Friday, August 27, 2010

The Body as Elements

THE BODY AS ELEMENTS
In may last article I discussed the nature of chi, as being the life force or animating principal within the body, and its connection with the emotions and mental parts and physical parts of the person.
In this article I would like to elaborate upon the more physical aspects of the person as seen by traditional medicine systems such as Chinese medicine and Ayurveda and ancient Greek medicine.
The physical body, that is the physical manifestation of the spirit, can be looked at as being composed of elements. When I talk of elements I am talking about the elements of nature such as earth, water, fire and air. In Ayurveda they also go into the element of ether, which is space without air, such as exists outside of our earth’s atmosphere.
People can have imbalances in the various elements of their bodies. For example too much fire element can manifest as a red face, high blood pressure, heat rashes, a bad temper, frustration, red spots on the face, etc etc. Too little fire in the body can manifest as paleness in the face, cold conditions such as mucus, and poor digestion. In Ayurveda, your digestion is considered a fire, called agni. When the agni is healthy you can digest food well. When it is weak it is hard to digest food properly as so toxins, called ama in Ayurveda build up from the improperly digested food. In Ayurveda, the small intestine is the seat of the Fire element and in Chinese medicine the small intestine meridian is also of the fire element. In Ayurveda, which actually means the science of living in Sanskrit, the world oldest language, the combination of the fire element and water or oil in the body is called Pitta.
The air element rules the nervous system. In Ayurveda the mixture of the air element and ether is called Vata or wind. Too much air in the body will produce nervous conditions such as anxiety and a mind that never is still. It can also produce digestive problems and arthritic joint problems, as well as dry conditions such as dry skin etc... Too little of the air element may produce dullness in the mind and stagnation.
The water element rules emotions such as tranquillity and melancholy. When in balance the water element can produce a calmness, and loving energy such as a mother gives to her children. When there is too much water in the body we will usually see imbalances in the lower body as water tends to sink so we will see oedema, or swelling of the ankles or bloating. We may also see a person being too overweight, or lacking in drive and living in the past. Not enough water in the body can lead to dryness both physically and emotionally. Someone with a dry or cutting intellect and not much love or care for others could be seen as lacking the water element. Again dryness in the body would cause joint problems and dry skin and a lack of fluids in the body such as low amounts of semen, or lack of menstruation etc...
The earth element is what makes body mass such as muscles. Strong muscles, as well as making us be able to do things in the world also give us stability such as the earth provides. A person with a lot of muscle mass is not easily blow over by the wind. They can be “solid as a rock”. When out of balance the earth element could lead to stagnation as earth has a tendency to not move. In the physical body it could manifest as such things as constipation etc

In Ayurveda, earth and water work together in the dosha, or constitutional element, known as kapha. So kapha rules phlegm , mucus, breast milk , lymph and some digestive secretions in the body. Not enough kapha will produce an ungrounded person that is too thin or spaced out. Too much kapha will produce an overweight person that is hard to get out of their routines.
When it comes to massage and the elements again our goal is to bring the body into balance. We need to reduce excess and support deficiencies. Sometimes it is easier to support deficiencies through other means such as healthy diet or herbal medicine but massage can certainly play a part. Also sometimes an element may appear to be deficient because another element is too strong. So in this way too much fire will burn up water or too much water will suppress fire. If we get rid of the excess the apparent deficiency may correct itself.
So, if a person is manifesting symptoms of too much fire in the body then we want to reduce this. The cause of this is often in the small intestine, as this is the seat of Pitta. Often too much fire comes from the repression of emotions such as anger and frustration. So we may do a lot of work on the small intestine and find that a person releases some anger. This should be done by the person naturally feeling the urge to scream or even to hit something such as a pillow. In Chinese Medicine this trapped anger or frustration, is also ruled by the Liver meridian system and the sound of Liver energy releasing is like the sound of wood breaking. This is also why traditionally chopping wood can be a good way to release anger, but vocalising by screaming also helps a lot. The sound vibration coming out of the body in a scream is actually energy that is stored in the body coming out. So it is good to encourage people with too much trapped fire energy to scream it out if they feel the urge to when you massage them. By letting this energy out they will feel more calm and allow for the more peaceful kapha type feelings of earth and water to increase.
Too much air in the body will manifest as too much thinking, rapid eye movements, nervousness, ticklishness, and a feeling of being ungrounded. It can also manifest as a feeling of bloating in the belly. Air and fire symptoms tend to affect the upper body as air and fire rise while water and earth imbalances are seen more in the lower body.
In Ayurveda, the air element or Vata, is situated in the large intestine. I also find, in my 20 years experience of massaging people, that people often have a lot of tightness in the small intestine, even the feeling of a rock in their belly when the Vata is deranged. Often, in order to loosen the intestines in a vata deranged person we need to massage the head first in order to calm their mind. This is especially true in ticklish people who will not be able to tolerate abdominal massage on their feet or legs, the massaging of which will usually proceed an abdominal massage.
Vata releasing from the body may come out as sighs, yawns, burps, or flatulence, as well as the release that comes through deep breathing. These are all ways that vata will release. When the air releases from the body a person will feel calmer and more centred and less agitated by anxiety or a restless mind. They may also feel their abdominal area to be less bloated often making them look thinner or more toned. Many other benefits can be achieved through the release of vata such as better joints etc...
Kapha releasing from the body can be achieved through deep long strokes and pressure points. The kapha that will come out will come out as mucous, or phlegm. It can also come out through releasing constipation and extra bowel movements. Many times after a massage, or during a massage, people will experience a feeling of nasal congestion or the feeling of wanting to cough up phlegm. This is Kapha releasing. They may also experience a feeling of invigoration and get up and go. This is due to the kapha being released which was previously causing stagnation for the person.
Ayurveda recommends for Vata imbalances that we massage lightly, for Pitta imbalances that we do a medium depth massage and for kapha imbalances that we massage more deeply. We can also use Ayurvedic massage oils that have herbs specifically designed to balance the doshas, or constitutional elements within the body. This is one of the main principals of the practice of Ayurvedic massage. I recommend Banyan Botanicals range of oils for this purpose.
Of course, essential oils can also affect the various elements such as lavender calming the Vata, cinnamon increasing Pitta, frankincense increasing Kapha etc.
For Ayurvedic dietary recommendation for treating elemental imbalances I recommend Paul Pitchford’s book Healing with wholefoods and Amadea Morningstar’s book The Ayurvedic cookbook, both textbooks in our Naturopathy and Wholefood nutrition courses.
For various examples of releases of elements such as Pitta and Vata releases see some of our massage videos on you tube.














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What is Chi?

What is Chi?
The understanding of the term chi is very central to understanding many forms of massage including Raynor massage. Chi literally means life force. It can be also spelt Qi and in different cultures can be called prana or sen or spirit. Chi is the underlying energy beneath the physical body. It is the difference between a living body and a dead body.
Modern science can’t really explain what is the difference between a living body and a recently dead body. Anatomically there is no difference between a live body and a recently dead body. They are exactly the same. Of course all the physiology or bodily functions have stopped, once the life force has left.
However ,everyone with any common sense, will know that there is immense value in a living person while a dead body is often just buried or cremated before it starts to smell. There is no longer a person there to relate to.
There are many ways to prove the existence of chi. I will go into some of them here.
It is easy to prove that we are not the physical body. Our body changes all the time according to the food that we eat and the air we breathe and the various other sensations and things that we take into our body. We can all realize that we existed 20 years ago, if we are over that age. For example I am in my 40s and I can clearly remember the experience of existence when I was 20 or even when I was 1 . I can still remember when I took my first steps as a toddler. However my physical body is completely different to that childhood body. Every atom has changed in my body. Scientists have shown that every atom is replaced in the body every 7 years. The body I have now is a completely new body than what I had 7 years ago let alone 20 years ago or 40 years ago.
Even the brain where many people think is the epicentre of their existence is completely new. The brain is continually having old cells die and new cells replace them so that our brain is a completely new brain after a few years.
So we can see that although our body is continually changing and growing , we still have a continuum of existence throughout that period. I am still the same self that existed 20 years ago, although of course I have learned from my experiences but still I am the same actual person. This aspect of ourselves that continues to exist over time is called the life force or chi or atma in Ayurveda. Some people might also call it the spirit or the soul.
We can look further at this idea that we are something other than just the material body by going through each part of our body and seeing am I the hand, am I the leg, We can clearly see that we aren’t our hand because if it got chopped off for some terrible reason we would still exist. We can see that we aren’t our leg by the same reason. We can even see that we aren’t the physical heart or liver because that can be replaced in a heart transplant or a liver transplant. Many parts of the brain, also have had brain damage through car accidents, bullets etc and yet the person still experiences the same sense of self, even our faces can now be transplanted, the outwards appearance can change but the inner person remains. So we can see also that we aren’t our brain in this way, although of course all of these major organs are very important for our physical manifestation.
We can also see that many people in older bodies often don’t experience themselves as “old”. They often say I am just the same person I was when I was young. Of course if there body has aged badly they may experience that their body doesn’t work as well as it used to but they themselves are the same person inside the body.
So this is where we can start to understand the question of what is chi. Chi is the animating factor of life. It is what distinguishes a living thing like a human, animal or plant from an inanimate object like a rock. While there is chi in a group of matter, such as a body it is alive and holds together in one form. When the chi leaves, the group of matter starts to break down into its’ constituent material parts such as a dead body decomposing and becoming part of the soil again.
This is such an important point when it comes to paradigms, or systems of thought, about medicine. Modern Western medicine is based on the idea that if we fix the matter then that is the problem fixed. This can work in some situations. But it doesn’t work in all situations. Eastern medicine and many traditional medicine systems such as Hawaiian medicine, and many Aboriginal and holistic forms of medicine, recognize the existence of the chi or spirit in a person and consider the treatment of the spirit to be the most important aspect of treatment because that is the real person. The material body of the person is merely a physical manifestation of that spirit, it is not the person themselves.
So when we look at mind- body – spirit forms of medicine, and we would have to include the Ayurvedic medicine of India as one of the most powerful and ancient forms of this type of medicine, Ayurveda often deals with disorders or imbalances in the chi or life force aspect of the person first. Fix the imbalances in the spirit or chi, and the mind and emotions will harmonize and the body will balance itself.
So, Raynor massage with its philosophical origins coming from Ayurveda, Chinese Medicine, Hawaiian medicine, Thai medicine and other traditional medicine systems looks at balancing the flow of the chi in the body and therefore helping to bring about a better state of health. This of course is also the basis for systems of medicine like acupuncture, reiki, Tui Na, Qi Gong, Tai Chi and the like.
So at the heart of the philosophy of Raynor massage is this concept of chi or life force and how it flows through the body. Chi can be compared in a poetic sense to the flow of water in a river. If there is a dam or blockage in a river then the chi won’t flow properly and this will result in a swelling. This swelling can also be seen in the physical body as muscle tension or a feeling of fullness in an area. This could then cause physical problems as muscle tension which will restrict blood flow, nerve function and lymphatic function as well as cause the skeleton and the bones to be pulled out of their healthy position.’
If we correct the flow of chi in the body by removing that blockage then we can see many of these problems go away.
How do these blockages occur in the first place?
Blockages in the chi flow can occur for many reasons. One of the first ones can be improper breathing. As can be seen though martial arts such as Qi Gong and Tai Chi and the art of hatha yoga we can see that breathing is very important in influencing the flow of chi or prana in the body. When we breathe strong and deeply we can positively affect the flow of chi in our body. We can also see the influence of things like rebirthing or integrative breath therapy here, where through deep breathing we access blockages in our emotions that can then be released, making a person feel better.
The other ways our chi can be blocked as I just touched, on is through emotional repression. When a person undergoes an emotional experience but “shoves it down” it can imbalance the flow of chi. For example, many people have repressed anger that hasn’t been healthily dealt with and this will cause interruptions to the chi flow. Other people have repressed sadness or grief and need to cry but don’t and so the chi becomes blocked.
Another way that I see people’s chi often gets blocked is when a person isn’t living a life that is in harmony or true to their spirit. When a person has an inner calling to be a certain way or do a certain thing in life but they don’t do it because of social reasons such as parental pressure, or social mores, or fear of social ridicule, then a person develops a blockage in their chi flow. In other words, when the person’s chi is flowing there will be a connection between their spirit and mind and body and any spiritual inspirations coming from deep in their soul will then start to manifest in the world. However, if a person has an inner calling to do something but doesn’t do that in order to please someone else, such as their parents their partner , their children etc then this can result in a distorted chi flow and eventually in ill health, sometimes even cancer or other serious diseases.
I see this often where people are doing a job they don’t want to do because they are trying to please their parents or doing it just for the money. This makes them depressed , which is a sign of stagnant chi flow and eventually that can also lead to physical or psychosomatic symptoms, some of which Western medicine has a difficult time in dealing with, because they may say it’s all in the persons mind.
So real health is when a person is living a life in harmony with their inner calling or what is referred to in Ayurveda as their dharma or life path. In fact, the deeper goal of Raynor massage is to get a person back in touch with this real sense of self.
Blockages in the flow of chi will be felt as a sense of pain as chi blockages are like a swelling in the river and this can feel sore for the person.
When we release these chi blockages many people experience the sudden sensation of the chi moving as a sense of a huge burst of electricity moving through their body. This is like a dam bursting. All of a sudden there is circulation to places where the chi never circulated before. People will also experience awareness and release of emotions that have been stagnant in their subtle body.
We can look at this subtle body, which could also be called a mental and emotional body, as something in between the chi or life force which is the essential self of the person, and the physical body. This middle layer of the person is where we hold all emotions. When we release the deeper layer or the chi , then the energy stored in this middle layer gets activated and can be released, especially if the client is working with the therapist by proper deep breathing methods.
So from the spirit or chi we unblock blockages and this opens up the emotional and mental zones and this then gets rid of physical tension in the body. We work through the physical body to get through the emotional body and then to the chi. Sometimes this involves very deep tissue massage and ,most often this is the case, but at other times it can involve the lightest of touch or in some cases we don’t even have to touch the person because the interaction of our life force and their life force is very subtle and their chi body can be affected by very subtle energies coming from our hands.
So Raynor massage can range from being one of the deepest styles of massage to being one of the most gentle and subtle forms of massage. It’s all about the practitioner developing their ability to be able to sense the subtle imbalances in their client’s chi flow. So in one sense this massage can be learned very easily and quickly but in another sense it can take a lifetime or more to really master it. Because we are dealing with such deep issues as the life force itself we need to constantly be in a humble frame of mind, knowing that we are always students and that life is always going to be great teacher for us and also that every person that comes to us is a unique individual, unlike any that we have seen before although some patterns of imbalances can definitely be similar but never the same between people.
This makes for a very interesting career and one where a person will never get bored.
In my next article I will discuss the ways of seeing the physical body as elements such as earth, water, fire and air.

Should massage be part of socialised medicine

Massage: Socialised or Free Market?

Throughout the world there are very different models of health care. From primarily private healthcare in the US to the State provision of primary and secondary health care in much of Western Europe to the socialised medical systems in places such as Canada and Australia. Many of the latter group are very happy with the government looking after their health care needs and want to extend this model of health care in to the preventative medicine field.
I would like to argue that this is not such a good thing, even though it may look innocuous at first glance.
Socialised medicine may be a good thing for things like unexpected events such as car accidents and medical emergencies. It takes some of the stress out of life by making people feel that if there is such an emergency that they will be looked after regardless of their ability to pay. This is reassuring when modern medicine can be so expensive, as we see in the United States where medical procedures can bankrupt people just as they are struggling with health problems. This doesn’t usually happen in Canada or Australia or the UK, where medicine is, at least in part, socialized.
However, when bureaucrats get involved in an industry there is always a cost. Bureaucrats like standardization, they like things to fit into nice boxes. As I mentioned in my article about Massage as an Art, getting bureaucracy involved in the massage industry, goes against attempts to develop the qualities of a good massage therapist because a good practitioner is an artist who really answers only to their own spirit and or to whatever they believe God to be. Regulation of a healing art goes against everything a fee society stands for, in the same way that State regulation of religion goes against the freedoms that the religion itself stands for. Bringing bureaucracy into this artistic freedom is very messy and stifling for the therapist involved and for the industry as a whole. It again forces everyone fit into these nice contained boxes of mediocrity.
There is very limited benefit to be had from making massage a form of socialised medicine in specific cases of rehabilitation from accidents or in recovery from brain injury.
One of the key strengths that the massage provides is in the field of preventative medicine. Getting a massage a week keeps the doctor away just as eating health foods is a food form of preventative medicine, in the same way that exercise or yoga is. None of these activities are, or need to be, socialised, incurring a lot of extra costs to society for what should be a simple economic transaction. Instead of person A paying money to person B we have Person A getting reimbursed by Insurance Company C for their treatment with person B while therapist B had to get licensed through government body D to get Company C to give money back to Person A. That’s a lot of extra people’s time wasted that all has to be paid for, for what should have be a simple transaction
So if a person receives one massage a week for 40 or 50 weeks a year, say at $80 or 50 pounds a treatment this is a cost of 2000 to 4000 local currency units a year . Many people spend way more than this on their car or on gym memberships let alone the people that spend this amount on cigarette consumption or alcohol or other drugs. Getting a weekly massage is a good investment just like a person may make a choose to spend more money by buying health food rather than junk food makes a decision to spend more money on the food now in order to save health costs and the other side effects of poor health later on in life. The long term investment in their health is worth it. Health after all is one, if not the most important things in this life.
If a person receives this regular massage, they will not have stress build up, their circulation will be better and emotionally they will be calm and happy usually, particularly if this type of massage is Raynor massage or another powerful type of massage.
The socialization of the massage industry means that a small group of bureaucrats usually with no great experience as healing artists decide who is “qualified” and who isn’t. What does being qualified mean when it comes to being a healing artist? What does being qualified mean when it comes to being a musician, a chef, a shaman or a painter?
It’s a hard to define term that really doesn’t need to be “defined” by one group of bureaucrats in a free market and which cannot be defined outside of cultural limitations.
In the field of martial arts, music or painting we actually have a free market. People will only pay to listen to music, to buy a painting if they think that what they are buying is worth the money they are paying. In a free society we can and should be able to choose which type of art form we want to decorate our house. We should be free to choose to consult a Mayan shaman if we want or a Hawaiian Kahuna, a Christian faith healer, an Ayurvedic astrologer, a gem therapist or a Reiki master or Chinese acupuncturist if that is where we feel our money is best spent.
Freedom is important.
The same is true of massage. Massage is an art form and there are always artists improving and being creative with massage, especially at this unique point in the Earth’s history where we are able to draw upon the ancient knowledge of so many cultures and their massage techniques, philosophies and ways of looking at people, life and health.
The great thing about the free market system is that the consumer decides for themselves what is best. If a consumer like a particular healer then supply and demand laws of economics will mean his or her business is successful. Happy clients will return and refer more clients and so soon they will be booked out in which case they may choose to charge more for their services. It is up to them. Therefore, being good at your art form will be rewarded. This is a good thing which encourages people to care for their clients and work hard to do the best massage they are capable of. Practitioners who are ineffective or who have bad bedside manner will not have repeat clients and will go out of business as it often costs more money to get that first client in the door by advertising than they earn from that initial first treatment
Any massage therapist, who has been in business for a while will tell you that a good massage therapy business is based on repeat clients and referrals. So, in this way, practitioners who are not good will be weeded out until they either improve their skills or bedside manner and personal relating skills or they find another job.
This, I believe, is a much better system that will serve our countries well, rather than bureaucratising the massage industry and involving the insurance industry. They are the only ones who gain from this because generally insurance is only for an unexpected event that is very expensive. Massage is best used for prevention of stress build up and energy blockages and this is just part of life. It is not unexpected nor is it prohibitively expensive. Even to get a massage once a month would still be enormously beneficial, especially if the massage is from a massage artist rather than a bureaucratically minded, assembly line style massage therapist following set routines and moves in treatments, regardless of the person’s needs that they are massaging.
Keep the freedom in the industry and keep bureaucrats out. Just pay the therapist $80 when you get a massage or whatever they charge and keep it simple. Just like paying when you buy food, gas or go to the gym. Socialism does not always work and the cost of socializing the massage industry far out weight the benefits.

Massage as an Art

The Art of Massage
There are many different approaches, styles and philosophies behind the practice of massage therapy. In some places, and by some people, massage is considered a branch of what is termed the healing arts, while other people in some places consider that massage that can be regulated and standardized according to scientific methods and then this is the only legitimate forms of massage. Where does Raynor massage fit into this debate?
Raynor massage is based on movement of the chi or prana in the body. We believe that science does not understand and is only beginning to even explore, the nature of the chi or the life force and that is why the description of the life force in ancient oriental massage techniques is more of a poetic nature. The fact that science can’t explain or understand chi or life force, however, does not mean that this doesn’t not exist. It merely shows the limitations of science. For more information about this please see my article what is Chi.
When we can accept the nature of life force we can see that massage becomes more of an art form than just a standard bunch of moves. An art form relies on subjectivity rather that objectivity , It relies on the perception and experience of the practitioner rather than an assembly line approach to massage, it is individual and even similar work will be unique to that time and situation.
So the most important skill than on the part of the Raynor massage therapy artist is to perceive the chi and its flow in the body. It means developing sensitivity to life force and feeling energy blockages in a person. It means tuning into a person as whole being of mind body and spirit. This is a skill that can not be measured in a classroom or a scholastic test. It is something that becomes part of a person’s being , a tuning in of their soul to the greater life force ( however we perceive that or whatever name we give that life force) and then being able to sense another persons life force. This is definitely more in the realm of art; in fact an esoteric art. It is an esoteric healing art.
Massage then cannot be learning set stroke and techniques. As a Raynor practitioner you must learn how to use these techniques in way that frees up the client from any blockages that they have in their body. This art form and requires skills in self development and awareness more similar that of a martial artist to that of a more intellectually based scientist or western medical practitioner.
The massage become more like a dance between the therapist and the client in a way harmonizing the breathe and using techniques and strategies that enable the client to release all their stagnant tension and blockages.
The practitioner must develop their art which means developing their perception. In ancient China, Japan and other Asian and Pacific countries the martial artist did a lot to develop their understanding of their own chi and how to use it. Similarly many of the best martial artists were also healers. Many jujitsu practitioners, for example, in Japan, also did shiatsu because the understanding of the human being gained through martial arts is similar to the understanding needed to do good shiatsu massage. It’s all based on the flow of the life force or chi in the person. Hawaiian massage is also considered more like a dance and spiritual interaction between two people, with the practitioner removing blockages from the person on a mind body or spirit level.
As martial arts have never been regulated in any country nor has there been theoretical exams required to be a martial artist nor should the art of massage therapy be regulated. Art is a subjective field and one person may like one form of art while another likes another. Regulation of art stifles creativity and undermines cultural interpretation, the essence of good art.
Regulation and standardization also stifles ingenuity, the process whereby a person sees a problem and asks how they will resolve it. This requires freedom. Freedom to work in a way which will release the individual persons blockages and help them to return to health and wholeness. Raynor massage is an art designed to relieve any blockages in the muscular and other systems of the body.
We can not say that massage just works on the muscles because the muscles do not work in isolation. Through the muscles blood and nerves travel, working into every system and structure of the body. The muscles and bones work very close together meaning that massage will affect the skeletal system. Practitioners of Thai massage and shiatsu were traditionally both massage therapist and chiropractor. Chi moves through the muscles also, therefore working on the muscles can impact greatly on the chi flow. The muscles in our digestive system, such as the small and large intestines and massage of these muscles will affect digestion and absorption of food as well as release of toxins which can then effect overall energy levels.
Massage should therefore be seen as a holistic art form that works on the entire mind body and soul. This is what Raynor massage is all about. It is a healing art.
This is why I, Brandon Raynor ,the founder of Raynor massage, have been so heavily involved in the health freedom movement, especially the attempt to stop the regulation, standardization and some would call the “McDonalidazation” or “fast foodization” of the massage industry. Massage is an art form and art requires freedom from the numbing effects of bureaucracy for creativity to flourish. I hope you will consider learning massage at our school.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Testimonial from Alberta

Hello Brandon,

I just had to write you and thank you. Thank you in the biggest way possible, that perhaps words cannot express in the manner that I wish. Thank you for developing a massage that embodies all practices and in such an intuitive method. I have just met a local angel who gives massages as trained by you (and Terry).

To back up, I am a yoga instructor. I have been trained through the Yoga Association of Alberta, but moreover, trained by some amazing talented yogis who see yoga moving more into the emotional heart space of dissolving the tensions in the body through "breakthroughs", and pushing past the barriers and releasing blockages (emotional, physical, psychological) through yoga. I had been told about Clare for a while in yoga, having a few students say: You have to meet Clare and have her do bodywork on you.

I've been to a lot of bodywork workshops and had a lot of bodywork done on me in the past 14 years. I was diagnosed with Rheumatoid Arthritis after my daughter was born, and have been on a healing journey ever since. I've lost most flexion in my wrists and a tiny erosion in my right arm is blocking some movement in my elbow. Otherwise, a good remission for the past 6 or so years.

No one has reached the depth of release in my body than Clare with your Raynor Method. All bodyworkers are scared to go deep in my body because of the RA. And it is what I needed!!!! I have only had 2 - 3 hour treatments with Clare, and it is so amazing, so compatible and familiar (like yoga) and what I've discovered is too much to write here. I discover things about my old soul in this earthbound body frequently in meditation or on the mat, but Clare gets me there in succinct fashion as well.

Its amazing, thank you. And If I thought my hands were strong enough, I might take the training too!!! It is profound, and I've spent thousands on bodywork over the years, and you, your method is what the world needs. Unconfined, from the intuitive trained wise heart, amazing!

I hope I get the chance to hug you in person someday.
Journey forward, there is so much light support for you.
Be well, take gentle care.

Shanti.
Holly Lewis
Alberta

PS ALL bodyworkers should be required to take the Raynor Method.
Sending you wisdom and strength.

Monday, June 21, 2010

Registered Massage Therapists in Ontario and BC

The term registered massage therapist is a term used to describe people that have completed a course approved by the "College of Massage Therapists" in Ontario or British Columbia. These courses tend to be between 2200 hours and 3000 hours long and cost approximately $20,000 to $30,000. The courses often emphasize only the so called "scientific" aspects of massage therapy and neglect the holistic and traditional aspects of massage therapy.

We have no problem with these courses in their particular approach to training massage therapists. We believe massage therapy is a healing art and like any art form there are many different ways to practice that art form. Of course, we personally think it's smarter to also study cultures and their massage styles, where massage has had thousands of years of history but we totally believe that these registered massage therapists in the Canadian provinces of Ontario and British Columbia should be able to practice massage therapy in the way that they think is best.

However, some of these registered massage therapists and their political bodies believe that only their form of the healing art of massage therapy should be able to be called massage therapy. This is what they have done in Ontario and British Columbia. They have enforced a ban on practitioners of all other styles of massage therapy such as Hawaiian massage (lomi lomi), Thai massage, Shiatsu, Tui Na, Ayurvedic massage, Balinese massage, Indian Head massage, Raynor massage, and many other massage therapists from using the term massage therapist or describing what they do as massage therapy.

They have used the oldest saying in the book that what they are doing is to protect the public from harm. Interesting, because no one in traditional Hawaii or China or Japan or Thailand or India or in fact, in almost any other country where massage has a long and established history, has felt that they need to regulate and exert centralized control over this ancient art form that is such an important aspect of primary health care. People have been practising Thai, Hawaiian and other native massage styles for thousands of years, not with harm, but with great benefit to the culture and health of these societies.

We can see that in many situations in life especially in politics, people like to take away our freedom to choose by saying that it is for our own protection. In most situations like this the people taking away the freedom have a vested economic interest in taking away that freedom, such as we can see here with the interests of the big established massage schools generating huge amounts of money by making the courses extremely long, and we also see the graduates of these schools wanting to keep a monopoly on their profession and keep other practitioners out rather than allow the free market to dominate, fearful this may show that some people just prefer a different type of healing art.

Here in this situation the Registered Massage Therapy political lobby and the College of Massage Therapists in Ontario and BC are promoting only one culture's perspective on massage and claiming that that is the only legitimate form of massage therapy. The training that they recognise is basically a Western medical practitioners approach to massage therapy. There is a heavy emphasis on seeing the human being as just muscles, bones and blood etc rather than seeing the human being from a holistic perspective, or Eastern medical perspective, as an integrated mind, body spirit being.

There is no significant history of massage in Western medicine, other than Swedish or classical massage which goes back about 200 years, and this was originally practiced outside of conventional medicine as something similar to gymnastics or physiotherapy. This is very different to the history of massage in countries and cultures like China, Japan, India and Hawaii where massage has thousands of years of history and practitioners in these cultures have treated billions of people safely for thousands of years.

However, in these cultures the philosophy behind their massage therapy has been one of moving the chi, prana or life force in the body and by so doing this one will also relieve the physical tension in the muscles. To understand these forms of massage one must also understand the paradigm of thought behind them and these go beyond the understanding that Western medicine has of the human body.

Western medicine does not readily accept the existence of chi or life force in general, although, there are many exceptions as some more enlightened doctors have sought to bridge the gap between Eastern and Western medicine.

The fact that Western medicine does not accept the existence of the chi, prana, spirit or soul etc is fine as long as they do not try to stop people who do accept these from practicing their healing art. Western medicine is based on science and everybody that practices science in a serious manner knows that science has limitations about what aspects of life it can know and not know. The areas that science generally can't understand are termed metaphysics. See this article in Wikipedia for more about what metaphysics means.

There are many things that science cannot and does not understand. Many of these relate to matters such as the nature of life itself. What is the difference between a living person and a dead person? The body is the same but there is a profound difference that science doesn't really explain adequately other than to describe the symptoms of the departure of the life force. It does not understand the nature of the life force itself.

In relation to massage and its regulation or "registration", is that why should one particular people with a philosophy that believes their form of medicine is better than all other cultures forms of medicine, because it is based on science, even though science has no understanding of life itself,(and healing arts are actually totally concerned with the life force in most cases) force other people to think within scientific limitations. Why should this one group of people force their limited and narrow philosophy of healing on to every other person in such multicultural provinces such as Ontario and British Columbia, of a great and tolerant country like Canada.

The term "massage therapy" and "massage therapist" should not be allowed to be owned by one select group of people with a limited philosophy. These terms like painter, sculptor, healer, shaman, natural health practitioner, etc etc are terms that have been around for millennium and mean different things to different people in different cultures.

Why should a consumer not be able to choose their own version of massage therapy. Is a person aged 60 who has been trained for 100 generations in Ayurvedic massage in India, and had 50 years of experience in the healing arts, any less of a massage therapist that a 22 year old graduate of an Ontario massage college, who has almost no life experience or maturity. This is ridiculous.

Every culture has emphasized different things in training their massage therapists. In Korea and Japan many blind people became massage therapists because they had an excellent sense of touch. Having an "excellent sense of touch" is hardly even considered important in considering who will be able to use the term massage therapist in Ontario, BC or Newfoundland. Yet having an excellent sense of touch would be considered by most people to be one of the most important aspects of being a good massage therapist.

In Hawaii, being a good massage therapist may mean being a very good kahuna, or healer, with a great sense of aloha, or open heartedness, and respect for and connection with the spirit world of the elders. Being able to harness the metaphysical energies of the spirit world may be a particular gift for some people and not for others and would not be something that a Board of Massage Therapists would be qualified to recognize, only the people receiving the massage from the therapist or healer.

It is interesting to look at the history of the regulation of massage and to see that one of the first places to regulate massage in the world was Hawaii. The purpose for this regulation was to stamp out traditional Hawaiian healing methods.
The test to be a massage therapist was a very intellectual one of naming latin names for muscles etc.

Many of the best kahunas at the time could not even read or write as it wasn't part of their culture and so could not pass the test even though massage had been in their families for hundred of generations and they were considered the best healers and massage therapists in the islands. Again the reasons to suppress the Hawaiians healing methods were one particular group of people's belief, in this case white missionaries, that Hawaiian healing methods were heathen. See this wikipedia article for more information

Another example of one culture stopping another cultures healing methods was when the British invaded India and outlawed all Ayurvedic hospitals. Ayurveda has a 5000 year history of medicine to share with the world but because it wasn't scientific or in accordance with European Christian philosophy, it was outlawed.

This is something that should be relegated to the past. In today's world we should show respect for all cultures' forms of medicine and allow freedom of choice in health care to prevail which means that let the consumer pick the health practitioner of their choice according to that persons' own tastes, culture, desires and needs and curiosities etc and, of course, the reputation of the practitioner.

There is no need to regulate the practice of massage therapy as the example of countries like the UK, Australia and New Zealand show where the consumer has a huge amount of choice and it is the practitioner's reputation and the quality of their treatments that influence the consumers choice of a health practitioner not a group of bureaucrats with vested interests to protect.

You can now learn Raynor massage in our online massage course.