Shiatsudo Blog

Shiatsu during pregnancy - Flexibility

November 29th, 2007

Another post about pregnancy from Dinah; this time talking a bit about flexibility. I wrote a little about keeping your back and hips flexible which is more applicable if you aren’t pregnant :).

During pregnancy, production of the hormone relaxin is stepped up considerably. As its name suggests, it relaxes ligaments and tendons, in preparation for the expansion of the pelvis that is required during childbirth. Unfortunately, like so many pregnancy hormones, it affects the whole body! So it loosens up tendons everywhere, and pregnant women will find that they are more flexible. However, be careful not to overstretch your joints! This is also something a shiatsu practitioner will be careful not to do while working on a pregnant client.

On the other hand, relaxin should make it easier to crouch and squat, which are good positions to practise, for two reasons. Obviously it may well be useful during childbirth, so that gravity can help (as opposed to the trapped-on-your-back-in-stirrups position)…But long before that happy day, you will find that bending at the middle — to tie your shoes or pick up something on the floor, for example — becomes uncomfortable. The solution is to get someone else to do these tasks for you! Or, bend at the knees instead, sink into a squat, and you will find this places less strain on your back as well as getting your hands closer to your goal.

If you have overstretched or pulled a tendon, a supportive shiatsu treatment can help by strengthening the meridian flow around the affected joints, making you feel more ‘held together’.

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Chronic Fatigue Syndrome on Radio 4

November 15th, 2007

I happened to catch an interesting feature last week on Radio 4’s Case Notes about Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS). CFS is also known as Myalgic Encephalitis (ME) and is characterised (as the name suggests) by extreme fatigue with all sorts of accompanying symptoms. I think one of the most difficult things for sufferers of CFS/ME is that there isn’t any specific treatment for the condition, so apart from feeling run down and exhausted, people with CFS/ME might also feel helpless, because there doesn’t seem to be a silver bullet for their condition. Often, treatment is aimed at the symptoms that accompany the disease (such as headaches, muscle pain and depression), because there just isn’t enough known about what causes it.

The program I caught on Radio 4 featured Dr Esther Crawley who is the UK’s only paediatrician to specialise in CFS/ME and had some interviews with her and some of her patients.

The full transcript of the program is a very interesting read. Dr Crawley’s approach seems to be one of regulating activity and trying to spread a patient’s energy through the week. This is a great idea because often people with CFS often only feel the effects of higher intensity activity a day or two after they have exerted themselves. So there is this horribly “payback” that hits them a day or two later if they exert themselves too much on a good day. This can become a bit of a cycle – as soon as someone with CFS/ME feels good, they rush out and over-exert themselves, and then a day or two later they crash, then a bit later they feel OK again and rush out etc etc. Regulating activity through the week helps her patients break this cycle.

Also interesting are Dr Crawley’s thoughts on sleep. People suffering from CFS/ME often sleep much longer than normal because they feel tired. She suggests that this might not be the best solution, because sleep quality deteriorates the longer you sleep. So, counter-intuitive though it seems, restricting sleep to similar amounts that other people get is another key to Dr Crawley’s treatment.

It would be fascinating to see a therapy like Shiatsu incorporated into something like Dr Crawley’s approach. I think it would fit in well. Certainly the parallels are interesting. In treating with Shiatsu, we always try and encourage balance. Sometimes, this means restricting the treatment - doing less rather than more. All Shiatsu students will at some point in their training be told something akin to “you are trying to do too much”. It seems natural to us to try and tackle a problem by doing everything we can to solve it; maybe we throw in every possible point we know, or we extend the time of a treatment because we haven’t “finished” treating a meridian. It is counter-intuitive, but sometimes we have to pull the reigns in a little. Using only a few points in a treatment will allow the body to really focus the energy on those functions we are stimulating, rather than scattering energy through the functions of 10 or 12 points. Making sure we cease treating before the client’s energy stops responding to the treatment makes the treatment more effective, because we don’t exhaust our client.

In fact, in Shiatsu, we really should do as little as possible, whilst doing just enough to give an effective treatment. Encourage energy to the deficient meridian, but don’t stimulate it to the point of excess. Move energy that is in excess, but don’t move so much that it becomes deficient. It is a balancing act, much like Dr Crawley balancing the activities of one of her patients.

Anyway, I’ve probably written too much; go read the transcript of the program.

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Round and round and round we go

November 11th, 2007

Filched from here….which way round do you see the dancer turning?
Dancer
If you see her turning clockwise, then you are apparently right brain dominant and vice versa.