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Chris,
Agreed again, I would like to speak with you personally sometime if possible and learn from what you are studying in your lab environment if you have the time (and are willing) after this global weirding freeze abates. St Louis High temps are finally up to low 30 degree range.
1. It's the innate ability we all possess to heal ourselves. It has nothing to do with an external, supernatural energy. Instead, the session creates conditions that are more ideal for the clients' bodies to heal themselves. Clients expect to be healed, are doing something active to promote it, and receive "permission" from us as therapists... Nothing supernatural or energetic about it. I think this makes sense. But then why should any of these practices be called "energy work"? What you've described is really something else entirely, isn't it? 2. Yes, it absolutely does matter. If clients are actually tapping into their own innate healing abilities, they should be informed of what is really happening. They should have the option of practicing it on their own instead of forking out big bucks to practitioners. They should be educated and empowered to continue their own journey into self-healing, relying on their innate abilities to heal themselves, not some nebulous energy that exists outside of themselves.
Excellent point.
3. You learned it works by simple observation.
The scientist in me can't resist pointing out that simple observations can be misleading.
Of course it works, but no supernatural or energetic forces are at work. I learned this for myself and now practice progressive relaxation and natural (ideomotor) movements instead of relying on other practitioners to "channel energy" into me. I am in control of my own healing, and it's freeing!
What you are describing seems to me to be like progressive relaxation (as you have stated) and/or psychotherapy performed with minimal talk (if that makes any sense - it does to me). Would you agree? And, again, what about the problem of calling it something that it isn't?
Stefanie,
You might like this article that addresses myofascial unwinding and ideomotor action.
Thanks for posting the Barrett links.
That's a good article, Vlad. Thanks! It cites Barrett's article, "The Analgesia of Movement", which suggests that myofascial unwinding can be explained as an ideomotor movement.
Do any energy workers have a response or objection to the proposition that the healing you observe is really a part of our own bodies' innate abilities to heal themselves through natural movement, rather than energy?
Like I stated earlier, I don't see the point in debating energy work, but I would like to read other opinions on this subject.
Vlad said:Stefanie,
You might like this article that addresses myofascial unwinding and ideomotor action. Thanks for posting the Barrett links.
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