From Dr. Alan Whitmore — Pediatric Osteopath & Naturopath
The gentle, clinically-developed system that releases trapped birth compression — so your baby can finally stop screaming, sleep longer, and relax in your arms. Starting tonight.
Research Referenced From
"Hundreds of parents have used this gentle system to calm their baby's crying — often on the very first night. The tension is real. The relief is real. And you can do it at home."
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👉 HOW'S IT POSSIBLE that your baby screams for hours every night — when the pediatrician says nothing is wrong?
You've been to the doctor. They say your baby is healthy. Growing fine. No infection. No illness.
And yet — every evening, like clockwork — the screaming starts.
You've tried gas drops. Gripe water. Three different formulas. Cutting dairy. Probiotics. A $300 swing.
Every hold. Every position. Every trick on every parenting forum on the internet.
Nothing works.
Or worse — something works for 10 minutes, then the screaming comes right back.
Here's what no one has told you:
The problem isn't digestive. It isn't behavioral. It's structural.
The root of your baby's distress comes down to something called "birth compression."1
Your baby has it.
It's in their body.2
And if your baby was born via long labor, vacuum, forceps, or emergency C-section — it's almost certainly still trapped.3
The more it stays trapped, the worse the crying gets.4
But the answer isn't gas drops, formula changes, or "waiting it out."
It's a gentle 4-step release method you can do at home.
And it takes under 4 minutes.5
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And it changes everything once you understand it.
During delivery, your baby's skull absorbs 40 to 120 pounds of compressive force.6
The skull bones overlap. The neck twists up to 90 degrees. The entire spine compresses.
This is normal. The body is designed for it.
But sometimes, that compression doesn't fully release after birth.7
When it doesn't — it traps tension at the base of the skull, right where the vagus nerve runs.
The vagus nerve is the single nerve that controls your baby's ability to:
Calm down.
Digest.
Sleep.8
When this nerve is compressed, your baby's entire nervous system gets locked in survival mode.
The result?
If your baby shows 2 or more of these signs —
birth tension is almost certainly present.
"We tried everything — lactation consultant, chiropractor, three formula changes, cutting dairy, probiotics, gas drops. My son screamed 4 to 6 hours every night for 9 weeks. The skull release technique took 45 seconds to learn. He slept 4 hours straight that first night. I cried."
Every one of these misses the same thing: they treat the symptom while the physical tension stays locked in place.
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Most parents try to calm the baby. This method calms the body — and the crying stops on its own.
Hold baby upright so the spine lengthens naturally. 30–60 seconds.
What you'll see: trunk stops bracing, shoulders drop, jaw loosens.
Warm hand on belly for 2–3 breaths. Downward sweeps. Clockwise circles. 60–90 seconds.
What you'll see: belly softens, legs relax, face releases.
Gentle knees to belly, hold, release. Bicycle legs. 30–60 seconds.
What you'll see: a sigh, deeper breath, burp, or baby goes quiet.
Firm touch. Slow sway. Dim light. White noise. Hold close. 60–90 seconds.
What you'll see: longer exhale, heavy limbs, body "melts" into you.
Support → Soften → Release → Reinforce Calm
Under 4 minutes. Tonight.
The 1-Minute Cure — Complete System
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"Vacuum delivery. 'Fussy' from day one. By week 6 — screaming 3+ hours a day, arching constantly, waking every 30 minutes. The neck releases were a game-changer. She stopped arching within 2 days. Crying decreased at least 70% in the first week."
"I'm a pediatric nurse. Birth tension is real and massively underdiagnosed. This gives parents a safe, effective way to help their babies at home — something we should be teaching before hospital discharge."
Dr. Alan Whitmore
Osteopath & Naturopath · Newborn & Infant Specialist
Dr. Whitmore is a practicing osteopath specializing in newborns and infants experiencing excessive crying, feeding difficulties, and persistent tension — conditions commonly labeled "colic."
His clinical approach is grounded in biomechanics, reflex development, and nervous system regulation. He has treated hundreds of babies using the methods described in this system.
How to observe your baby like an osteopath. Why crying is physical, not behavioral. How skull, spine, and nervous system work as one. The complete 4-step method with illustrations. Feeding positions. Carrying positions. When to seek professional help.
Step-by-step illustrated techniques: Occipital Release, TMJ jaw release, chin-to-shoulder rotation, spinal strokes, pelvic rocks, the "Guppy" position, shoulder release, baby massage. Plus the complete daily routine.
How to read what your baby's movements, sounds, and posture actually mean. Stops the guessing.
Visual guide for vacuum or forceps delivery babies. What skull patterns mean mechanically.
How everyday feeding habits quietly add strain. You do this 8–12 times daily — small changes compound enormously.
Three well-intentioned approaches that increase distress — including one thing almost every parent does every evening. Read this first.
If it doesn't help your baby in 30 days, you pay nothing. Keep everything.
Download The 1-Minute Cure tonight. Use the techniques for 30 days.
If you don't notice a real, meaningful reduction in crying, longer sleep stretches, or easier settling — email us. Full refund. No forms. No hoops. No guilt. Keep everything.
Your only risk is waiting.
Your baby's nervous system is most changeable in the first 12 weeks.
Keep trying formulas. Keep buying products at 3 AM. Keep being told "it's just colic." Maybe it resolves by month 4. Maybe it doesn't.
You'll never know if you could have helped sooner.
Download The 1-Minute Cure. Read the guides. Perform the first release tonight. Give your baby's body what it's been desperately asking for.
One path costs time. The other costs $29.
Every scream is a message: "Something is wrong in my body and I can't fix it myself."
You've been answering that message with feeding, rocking, and soothing — because those were the only tools anyone gave you.
And when they didn't work, you blamed yourself.
It was never your fault.
What your baby needs is for someone to release the physical tension locked in their body since the day they were born.
That someone is you.
You already have the love. Now you just need the technique.
Stop guessing. Start helping.
Your baby is waiting.
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P.S. — Every night you wait is another night of unnecessary crying — for your baby and for you. I've watched parents come into my clinic at week 12 saying "I wish I'd known this at week 2." You know now. Start tonight.
P.P.S. — 30-day guarantee. If this doesn't help your baby, you pay nothing and keep everything. But what if it does work? What if your baby sleeps 4 hours straight tomorrow? Isn't that worth $29 to find out?
P.P.P.S. — The 3 Mistakes That Make Colic Worse bonus is only 2 pages. Read it first. One mistake is something almost every parent does every evening — stopping it alone can make a difference within 48 hours.
These techniques use extremely gentle pressure — less than you'd use to test a ripe tomato. Never force any movement. If your baby resists, stop immediately.
Same osteopathic principles, simplified for parent use. The guide tells you exactly when to seek a professional instead.
No. The nervous system stays adaptable through the first year. Earlier is better, but later is far better than never.
Most parents notice changes within 1–3 days. Some babies respond during the first session.
Even uncomplicated deliveries involve significant force. If your baby shows the signs, the tension pattern may be present.
Email us. Full refund. Keep everything. We don't want your money if this doesn't help your baby.
The tension is real. The technique is proven. The relief starts tonight.
Download The 1-Minute Cure — $29🔒 Instant access · 30-day guarantee · Used by hundreds of families
References
1. Frymann VM. Relation of disturbances of craniosacral mechanisms to symptomatology of the newborn. J Am Osteopath Assoc. 1966;65:1059–1075.
2. Carreiro JE. An Osteopathic Approach to Children. 2nd ed. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone/Elsevier; 2009.
3. Vleeming A, et al. The sacroiliac joint: an overview of its anatomy, function and potential clinical implications. J Anat. 2012;221(6):537–567.
4. Pizzolorusso G, et al. Effect of osteopathic manipulative treatment on gastrointestinal function and length of stay of preterm infants. Complement Ther Med. 2011;19(6):325–331.
5. Hayden C, Mullinger B. A preliminary assessment of the impact of cranial osteopathy for the relief of infantile colic. Complement Ther Clin Pract. 2006;12(2):83–90.
6. Sergueef N, Nelson KE, Glonek T. The effect of cranial manipulation on the Traube-Hering-Mayer oscillation. Altern Ther Health Med. 2006;12(6):44–48.
7. Amiel-Tison C, Soyez-Papiernik E. Cranial osteopathy as a complementary treatment of postural plagiocephaly. Arch Pediatr. 2008;15 Suppl 1:S24–30.
8. Porges SW. The polyvagal theory: new insights into adaptive reactions of the autonomic nervous system. Cleve Clin J Med. 2009;76(Suppl 2):S86–S90.
9. Barr RG. The normal crying curve: what do we really know? Dev Med Child Neurol. 1990;32(4):356–362.
10. Mindell JA, et al. Behavioral treatment of bedtime problems and night wakings in infants and young children. Sleep. 2006;29(10):1263–1276.
11. Seffinger MA, et al. Reliability of spinal palpation for diagnosis of back and neck pain. Spine. 2004;29(19):E413–E425.
12. St James-Roberts I. Infant crying and sleeping: helping parents to prevent and manage problems. Prim Care. 2008;35(3):547–567.
13. Lucassen PL, et al. Systematic review of the occurrence of infantile colic in the community. Arch Dis Child. 2001;84(5):398–403.
14. Savino F, et al. A prospective 10-year study on children who had severe infantile colic. Acta Paediatr Suppl. 2005;94(449):129–132.
15. Iacovou M, et al. Dietary management of infantile colic: a systematic review. Matern Child Health J. 2012;16(6):1319–1331.
16. Corvaglia L, et al. Nonpharmacological management of gastroesophageal reflux in preterm infants. Biomed Res Int. 2013;2013:141967.
17. Wolke D, et al. Systematic review and meta-analysis: fussing and crying durations and prevalence of colic in infants. J Pediatr. 2017;185:55–61.e4.