Dr. Erin Jewel Rosen

Dr. Erin Jewel Rosen I am here to help each individual achieve a stronger level of health and a renewed enthusiasm for living their lives!

My name is Erin Rosen and I received my doctorate in chiropractic from Life University in September of 2013. As a student and a new doctor I am motivated to make a difference in the healthcare field especially the field of chiropractic. My leadership roles included: President of the SOT club, Member of the Appropriations, & Professional Leadership Committee, research track scholarship recipient, p

roctor for the 180 hour ICPA certification series, instructor for SOT seminars and the 1st student certified in SOT by SOTO-USA. I was first exposed to research as a Kinesiology major at UMass Amherst and continued this work in chiropractic as a member of the research track at Life University. My work included: data collection and analysis for various research projects, as well as a paper acceptance and presentation at the International Research and Philosophy Symposium (IRAPS) conference at Sherman College. I also attended Babson College in Wellesley, MA. and was a Women in Leadership Scholarship recipient and participating student of the Women in Leadership Program. I graduated with honors from UMass Amherst with a degree in Kinesiology. I continued to further my studies in the health care field by graduating from the Institute for Integrated Nutrition, becoming a certified Viniyoga instructor, Kundalina Yoga instructor and a Khalsa Way Prenatal and Pregnancy yoga instructor. While in high school I founded a non-profit organization, Erin’s Helping Hands. Under my direction over 400 volunteers provided over 20,000 blankets to needy children around the world. In addition to blankets, care packages were provided to children entering foster care and homeless shelters throughout MA. In addition to the various pre-professional experiences I bring to my profession an accomplished athletic background as an elite, nationally ranked rhythmic gymnast and over 9 years of coaching experience. I understand first hand many intricacies and functional capabilities of performance in both elite and amateur athletes. My degrees in both Kinesiology and Chiropractic have also created a unique understanding of human biomechanics and neurophysiology.

Many people think of clutter as something visible, but mental clutter affects health just as much.Constant notifications...
06/03/2026

Many people think of clutter as something visible, but mental clutter affects health just as much.

Constant notifications, unfinished tasks, overstimulation, multitasking, and the pressure to stay mentally engaged all day create a level of background tension that people often adapt to without realizing it.

Over time, that mental load influences focus, sleep, patience, energy, and even how present people feel in their daily lives.

Creating more space mentally doesn’t require eliminating responsibility altogether. Sometimes it begins with fewer inputs, clearer boundaries, and allowing moments where attention is not constantly being pulled in multiple directions.

The mind and body respond differently when there’s room to breathe.

Your chiropractor asking about your digestion isn't a strange question. It's a clinically important one.Here's why:The v...
06/01/2026

Your chiropractor asking about your digestion isn't a strange question. It's a clinically important one.

Here's why:
The vagus nerve, the longest cranial nerve in the human body, it runs from your brainstem all the way to your intestines. It governs digestion, heart rate, immune response, emotional regulation, and the tone of your entire parasympathetic nervous system.

When the upper cervical spine (the top of your neck) is misaligned, it can directly affect vagal tone, meaning the quality of the neurological signal to your gut decreases.

This shows up as: bloating, slow digestion, constipation, acid reflux, food sensitivities that seem to appear from nowhere, and a persistent sense that your gut "isn't right" despite dietary changes.

This is why whole-person chiropractic care doesn't stop at back pain. And it's why I incorporate nutritional assessment alongside structural work. The gut and the spine are in constant dialogue; you can't fully address one while ignoring the other.

Have you ever had digestive issues that no one connected to your nervous system or spine? Drop a 🙋 in the comments. I want to know how common this is for you all.

This is why I do what I do.I spent years watching patients walk into offices feeling like a problem to be solved,  rushe...
05/30/2026

This is why I do what I do.

I spent years watching patients walk into offices feeling like a problem to be solved, rushed through appointments, handed a generic plan, and sent home without answers.

That's not healing. That's a transaction.

At Tailored Touch Chiropractic, I meet you exactly where you are, physically, emotionally, and functionally. Because your body keeps score. It holds the stress of your unspoken worries, the posture of your difficult years, the tension of feeling unseen.

And when you finally feel safe enough to let it release — that's when real healing begins.

I don't believe in one-size-fits-all care. I believe in taking the time to understand your whole story, so the care we create together actually fits your whole life.

Many people pay attention to major stressors while overlooking the smaller transitions that fill most of the day.Moving ...
05/28/2026

Many people pay attention to major stressors while overlooking the smaller transitions that fill most of the day.

Moving from work mode into rest. Leaving one environment and entering another. Going from stillness into movement without enough time to reset in between.

The body experiences all of these shifts.

When transitions happen too quickly or too frequently, people often stay mentally and physically “on” longer than they realize. Over time, this can create a feeling of constant low-level tension that becomes difficult to separate from normal life.

Intentional living is not only about the bigger choices we make. It’s also about how we move through the smaller moments repeatedly.

Sometimes creating more ease begins with allowing transitions to happen more slowly and with more awareness.

One of the more interesting things about human behavior is how quickly people adapt.A posture pattern becomes familiar. ...
05/26/2026

One of the more interesting things about human behavior is how quickly people adapt.

A posture pattern becomes familiar. A stressful routine becomes expected. Constant tension becomes part of everyday life. Eventually, what once felt temporary starts feeling normal.

This happens physically, mentally, and emotionally.

People are incredibly capable of functioning through patterns that no longer support them simply because those patterns have been repeated long enough.

Awareness changes that.

Not all at once, and not through judgment, but through gradually noticing what has become automatic and deciding whether it still deserves a place in daily life.

Many meaningful changes begin there.

No two people experience stress, movement patterns, or health challenges in exactly the same way.That’s why care should ...
05/24/2026

No two people experience stress, movement patterns, or health challenges in exactly the same way.

That’s why care should never feel one-size-fits-all.

At Tailored Touch Health, chiropractic care is approached through observation, individualized assessment, and attention to the patterns influencing how someone moves through daily life.

For some people, support may focus more on tension patterns and posture. For others, it may involve stress, movement habits, nutrition, or the relationship between physical and emotional health.

The goal is not simply temporary relief. It’s helping people better understand the factors influencing their health while creating support that feels sustainable and personalized to them.

Care becomes more effective when it reflects the individual receiving it.
🔗 https://www.tailoredtouchhealth.com/services-1

Many of the stressors that affect health are subtle and repetitive.Constant multitasking. Skipping meals. Staying mental...
05/22/2026

Many of the stressors that affect health are subtle and repetitive.

Constant multitasking. Skipping meals. Staying mentally “on” all day. Moving from one responsibility to the next without enough time to reset in between.

Individually, these things may not seem significant. But over time, they create patterns that influence energy, focus, tension, sleep, digestion, and overall resilience.

People often wait for something dramatic before acknowledging stress, yet many health challenges develop gradually through the accumulation of smaller daily demands.

This is why intentional living matters. Not as perfection, but as awareness of the patterns shaping everyday life.

Small lifestyle shifts can create meaningful changes when they support the person consistently over time.

05/20/2026

There’s a natural pace to sustainable change.

Many people have been taught to approach health through urgency—fixing symptoms quickly, pushing harder, or trying to force progress before the body is ready to support it.

But lasting change tends to happen differently.

It develops through consistency, supportive habits, personalized care, and enough patience for new patterns to become familiar over time.

Healing is rarely linear.

But it often becomes more sustainable when we stop rushing the process.

The environments we spend time in influence more than mood.They affect pacing, attention, tension levels, breathing patt...
05/18/2026

The environments we spend time in influence more than mood.

They affect pacing, attention, tension levels, breathing patterns, and how supported we feel throughout the day. Some spaces naturally encourage settling and recovery. Others keep us in a constant state of adjustment without us fully realizing it.

Over time, people often adapt to environments that ask too much from them physically or mentally. Eventually that level of effort begins to feel normal, even when it’s draining.

Sometimes improving health begins with looking at the spaces we move through every day:
how we work,
how we rest,
how much stimulation we’re constantly navigating,
and whether there’s enough room for the body and mind to recover between demands.

Healing is influenced by environment more than most people realize.

Address

2250 Main Street
Concord, MA
01742

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