Imagine you were injured
a couple of years ago. You received on-going therapy in the form
of hot packs, ultrasound, massage, electrical stimulation, exercise
and flexibility training, joint mobilization and muscle energy
techniques, medication and psychological counseling to no avail.
All of the standard tests show nothing and you desperately want
to get better.
You've been given a multitude of different diagnostic labels and
all the experts are telling you there is nothing wrong. You feel
imprisoned in a body that won't respond and allow you to play
and work again. You feel helpless and out of control What if something
was overlooked? What could it be?
THE INSTINCTUAL "FREEZE RESPONSE"
When many of us are injured, we go into a state of disassociation
at the moment of trauma to survive. Our body/mind experiences
an instinctive "freeze response" and this positional,
physiological memory becomes indelibly imprinted into our mind/body
awareness. The sympathetic and parasympathetic autonomic nervous
systems become stuck in a state of hyper arousal that is not under
our voluntary control.1 It is like having your foot on the accelerator
of a car and the other foot on the brake. This consumes an enormous
amount of energy and eventually exhausts us.
Because this positional memory becomes disassociated and locked
in our subconscious, we have no awareness of it and without conscious
awareness, we have no control of it.
This "freeze response", over time, creates holding or
bracing patterns that eventually produce increased chronic muscular
tone, spasm, and myofascial restrictions that eventually become
symptoms.
Traditionally, therapy focuses on symptoms, explaining why modalities,
exercise, joint mobilization and muscle energy techniques, massage
and/or medicine can, many times, only produce poor or temporary
results.
Why didn't good psychological counseling help? Possibly because
the majority of psychological therapy is done in consensus consciousness.
In other words, "talk therapy" and analysis are focused
on the conscious level and the cause of the chronic symptom complex
is on the instinctual level, which is not accessed by words and
analysis, or for that matter by traditional therapeutic interventions
or medicine.
What can help this state of disassociation? Myofascial Release
and Myofascial Unwinding.
Myofascial restrictions do not show up in any of the standard
tests, so myofascial restrictions that solidify these chronic
holding or freeze response patterns in our bodies are missed or
misdiagnosed in health care.
Myofascial Release frees these powerful, structural restrictions
that place enormous pressure upon sensitive structures that produce
pain, headaches and restrictions of motion. And Myofascial Unwinding
(the motion facilitation component of the Myofascial Release Approach)
guides the patient into significant positions of past traumas.
In the safety of the therapeutic environment, the therapist gently
holds the patient in these significant positions of past trauma.
In these therapeutic positions, the patient's tissue memory releases
the instinctual bracing patterns. The "freeze response"
is then deactivated, which allows for continued structural release
and elimination of symptoms.
The release of tissue memory creates awareness to return the patient
to conscious choice and control of his or her destiny. The patient
can then progress toward the ultimate goal of healing and health.
Reference: Levine,
Peter, Waking the Tiger Healing Trauma; North Atlantic Books.,
Berkeley 1997