Full Body Release Postgraduate Workshop

Posted August 21st, 2009 in Training News by John Dalton

August 06 -2006.  Brisbane.

fbr1bAs adults we are no longer physically held in the way we were as children.

Full body release is a technique that holds us like a baby.

Full Body Release 4A team of cranio sacral therapists tune into a patient and literally pick them up as they provide complete support for their system.

fbr13bWhen provided with intentioned gravity-free support, our bodies begin to release deep, full body patterns.

Wonderful and beautiful as it is, this is a technique that is used infrequently in practice as the logistics involved are prohibitive.

Full Body release 2A minimum of six cranio sacral therapists are required to make up a team. When each therapist has a busy practice this is not easily organised.

Full Body Release 6I use full body release as a post graduate workshop because it is an excellent tool for helping cranio sacral therapists gain a deeper sense of whole body patterns. They can take this knowledge back to their practice where it informs their one to one patient work.

Full Body Release 7Each participant at the workshop takes a turn leading a team and being a patient.

At the beginning of the process the ‘patient’ is surrounded by the therapeutic team.

The team leader begins to tune into the patient’s cranio sacral system and calls in the other therapists as they are needed.

Full Body Release 8As the patient’s system begins to release and unwind it stretches out. The team follow this and give support as the patient becomes airborne.

Full Body Release 9My role in the process is to monitor the patient and team and offer assistance where needed.

The patient’s body goes through and intricate ballet of movement that the therapeutic team must keep up and follow accurately, holding as the patient’s system releases.

Full Body Release 9Like a big piece of cellophane that has been scrunched up for years, once given the right support, it begins to unravel.

Full Body Release 10There is continual communication between the lead therapist and the patient.

Full Body release 3The process feels timeless but eventually draws to a natural close and the patient returns to the ground. Full Body Release 11

Their system is settled by the lead therapist and the team takes a well earned rest. We then go through a debriefing process where we assess the effectivenes of the team.

Full Body Release 12What sketching is to artists, full body release is to cranio sacral therapists. It gives them a chance to deepen their palpatory skill and get a broader sense of full body patterns. When they return to their practices and are once again working alone with their patients, the benefits of the full body release seminar are evident.

The main feedback I get about this seminar from the therapists is how much more they can feel in their patient’s body.

B1.06.0 – Direct – Indirect Technique

Posted June 19th, 2008 in Learning, Treatment Theory by John Dalton

<< Back to Basics 1 syllabus

HOW ARE RESTRICTIONS RELEASED?

We use two approaches
✬ Indirect technique
✬ Direct technique

It is through a combination of indirect and direct technique that restrictions can be assisted to release.

INDIRECT TECHNIQUE

Indirect technique requires the skill of being able to follow the body to the point of restriction.

FOLLOWING
Following the Body is a skill that takes a lot of practice to get proficient at. Without getting too flowery about it, it’s a bit like singing along to a song. It requires you to keep in time and in tune so that your singing harmonises with the music. The combination of the music and your singing produces something more than the individual components.

If you put your body in a flotation tank it will generally start to move because when your body has a gravity free environment it begins to unravel.

Like a piece of cellophane that has been you crinkled up in your hands. When you let it go it begins to unravel.

Following the body means providing this gravity free environment in which the body begins to move. The skill comes in following the dance.

Indirect technique is a process of Unlatching.

You are at a door that is locked. There is a key in the lock but when you try to turn it the key is stuck. You lean your weight against the door, pushing it even further closed knowing this will give the barrel of the lock the space it needs to turn.
While pushing the door in, you try the key again and it turns freely.
You release the door and it springs open.

Indirect technique works in a similar way. It is one of the gems of the cranio sacral approach. It takes the view that substantial permanent release can be achieved by following the body into the pattern of restriction.

If one of my vertebrae has been displaced to the left by a trauma, a whole pattern will have been established around the vertebrae that will keep it displaced to the left.

No amount of pushing to the right is going to keep the vertebrae in line permanently. If that approach is taken the vertebrae will keep ‘popping out’ and will need to be ‘put back in’ with increasing regularity.

A permanent release and subsequent realignment can be achieved by following the vertebrae into the pattern of restriction, that is to the left. At the point of the trauma the restriction will release and the vertebrae will return to alignment naturally.

Indirect technique, going with the restriction pattern.

DIRECT TECHNIQUE

Direct technique is used when indirect technique fails to achieve a release. The restriction pattern has been felt and the therapist knows the structure needs to release in a certain direction. Direct technique is moving in that direction against the restriction.

Direct technique works because of another gem of the cranio sacral approach; a little pressure over a long period of time can move mountains.

You have just made a peanut butter sandwich. You suddenly decide you want to put jam in your sandwich too. If you pull the pieces of bread apart too quickly you will tear them. But if you apply a small amount of pressure and wait, the two pieces of bread will come apart in time.

You are in a lake. In front of you is a huge yacht. You have to move it 200m from one jetty to another. You run at the boat and push it with all your strength. (Not easy when you are waist deep in water holding a peanut butter sandwich.) The boat hardly moves. Luckily you are a trained cranio sacral therapist and you apply direct technique. You place your index finger against the boat, applying a small amount of pressure and you wait. In time you will see that this huge boat has moved and if you continue you will cover the 200m in no time.

Direct technique, going against the restriction pattern.

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