10. Mending the Body, Moving the Body
As we work with the mind and brain, we can’t ignore the importance of working
with the body, which often has been storing up physical and muscular tension
from a fight, flight, or freeze state of mind for a lifetime. The following
approaches are particularly good at helping to release stored up muscular tension
and tame the inflammatory response.
YOGA
PET scans show that after practicing yoga, cerebral blood flow to the amygdala,
the brain’s alarm center, decreases, while blood flow to the frontal lobe and
prefrontal cortex increases. These areas of the brain go offline during early
adversity and need to be coaxed back online. Practicing yoga also increases
levels of GABA—or gamma-aminobutyric acid—a chemical that improves brain
function and promotes calm. When you don’t have enough GABA, you’re more
prone to depression and anxiety. Those who regularly practice yoga show
dramatically lower levels of inflammatory biomarkers, even during lab stress
tests.
TRAUMA RELEASE EXERCISES
Another benefit of yoga comes through practicing specific poses that help
release tension in a muscle called the psoas, otherwise known as the “fight-or-
flight muscle.” Psoas muscles connect the lumbar spine to the legs, and they
support our internal organs. When you feel a sudden sense of fear, worry, or
loss, the psoas fire up in order to help us get ready to fight, kick, or strike out.
Children who have experienced Adverse Childhood Experiences often have
psoas that are tightly wound, like an animal bracing to be attacked, always in
fight-or-flight mode. Over time, that tight feeling becomes so normal that we
can’t even tell we’re holding on to emotions from our past.
David Bercelli, PhD, developed the six Trauma Release Exercises to help
individuals release the muscle tension stored as a result of stress, adversity, and
early trauma. That release evokes a muscular shaking process—called
neurogenic tremors—which releases deep, chronic muscular tension held within
the body’s core. When shaking is evoked at the center of the body—an area
protected by the psoas—it reverberates throughout the entire body, traveling
along the spine, releasing deep chronic tension from the sacrum to the cranium.
Mary began learning TRE when she happened to meet the founder in the yoga
studio where she was practicing. “The first time I tried Trauma Release
Exercises, I triggered a deep shaking and trembling. My legs just shook and it
went on and on.” As Mary felt her body release so much pent-up energy, she
realized “that when I was a kid, and I was afraid, I couldn’t shake; I couldn’t let
my father see that I was afraid of him or I would have been humiliated for that.
So I learned to contain it. In the same way that I never cried when I was a kid,
because no one was going to comfort me, I never even allowed myself to
tremble.” As Mary learned to discharge that tension through TRE and yoga, she
felt herself “moving toward life. Like the flowers growing between the cracks in
the sidewalk.” Over time, she says, “I’ve become able to process most things
without freaking out because I’ve learned, through practicing body movement,
the art of self-soothing. This is the gift that I’ve been able to give myself.” As a
result, “I’m physically better now.” Her irritable bowel syndrome and
excruciating lower back pain are gone. And although the permanent changes in
her skin pigmentation from her autoimmune vitiligo remain, the disease has
stopped progressing. “My suicidal depression and anxiety are gone, too,” she
says. “I see what is good in me, and how a lot of my gifts in life—my ability to
be so caring and nurturing to others—came out of my early adversity. As I’ve
learned to shift out of that trauma state and into release, my body has changed.”
These days, Mary says, “I hardly ever get sick. I haven’t even had a cold for four
years.”
BODYWORK
Bernie Siegel, MD, tells this story about the power of bodywork to bring up and
release wounds from childhood that we’ve stored within. Siegel’s own birth was
traumatizing for his mother. For health reasons, she could not risk undergoing a
cesarean. The labor was so difficult and prolonged that by the time he was born,
his mother later told him, “They didn’t hand me a baby, they handed me a purple
melon.” His head was misshapen; his skin, mottled. His parents “hid him away
from people.” But Siegel’s grandmother would rub oil on and vigorously
massage her newborn grandson’s “purple head” several times a day to help
restore his appearance. In her hands, Bernie felt deeply loved.
Fast-forward fifty years. Siegel, who has a shaved head, would occasionally
get full therapeutic body massages. On one visit, his regular massage therapist
wasn’t available so he saw his therapist’s wife. Siegel closed his eyes,
anticipating a relaxing massage. This new therapist oiled her soft, female hands
and began to rub his bare head. The next thing Siegel knew, he lost his sense of
consciousness—something that had never happened before in his male massage
therapist’s hands.
When Siegel returned to consciousness, he opened his eyes to find himself
surrounded by people panicking. “We couldn’t communicate with you! We
thought you had a stroke!” they told him. But, Siegel explains, “I knew exactly
what had happened. I had become that traumatized infant again.” That moment
brought forth his stored traumatic body memories, only this time, as an adult
who had already done a great deal of self-healing, he was able to move through
those previously submerged emotions and emerge in a safe way. As a physician
he knew that untouched babies don’t gain weight and develop as well as babies
who are massaged and touched. He felt a new gratitude for his grandmother’s
loving touch, and how it had helped him to heal and thrive. The pain from that
early trauma was gone.
Although we do not have scientific evidence as to how and why bodywork
helps with healing, these modalities have been life-changing for many
individuals interviewed in these pages.
In the practice of Massage Rho, a therapist has the client guide the therapist’s
hands to the part of the client’s body where the client feels pain. The therapist
applies pressure in that area with her hands to allow deep-tissue muscle release,
often releasing stored emotions as well. In Core Energetic massage, therapists
release muscle tension and energy blockages that we’re holding in our bodies so
that feelings can be expressed. In Therapeutic Touch, a therapist trained to be
sensitive to the client’s energy field works with that field without ever touching
the patient. Other such modalities include Reiki, shiatsu massage, and
cranialsacral work.
Whatever modality you choose, the important thing is to find a practitioner-
client relationship in which you feel safe.
Mary felt that she was aided in her healing by bodywork with a “medical
intuitive energetic healer.”
“My physical sensations would shift ten minutes into a session,” she recalls.
“I’d experience a complete break from the tremendous sense of anxiety that I
always held inside.” This break was a gift. “My medical intuitive healer was able
to put me in a peaceful, healing, trusting place—in a way that I could not get to
on my own. I was able to relax and feel physically safe in someone’s hands for
the first time in my life.” After her sessions, when fears and worries would
intrude again, Mary would reinvite “that sensation of being safe in someone’s
hands, and bring that sense of peace into moments when I came up against
triggers in the real world. I internalized that feeling of being soothed and at
peace with the world.”
In Laura’s search for healing, she has tried both Massage Rho and Core
Energetic healing. Both have stirred up memories that are “known but not
remembered.” In one session, she says, my therapist was working around my
diaphragm and I suddenly found myself screaming out loud, ‘Please don’t do
this to me, please stop!’ as I sobbed and kicked my legs like a toddler. I felt
utterly powerless, and afraid, and then the feeling began to dissipate. Another
time, my therapist was working on my stomach and I found myself screaming
and crying, ‘I can’t take this weight! Please don’t put this weight on me!’ I felt
all that weight of having to care for my mother and be the only grown-up in my
adolescent world.” Over the course of many sessions, the pain of the past has
begun to lessen. Mary feels a sense of “letting go.”
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