| Psychotherapy,
Yoga and Bodywork
Therapy for the Mind, Heart, and Soul Living in
a Body
In the past few decades, more and more people have
found benefit in therapeutic massage and deep bodywork.
As a psychotherapist, I strongly support and encourage
my clients to receive bodywork, and to consider it as
more than simply an aid to relaxation. Bodywork can
be a way to learn more about yourself, especially about
the way you hold tension and emotional pain. It can
also be a way of learning to release and let go, a major
aspect of psychotherapeutic work.
As you receive bodywork, you find a place where relaxation
becomes more than a release of tight muscles. You can
enter into the body’s deep wisdom; the knowing
that you need not carry stress or pain or worry, at
least for a time. You can enter into the body’s
memory of deep peace and greater freedom. Then, as you
reengage your world of relationships and work, this
experience of openness and expansiveness will be with
you for some time.
However, the old patterns of body tension will most
likely take hold again; shoulders tighten, back muscles
stiffen, literally all the body tissue contracts. When
we pay attention to this cycle, (the relief/release,
and then the tightening/contraction), we realize that
much of our body pain has its roots in our mind; our
thoughts and emotions. It’s common to notice that
when we are going through a difficult life passage -
separation, loss or taking on of greater responsibilities
- it may seem impossible to relax. Yet these times of
stress, including the body’s tense reactions,
are often opportunities to grow. This growth occurs
as we become aware of the body armor that holds our
defenses and that defines our self-image. We then have
an opportunity to recognize that we can choose to soften,
to open to a larger sense of who we are, to be more
whole, more alive.
The therapy work that I do includes dialogue in which
we look deeply at the challenges that are arising in
your life. We seek to arrive at a place of honest self-reflection
and heart sharing. However, I also work with experiential
processes that go beyond “talk therapy”,
bringing awareness to the fixed mental and emotional
patterns that connect to your physical body. One might
say that we move below the story of events to the more
elemental patterns that cause us to repeat self-destructive
behaviors even though “we know better”.
In addition to bodywork, yoga studios and training
centers have been flowering in communities all over
the country. While many people approach yoga for it’s
benefits in relieving stress and strengthening and toning
muscles, it is in fact, a spiritual practice developed
to purify and integrate the body with the mind and spirit.
Working with yogic meditation practices for the past
35 years, I have found that such exercises, especially
those using the breath and attuning to inner life energies
(sometimes called chi or ki), are profoundly useful
in the work of psychotherapy. Emotions and thoughts
related to memories that involve guilt, resentment or
fear, can be experienced as trapped or stuck energy,
and worked with directly in ways that release and free
the flow. Likewise, these methods allow us to access
the deep inner wisdom, creativity and healing energies
that are within each of us.
My work as a psychotherapist has been deeply informed
by my experiential explorations with body awareness
and yoga-meditation. I have found that these approaches
can be helpful both in times of crisis and times when
life is going smoothly. In either case, we have the
opportunity to journey deeply into the body/mind to
the roots of old patterns, and the sources of our healing
and regeneration.
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