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Our Story

The Big Bang

 


 

Our
Story

The Big Bang

 The Gravity Collision

 CHAPTER ONE


Two cosmic forces on separate paths. One, Comet Maximus — a fireball of fresh ideas, rebellion, and raw potential, streaking across the universe. The other, ISS Parmar — a steady, powerful station of knowledge and collaboration, built for the long haul.

Comet Maximus (Dr. Paul Maximus, ND) burned through life — aced school, crashed hard, dropped out, and nearly didn’t make it. But he rebuilt. Became a world-class coach. Then an ND. Fought every professor on evidence-based medicine. Only one could keep up: ISS Parmar.

ISS Parmar (Dr. Bobby Parmar, ND) had spent 17 years in orbit — a medical powerhouse, pulling patients in with precision and depth. But he was trapped, working under others, waiting to break free. He tried scaling — some partnerships worked, but none could go the distance.

Then, just as Comet Maximus was about to exit the ND solar system, boom. Impact.

The collision birthed something new: Gravity Health.

From the cosmic dust came Irene — a navigator and stabilizer, and Haruy — her best friend and the glue holding the mission together. Then Madison — a force of resilience, answering the call of the Yukon like a rogue planet finding its system.

Now, we’re not just a clinic. We’re a force. Gravity pulls the best together.

And we’re just getting started. 🚀

From Stardust to Stations

 CHAPTER TWO


On initial collision, Comet Maximus and ISS Parmar shared the same spinning path, caught in the glow of two small rooms at Mint Integrative Health. But their energy built too fast, too bright — disrupting the system until escape was inevitable.

Then, a radio signal came from deep space.

Cosmonaut JLM (Dr. Jocelyn Land Murphy, ND), broadcasting from Whitehorse — a planet few had dared to visit. She needed reinforcements. The conditions were uncertain, possibly hostile. But the call was too intriguing to ignore.

So, they launched an exploratory mission.

What they found wasn’t just habitable — it was magnetic. The people, the land, the need. One mission turned into another. And another. Before long, they were building a permanent landing pad.

Then, just as their Gravity Health Whitehorse outpost was settling in, a new opportunity appeared in their home orbit. A space station of their own, in a prime sector of Vancouver. The kind of long-term launch site they couldn’t pass up.

So, they took the leap. A seven-year lease, as Gravity Health Vancouver.

Now, the Gravity crew shuttles between both worlds, touching down in Whitehorse once a month while maintaining mission control in Vancouver. By late 2025, Madison will be permanently stationed at the Whitehorse outpost, a dedicated presence in deep space.

Two locations. One team. One mission.

The Gravity system is expanding. 🚀

 

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Stay in the loop on our latest thoughts, webinars, and announcements.Â