Holistic Health Glossary
ACUPRESSURE
Acupressure is an ancient healing art that uses the fingers
to press key points on the surface of the skin to stimulate
the body's natural self-curative abilities. When these points
are pressed, they release muscular tension and promote the
circulation of blood and the body's life force (sometimes
known as qi or chi) to aid healing. Acupuncture and acupressure
use the same points, but acupuncture employs needles, while
acupressure uses the gentle, but firm pressure of hands (and
even feet).
ALLOPATHIC MEDICINE
Known as conventional medicine, allopathy is a medical approach
which seeks to cure by producing a condition in the body different
than, or opposite to, the condition that exists within the
diseased state. BIOFEEDBACK
Biofeedback utilizes a system of sensitive instruments that
relay information about the physical condition of the body.
Used as a primary therapy, or in conjunction with other methods,
biofeedback provides deep relaxation and stress management
skills to prevent stress-related disorders and illness. These
skills, including deep breathing and guided imagery, offer
self-regulation and control over mental, emotional, and physical
processes.
BOWEN TECHNIQUE
Developed by Thomas Ambrose Bowen of Australia in the 1960s
and 1970s, this hands-on, light-touch body therapy consists
of gentle rolling movements over muscle bellies and tendons
to stimulate the body's own healing mechanisms.
CRANIOSACRAL
THERAPY
Craniosacral therapy is a gentle, noninvasive method of evaluating
and enhancing the function of a physiological body arrangement
called the craniosacral system. This manual therapy enhances
the body's natural healing processes and has proven effective
in treating a wide range of medical problems associated with
pain and dysfunction. The craniosacral system consists of
the membranes and cerebrospinal fluid that surround and protect
the brain and spinal cord. It extends from the bones of the
skull, face, and mouth ' which make up the cranium ' down
to the sacrum or tailbone. Since this system influences the
development and function of the brain and spinal cord, any
imbalance or dysfunction in the craniosacral system could
cause sensory, motor, or neurological disabilities. These
problems may include chronic pain, eye difficulties, scoliosis,
motor-coordination impairments, learning disabilities, and
other dysfunctions of the central nervous system. Craniosacral
therapy encourages the body's natural healing mechanisms to
improve the functioning of the central nervous system, dissipate
the negative effects of stress, and enhance health and resistance
to disease. The craniosacral therapy practitioner uses a light
touch to assist the natural movement of fluid within the craniosacral
system.
DEEP TISSUE MASSAGE
Techniques which utilize deep tissue/deep muscle massage are
administered to affect the sub-layer of musculature and fascia.
These techniques require more advanced training and a more
thorough understanding of anatomy and physiology. The muscles
must be relaxed in order to effectively perform deep tissue
massage, otherwise tight surface muscles prevent the practitioner
from reaching deeper musculature. It helps with chronic muscular
pain and injury rehabilitation, and reduces inflammation-related
pain caused by arthritis and tendinitis. It is generally integrated
with other massage techniques.
GERIATRIC MASSAGE
Geriatric massage, with its focus on the elderly, addresses
the psychological and physiological aspects of aging and its
associated diseases. Bodywork, often limited to a shorter
time span, is performed in residential care facilities.
GUIDED IMAGERY
Also known as visualization, guided imagery is a relaxation
system utilizing imagination and thoughts to improve one's
physical, mental, and emotional health. Often involving a
process of listening to music or a person's voice, the participant
can take hold of imagery, symbols, and deep feelings to stimulate
the body's immune system, fight disease, and improve their
overall health. Many seriously ill patients have used this
technique to imagine the destruction of their disease and/or
disorder.
HOLISTIC MEDICINE
Holistic medicine recognizes that the mind, spirit, lifestyle,
environment, and other aspects of a person's existence significantly
affect the functioning of the physical body. Thus, in evaluating
and treating illness and prescribing preventative intervention,
this approach treats the whole person, addressing more than
just the symptoms or disease. Holistic practitioners may utilize
a combination of conventional treatments along with alternative
therapies.
HOLOTROPIC BREATHWORK
Developed by Dr. Stanislov Grof, a psychiatrist working with
people in non-ordinary states of consciousness, and by Christina
Grof, a transpersonal teacher, this is a simple, yet powerful
technique for self-exploration and healing based on combined
insights from modern consciousness research, depth psychology,
and perennial spiritual practices. The method activates non-ordinary
states of consciousness which mobilize the spontaneous healing
potential of the psyche. Sustained effective breathing, evocative
music, focused energy work, and mandala drawing are components
of this subjective journey. Holotropic literally means moving
toward wholeness. Virtually all ancient and native traditions
recognize the psychological and spiritual healing potential
of states of consciousness that differ from what we call ordinary.
Holotropic Breathwork is a powerful method of self-exploration
and healing. This work can be useful for artists wishing to
facilitate their creativity, persons seeking a deep level
of healing, those seeking to explore their inner self and/or
the transpersonal dimensions, and it can lead to a spiritual
opening and transformation.
INTUITIVE WORK
Intuitive work is a way of incorporating the perceived and
received information that extends beyond the five senses,
transcending what is considered ordinary thinking patterns
and reasoning processes. The four main mediums by which intuitives
receive and perceive information are clairsentience; clairvoyance;
clairaudience; and 'knowingness' impression or inspirational
thought. The challenge for bodyworkers is how to respectfully
incorporate intuition into their work while maintaining responsibility/
respect toward the client. While the science aspect of bodywork
focuses on the technique of touch (information accessed through
the left hemisphere of the brain), the art aspect of bodywork
focuses on how to touch with care and sensitivity (information
accessed through the right hemisphere of the brain). As obvious
tools for listening, hands touch with the intent to hear and
see ' information accessed through the temporal lobe. These
three parts of the neurological system are considered the
intuitive network.
JIN SHIN
DO
Developed by psychotherapist Iona Marsaa Teeguarden, Jin Shin
Do combines gentle, yet deep finger pressure on acu-points
with simple body focusing techniques to release physical and
emotional tension. The client determines the depth of the
pressure. Jin Shin Do promotes a pleasurable, trancelike state
during which the recipient can get in touch with the body
and access feelings or emotions related to the physical condition.
This body/mind approach, performed on the fully-clothed client,
is a synthesis of a traditional Japanese acupressure technique,
classic Chinese acupuncture theory, Taoist yogic philosophy
and breathing methods, and Reichian segmental theory. The
client lies on her back on a massage table while the practitioner
holds 'local points' in tension areas together with related
'distal points,' which help the armored places to release
more easily and deeply. A typical session is about 2 hours.
Jin Shin Do acupressure is effective in helping relieve tension
and fatigue, stress-related headaches and gastro-intestinal
problems, back and shoulder pain, eye strain, menstrual and
menopausal imbalances, sinus pain, and allergies.
MASSAGE, BODYWORK AND SOMATIC
THERAPIES
Massage or massage therapy are systems of structured palpation
or movement of the soft tissue of the body. (For simplicity's
sake, massage or massage therapy are often used interchangeably
throughout this website to describe more than 250 massage,
bodywork and somatic therapies or modalities).
The massage system may include, but is not limited to, such
techniques as, stroking, kneading, gliding, percussion, friction,
vibration, compression, passive or active stretching within
the normal anatomical range of movement; effleurage (either
firm or light soothing, stroking movement, without dragging
the skin, using either padded parts of fingertips or palms);
petrissage (lifting or picking up muscles and rolling the
folds of skin); or tapotement (striking with the side of the
hand, usually with partly flexed fingers, rhythmic movements
with fingers or short rapid movements of sides of the hand).
These techniques may be applied with or without the aid of
lubricants, salt or herbal preparations, hydromassage, thermal
massage or a massage device that mimics or enhances the actions
possible by human hands. The purpose of the practice of massage
is to enhance the general health and well-being of the recipient.
Massage does not include the diagnosis of a specific pathology,
the prescription of drugs or controlled substances, spinal
manipulation or those acts of physical therapy that are outside
the scope of massage therapy.
An outgrowth of massage and other systems is bodywork, defined
as various forms of touch therapies that may use manipulation,
movement and/or repatterning to affect structural changes
to the body.
Somatic means of the body and is often used to denote a body/mind
or whole-body approach, as distinguished from a physiology-only
perspective.
MINDFULNESS-BASED STRESS
REDUCTION
Relaxation techniques, meditation, and easy stretching exercises
are combined to allow the client to become 'mindful' in order
to access inner sources of power. By being fully mindful and
awake in life, clients may cope more effectively with stress
and illness.
MOVEMENT THERAPY
A variety of techniques that utilize movement re-education
and proper body mechanics in combination with massage or soft
tissue manipulation. After observing the client, the therapist
will determine which corrective measures are necessary to
accomplish specific goals. Active client participation is
important while the practitioner uses verbal instruction,
hypnosis and imagery, deep muscle and connective tissue manipulation,
and mobilization in the movement re-education process.
MUSCLE TESTING
Muscle testing involves finding a muscle that is unbalanced
and then attempting to determine why that muscle is not functioning
properly. Treatments may involve specific joint manipulation
or mobilization, various myofascial therapies, cranial techniques,
meridian and acupuncture skills, clinical nutrition, dietary
management, counselling skills, evaluating environmental irritants,
and various reflex procedures. The object is to test the function
of a single muscle in the best possible manner, (adapted from
www.icak.com).
MYOFASCIAL RELEASE
Myofascial release is the three-dimensional application of
sustained pressure and movement into the fascial system in
order to eliminate fascial restrictions and facilitate the
emergence of emotional patterns and belief systems that are
no longer relevant or are impeding progress. First, an assessment
is made by visually analyzing the human frame, followed by
the palpation of the tissue texture of various fascial layers.
Upon locating an area of fascial tension, gentle pressure
is applied in the direction of the restriction. Myofascial
release is an effective therapeutic approach in the relief
of cervical pain, back pain, fibromyalgia, scoliosis, neurological
dysfunction, restriction of motion, chronic pain, and headaches.
NATUROPATHIC MEDICINE
Naturopathy integrates a wide range of natural therapeutics
emphasizing the healing power of nature to treat the causes
of disease, rather than suppressing the symptoms. As part
of a holistic medical healthcare system with an emphasis on
education and prevention, the naturopathic physician seeks
to motivate the individual toward a healthy and balanced diet,
lifestyle, and mental attitude. Treatments such as homeopathic
medicines, clinical nutrition, traditional Oriental medicine,
and acupuncture are used to enhance the body's natural healing
process.
NEUROMUSCULAR THERAPY
This comprehensive program of soft-tissue manipulation balances
the body's central nervous system with the musculoskeletal
system. Based on neurological laws that explain how the central
nervous system initiates and maintains pain, the goal is to
help relieve the pain and dysfunction by understanding and
alleviating the underlying cause. Neuromuscular therapy can
help individuals who experience distortion and biomechanical
dysfunction, which is often a symptom of a deeper problem.
It is also used to locate and release spasms and hypercontraction
in the tissue, eliminate trigger points that cause referred
pain, rebuild the strength of injured tissues, assist venous
and lymphatic flow, and restore postural alignment, proper
biomechanics, and flexibility to the tissues.
OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE
This system of comprehensive medical care goes beyond conventional
medical philosophy to include an emphasis on structural balance
of the musculoskeletal system. Osteopathic physicians use
joint manipulation, postural re-education, and physical therapy
to normalize the body's structure and promote healing. Most
medical conditions are amenable to osteopathic healing. In
some cases, osteopathy has been show to resolve illnesses
resistant to surgery and other medical approaches.
PILATES METHOD
Pilates is a series of movements, done from a sitting, reclining,
kneeling, or standing position, designed to increase strength
and flexibility, release tension, and relieve chronic neck
and back pain. Developed by German-born Joseph Pilates in
the 1920s, this method combines elements of Eastern and Western
disciplines, including yoga, tai chi, and ancient Greek and
Roman exercise protocols. Specially designed apparatus are
used for stretching and strengthening exercises and can be
calibrated to the client's needs. Repatterning movements and
proper breathing techniques are important components of the
training. The Pilates method is used in physical rehabilitation
and is popular with athletes and performance artists, as well
as those seeking to improve body conditioning.
POLARITY THERAPY
Polarity therapy is based on universal principles of energy
' attraction, repulsion, and neutrality. The interrelation
of these principles forms the basis for every aspect of life,
including our experience of health, wellness, and disease.
With this understanding, polarity therapy addresses the interdependence
of body, mind, and spirit, the importance of relationships,
and the value of creating a way of life in harmony with nature.
Founded by Austrian-born naturopath Dr. Randolph Stone in
the mid-1920s, polarity therapy is a clothes-on, noninvasive
system complementing existing systems with an integrated,
holistic model. Polarity is based on the belief that positive
and negative poles exist in every cell. The body is gently
manipulated to balance the positive and negative energies.
In addition to physical manipulation, blockages and toxins
are eliminated through a cleansing diet and simple exercises.
PRENATAL/PREGNANCY MASSAGE
Performed by a trained perinatal specialist, many methods
of massage and somatic therapies are both effective and safe
prenatally, and during labor and postpartum periods of women's
pregnancies. Prenatally, specific techniques can reduce pregnancy
discomforts and concerns and enhance the physiological and
emotional well-being of both mother and fetus. Skilled, appropriate
touch facilitates labor, shortening labor times and easing
pain and anxiety. In the postpartum period, specialized techniques
rebalance structure, physiology, and emotions of the new mother,
and may help her to bond with and care for her infant.
REFLEXOLOGY
Based on an ancient Chinese therapy, reflexology involves
manipulation of specific reflex areas in the foot, hands,
and ears that correspond to other parts of the body. Sometimes
referred to as zone therapy, this bodywork involves application
of pressure to these reflex zones to stimulate body organs
and relieve areas of congestion. Similar to acupressure principles,
reflexology works with the body's energy flow to stimulate
self-healing and maintain balance in physical function. Developed
in the United States in the early 1900s, this technique is
used today to reduce pain, increase relaxation, and stimulate
circulation of blood and lymphatic fluids.
SOMATIC EXPERIENCING
A naturalistic approach to the healing of trauma, based on
the understanding that animals in the wild, though constantly
threatened by predators, are rarely traumatized. This approach
uses education about and awareness of body sensation as a
primary tool. Appropriate, gentle manipulation of the muscles,
joints, and viscera is employed. Developed by Dr. Peter Levine,
Somatic Experiencing offers a safe, gradual way to help trauma
survivors develop their own natural ability to eliminate the
excess energy caused by overwhelming events.
SWEDISH MASSAGE
One of the most commonly taught and well-known massage techniques,
Swedish massage is a vigorous system of treatment designed
to energize the body by stimulating circulation. Five basic
strokes, all flowing toward the heart, are used to manipulate
the soft tissues of the body. The disrobed client is covered
by a sheet, with only the area being worked on exposed. Therapists
use a combination of kneading, rolling, vibrational, percussive,
and tapping movements, with the application of oil, to reduce
friction on the skin. The many benefits of Swedish massage
may include generalized relaxation, dissolution of scar tissue
adhesions, and improved circulation, which may speed healing
and reduce swelling from injury.
TRAGER APPROACH
Trager is an approach to bodywork developed in the 1920s by
American medical practitioner Dr. Milton Trager. It makes
extensive use of touch-contact and encourages the client to
experience the freeing-up of different parts of the body.
The approach consists of simple exercises called Mentastics
and deep, nonintrusive hands-on work, including fluid, gentle,
rocking movements. The idea is to use motion in the muscles
and joints to produce positive sensory feelings that are then
fed back into the central nervous system. The result is a
feeling of lightness, freedom, and flexibility. A Trager session
takes from 60 to 90 minutes. No oils or lotions are used.
The client wears a swimsuit or underwear and lies on a well-padded
table in a warm, comfortable environment. No long, broad strokes
are used over the surface of the body and, unlike various
techniques of deep tissue manipulation, it does not utilize
extreme pressure or rapid thrusts to create structural change
and does not produce pain as a necessary adjunct to its effectiveness.
During the session, the practitioner makes touch-contact with
the client in such a gentle and rhythmic way that the person
lying passively on the table actually experiences the possibility
of being able to move each part of the body freely, effortlessly,
and gracefully on their own. The practitioner works in a relaxed,
meditative state of consciousness. This allows the practitioner
to connect deeply with the recipient in an unforced way, to
remain continually aware of the slightest responses, and to
work efficiently without fatigue.
VISCERAL MANIPULATION
Visceral manipulation enhances the normal mobility and tissue
motion of the organs of the visceral system. Hypertonicity,
displacement, and adhesions can all cause organs to work against
each other, creating chronic irritation and fixed, abnormal
points of tension. The visceral organs are dependent on their
ability to move freely in the visceral cavity to then work
correctly and efficiently. When they are pulled out of their
effective positions, they cease to function properly. By freeing
each organ to work compatibly with the others, a therapist
can potentially alter and improve the structure and functioning
of the entire body.
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