Traditional therapy
has viewed pain from two different perspectives. One school of
thought was to avoid pain, "mask" the symptoms and teach
the patient to cope with his or her problem. This approach did
not cause direct trauma, but forced people to be satisfied with
limited results. There was the possibility of cumulative trauma
since untreated restrictions caused micro trauma to the patient's
system over time. This micro trauma was like a ticking time bomb
left in the system, forcing a return of symptoms or a shift to
another area. This is rarely a satisfactory solution.
The other school of thought was "no pain, no gain." Too
many times patients were instructed to exercise and force their
way through the pain. The result: a lot of strong patients in
agony. Or manipulation and other aggressive manual techniques
produced force into osseous structures while paying no attention
to the tight surrounding myofascial environment. The aggressive
force used created the possibility of increased pain, injury or
a return of symptoms because the environment of every osseous
structure, the myofascial system, had not been released first.
Myofascial Release can safely and effectively free the osseous
structures and/or create a more open environment to enhance the
effectiveness of manipulation, mobilization procedures, muscle
energy techniques and exercise and flexibility programs.
Is there a possibility of another option for the relief of pain
and the restoration of motion? I strongly believe the possibility
exists, based on my years of experience and the experience of
over 20,000 physical therapists (one-third of the profession)
that I have had the opportunity to train in this approach.
I would like you to consider the possibility of a third treatment
option of relieving pain and restoring motion: therapeutic pain.
One aspect of the Myofascial Release Approach is where the therapist
applies gentle, sustained pressure into the fascial system, creating
what the patient reports as a feeling of good pain or a good stretch.
Release of the pressure of the fascial system around the muscles,
nerves, blood vessels and the osseous structures creates a free
mobile environment of these pain-sensitive structures, producing
consistent results in relieving pain and restoring functional
mobility.
Another aspect of myofascial release is the sophisticated facilitation
techniques called Myofascial Unwinding. The fascial system is
a piezoelectric tissue, so when the therapist applies gentle sustained
pressure into the fascial system through compression, traction
or twisting the fascial system or moving a particular body part
(taking gravity out of the system), it creates a flow of the body's
bioenergy. This flow triggers the mind/body complex into spontaneous
motion. This spontaneous therapeutic motion allows the body to
assume positions in space that represent positions of past traumas.
These positions of trauma represent one's subconscious fear, negative
memories and/or pain that have created holding or bracing patterns
which have impeded progress of the traditional therapeutic approach.
It is these positions in space and the re-experiencing of this
pain memory which is never injurious, that takes the threat out
of the system and allows the mind/body complex to let go of these
holding or bracing patterns so that healing can commence.
Working in reverse, Myofascial Release, and Myofascial Unwinding,
release the fascial tissue restrictions, thereby altering the
habitual muscular response and allowing the positional, reversible
amnesia to surface, producing emotions and belief systems that
are the cause of holding patterns and ultimately symptoms. Thus
it is important for the therapist to quiet his or her mind and
feel the inherent motions. Quietly following the tissue or body
part three-dimensionally along the direction of ease takes the
patient into the significant restrictions or positions. 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 can then move into positions that allow these state or
position dependent physiologic or flashback phenomena to reoccur.
As this happens within the safe environment of a treatment session,
the patient can facilitate the body's inherent self-correcting
mechanism to obtain improvement.
The Myofascial Release Approach is more than just an assemblage
of techniques. Instead, it creates a whole-body awareness allowing
the health professional to facilitate change, growth and the possibility
for total resolution of restrictions, emotions and belief systems
that impede patient progresas
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