually Doc … if you’re listening on your desktop, you can actually head over to thechiropracticphilanthropist.com. So head off iTunes, head to thechiropracticphilanthropist.com. We’ll have a webpage dedicated to our discussion with Dr. Skip today. But we’ll have all those links as well and all the resources he’s going to be providing and has provided today. And if you’re on your mobile, go ahead and expand open those show notes and you’ll find it right there and you can connect to primepediatricprogram.com right now.
Doc, okay, you ready for this? I’m going to actually take you, I’m going to place you in the Tspeed time machine, you ready?
Dr. Skip Weiss:
All right.
Dr. Ed:
Okay, here we go. So, we put you in the Tspeed time machine, we send you back to a younger version of yourself. This is right after you came out of chiropractic college, but you have all the knowledge and the life experience you have today. So, you meet that younger self. What would you say to that younger self?
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Don’t … have no doubt in who you are as a man. And to always push forward and do what’s best for your family. All the knowledge you had is between your ears and you just had to have clinical confidence in what you do. Just keep pushing forward. That’s what I would say to myself. And I get shook up about that because, dude you know as well as I do, the shit you have to go through to be the person you are every day from your past, they are the things that make you who you are. And I would definitely say that to just keep… have full confidence in yourself and know that what you do is going to change lives forever. And be confident. And be a damn good dad and a damn good husband. Your family deserves that.
Dr. Ed:
Yeah, yeah. I love this. You know, and this is how I felt in practice is I wasn’t changing even just the next generations’ health; I was changing the generation after that too, you know? Future generations.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Exactly. Exactly, man. I adjusted a baby last night that was five hours old and I sat down on the couch in the hospital, right, and I’m taking care of this little one. I look up and there’s four generations of people that I’ve taken care of in that family.
Dr. Ed:
Crazy.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
From grand, from baby, through brothers and sisters, through mom, through grandmother and great grandfather. The cool thing is, here’s what’s really, really amazing about that whole thing is the reason why I saw all of them is because I saw the baby six years ago first. Mom came in because baby wasn’t latching right and some serious colic. Then I look around and this lady, Ed, she’s got nine kids. This is her tenth, man. Just before that day, I’m sitting with this group of six kids and the mom looks at me, she goes, “Here I have a picture for you”. It’s a picture of me with the kids and she goes, “Do you realize you’ve adjusted every one of those kids?” And I said, “Yeah”. She said, “No, no, you don’t get this. You’ve adjusted every one of them and the longest they went their life without an adjustment after they were born is four hours and that’s because you couldn’t get down to the hospital quick enough. Those are the cool things in practice, right?
Dr. Ed:
Yeah.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Those are the [inaudible] things.
Dr. Ed:
Yeah.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
I don’t know what I’d do, man.
Dr. Ed:
Yeah, its so true though. There’s something about the energy. Again, this may not be for every Doc who’s listening, but there’s something about taking care of kids and the energy that they bring to your practice too. I’ve got to tell you if I still had… If I was still practicing today, I’d probably take your course. It’d be a lot.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Man, I appreciate it. I’ve taken so many courses to get to where I am and that’s a big thing too. Not just one thing is going to make you amazing. It might give you some extra… it’s gonna give you extra things to make you a better Doctor; it’ll give you clinical lessons but the one thing I can tell all Doctors out there is that there’s numerous amount of courses to take to keep honing your craft and to be amazing at what you do. Just keep moving forward, man.
I appreciate that. That’s a hell of a compliment. Thanks Dr. Ed.
Dr. Ed:
No, I mean, it’s genuine by the way.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Thank you.
Dr. Ed:
Because I was always, I was always looking for, like what is… Well, and I do this today even, you know, now people think I’m like, or consider me more of a marketer, but I’m always looking like what is… How can I improve what I’m already doing? I know that there’s, people that are doing it better and how can I learn? So, it was the same in practice, and I encourage all Doctors who are listening too, is that, really kind of look inside yourself. When was the last time you really invested in honing up those confidence skills? At some point, I was almost like cruise control for me in practice. You know?
Dr. Skip Weiss:
It’s so easy to do. That’s so easy to do is to get in that cruise control and that comfort mode. Sometimes I find that whenever I get comfortable, something’s going to make me really uncomfortable and it’s usually my wife, Dr. Julie.
Dr. Ed:
That works.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Yeah, it usually is Julie. She straightens me out, man.
Dr. Ed:
Okay, so one thing that we love to end our episodes and wrap up with is a resource. So, if there a resource that’s like, look, all Doctors listening right now need to go and listen to this, read this book possibly, or check this person out; what would that resource be that you’d like to drop?
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Can I give you two?
Dr. Ed:
Sure.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Okay, one of the most important resources I find in practice right now is when it comes to technique, is either learning MC2 and tonal work. Then, taking tonal work to the next level and learning cranial. Then rounding that out with learning Thompson order. The Docs that I trust most with that I’ll honestly tell you, and I get nothing out of this, is John Minardi for Thompson work. Dr. Martin Rosen for SOT and cranial work. Dr. Dan Bromstein, Dr. Christina Stitcher and Dr. Steve Hoffman for the MC2 work. Those guys are changing chiropractic as a playing field.
I would think the best written resource right now… that I don’t know because I pull from so much. I pull from so much. I would say anything that you can get your hands on regarding pediatric neurology and actually understanding how kids operate. Understanding where premier reflexes develop in a child and at what age, what gestational week these things come in will give mile ahead of any sort of health care provider out there. Chiropractic [inaudible]
I hope that helps.
Dr. Ed:
Yeah, absolutely.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Alright.
Dr. Ed:
By the way I did the MC2 training and God that feels like so long ago now. But I did that. It was transformative for my practice like how I approached kids.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
It is.
Dr. Ed:
So I really enjoyed that.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
It is.
Dr. Ed:
Yeah.
So, listeners. You can head over to thechiropracticphilanthropist.com. Again, you can check out the links and the resources that Dr. Skip has actually provided as well. We’ll have a webpage dedicated to this discussion. Doc, I’ve got to thank you for bringing the obsession and the passion to TCP today. I talk to a lot of Doctors and clearly you have a passion but I can tell, I can feel it, that you’re obsessed with helping other Doctors help more kids and more families.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Yeah, man.
Dr. Ed:
So I want to thank you for that.
Dr. Skip Weiss:
Thank you so much. I hope at some point I’ll get to talk to you again Dr. Ed and keep doing what you’re doing, man. This is so pivotal for Doctors and students. You are so important. You just need to know that.
Dr. Ed:
Thank you.







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