I am sure that you
have heard of or experienced the flight or fight response, but
have you ever heard of the freeze response?
For years, I have taught that one of the many benefits of Myofascial
Release and Myofascial Unwinding is the release of the holding
or bracing patterns of the mind/body complex. It seems that during
times of trauma the subconscious develops a protective pattern
that becomes locked into the mind/body complex like a "frozen
moment in time."
I believe that it is these "holding patterns" that have
frustrated therapists using traditional therapy in their efforts
to help their patients have a speedy and complete resolution of
their problems.
In his informative book "Waking the Tiger: Healing Trauma,"
Peter Levine, Ph.D., develops an intriguing model that may explain
the effectiveness of Myofascial Release.
The behaviors of fleeing, fighting, and freezing are so primitive
that they are thought to predate the reptilian brain. These survival
tools are found in all species from spiders and cockroaches to
primates and human beings. When neither flight nor fight will
ensure the animals safety, there is another line of defense; immobility
(freezing), which is just as universal and basic to survival.
No animal, not even the human, has conscious control over whether
or not it freezes in response to threat. 1 When an animal or human
is traumatized, it will enter the freeze response as a survival
strategy. This state of immobility is beyond conscious control
and becomes a vicious cycle maintaining physiological high levels
of activity of both the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous
systems.
In humans, trauma occurs as a result of the initiation of the
instinctual cycle that is rarely allowed to finish.
The duration of the immobility (freezing) response is normally
time-limited; animals go in and they come out. If the animal is
not killed and when threat is over, the animal then discharges
an enormous amount of energy in the form of shaking, profuse sweating
and deep breathing. It then returns to a state of calm alertness.
The human freezing response does not easily resolve itself because
the supercharged energy locked in the nervous system is imprisoned
by the emotions of fear and trauma. The result is that a vicious
cycle of fear and immobility takes over, preventing the response
from completing naturally. When not allowed to complete, these
responses form the symptoms of trauma.1
Myofascial Release allows for a completion of this instinctive
cycle in a safe, natural and effective manner. Working in reverse,
Myofascial Release and Myofascial Unwinding start with present
day restrictions and compensations. The release of fascial restrictions
alters the habitual muscular "holding patterns." With
Myofascial Unwinding, the therapist eliminates gravity from the
system. This unloading of the structure allows the body's righting
reflexes and protective responses to temporarily suspend their
influence. The body, guided by the therapist, can move into positions
of past trauma, which allow for a release of the instinctual "freeze"
response in a safe, gentle and natural manner.
As this occurs, Myofascial Release techniques are utilized to
eliminate structural compensations for a resolution of the patient's
long-standing symptoms.
The goal of Myofascial Release is to return the patient to a pain
free, active lifestyle.
Reference:
Levine, Peter, Waking the tiger Healing Trauma, North Atlantic
Books, Berkeley, CA 1997