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Online Emotional Guidance – skype sessions to integrate body and mind

March 1, 2012 by craniohealing Leave a Comment

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by MIRA on MARCH 1, 2012

For some people who are busy or going through a lot, it’s simply convenient to work on themselves and get support in their own homes and offices where theyfeel most comfortable. That’s where online emotional guidance can be handy. And for those who have had sessions with me but don’t live in Bali, skype sessions are a way to continue the work and be reminded to keep up your inner awareness practice in everyday life. They also help to anchor you back in your body when you get lost in your thoughts and can’t make decsions or move forwards…

Whether you are experiencing fear, stress, sadness, anger or any combination of other emotions, in online emotional guidance we approach your experience through a simple conversation. Then I guide you towards feeling sensation in your body, and feeling, rather than thinking. Emotions get out of hand when we lose connection with body sensation. The thoughts and stories they trigger contribute to even more emotion. So we practise calming the nervous system through sensing the body and being in the present. You learn not to let the emotions overwhelm you and your awareness of reality increases. Whether the cause is a change in career, relationship break-up, mid-life crisis or whatever unexpected turn of events, online emotional guidance is a resource to support you in steering your course to clearer waters…

As I work I tune into (sense) your energetic core, in the same way as in a craniosacral session, and the conversation is very much guided by a feeling connection with your soul. I also look at your energy field, and how things going on there relate to holding and movement in your body. Even though it is skype, there is a similar energy field as if we were in the room together, and I can pick up the subtleties of feeling and bring them to your awareness. I also reflect back to you some of the unconscious elements that are presenting themselves so they can come into awareness, as is appropriate. Your being or core dictates the session, just as in cranio, and your resistances are always respected.

As you talk about your experience, issues arise so that you can come to see how your family relationships have shaped your responses, attitudes and relationships, and find new more authentic responses from your own core. So the sessions form a process where each week you sink deeper into your own being as your awareness of yourself grows, and past issues integrate. In the process you move gently through old unfelt emotions, and gradually increase in clarity, physcial energy and confidence. Your experience of yourself moves deeper into your body, down into your hips, abdomen and feet as you embody and integrate. Your core expands, the problems dissolve and your deeper self starts to live. The sessions can also support you in moving into a new expression – whether job, relationship or life – of your own unique creativity and being.

“I did 2 years in therapy before, i feel like it just kept me where i was. I’ve made so much more progress with you already, this is something I am going to continue” (Christie, social worker, after 3 cranio sessions and 4 skype sessions)

These sessions are not therapy. We are not looking at solving your problems or making things you don’t like go away or get better.  Online emotional guidance focuses on unblocking and encouraging your core energy, your honest and authentic expression of self, and giving your soul permission to live fully. Sessions offer a new way of living, of experiencing yourself and life, that deepens and expands as you practice. It is (as reported by many clients) way faster and more effective than  talk “therapy” in creating lasting change, because we work through the body and sensation, at the experiential level, rather than “understanding”. As your experience changes, your brain patterns rewire. The sessions give you the tools to practice embodied meditation – that is sensing inside your body and outside your body and being fully aware in each moment – a form of mindfulness which is effective in healing even the most entrenched conditions without using medication. Online emotional guidance can help you move into a whole new experience of life, and of yourself, and ultimately beyond any ideas of yourself to just being as you are, moment to moment, and seeing what life can do with you. If this possibility excites you and your life has lead you to a point where you long to be more fully alive, and to share your love and your unique self with those around you, then please book a session.

Advantages of sessions online

  • if you would like to work on yourself in a place where you feel comfortable.
  • are very busy and do not have time to travel to a session
  • live far away, or are travelling and want consistent support

Tips for skype sessions

  • Please try to create a private space free of distractions and other people’s presence as best you can during the session times (and preferably  10 minutes or so before and after the sessions.)
  • If possible please use a head set with michrophone so that you have your hands free (speaker phone might create an echo and may not work so well).
  • It would be a good idea to have some paper and pen ready in case you want to make any notes.
  • If you have phones with you or in the room, please turn them off or set it in silent mode.

To book a session, click here

Download skype here: http://www.skype.com/intl/en-us/get-skype

Please feel free to share with those you think will be interested in these thoughts, but please give credit to the author.

Tagged as: anger, dealing with emotions, dealing with transition, fear, hange in career, mid-life crisis, Online emotional guidance, online spiritual counselling, relationship break-up, resolving emotional issues, sadness, skype sessions, stress, transition

Filed Under: Health, Lifestyle Tagged With: anger, change in career, dealing with emotions, dealing with transmiten, fear, mid-life crisis, online emotional guidance, online espiritual counselling, relationship break-up, resolvió emotional issues, sandez, skype sesiona, stress, transmiten

Craniosacral Therapy & Ego Death – how sessions can support the process

August 23, 2011 by craniohealing Leave a Comment

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by Mira on AUGUST 23, 2011

 Introduction

There is a lot of mystery and unecessary fear surrounding the process of ego death, and many people therefore don’t even know what is going on when it happens to them. They may experience very strong and inexplicable emotions and the life they know collapsing around them as everything seems to descend into despair. This article aims to give some pointers and practical guidelines as well as providing information on how and when craniosacral therapy can be beneficial as part of this process. It also gives an overview to encourage people and help them to orient themselves in the process and find their way through more easily.

What is Ego death?

There is no definitive answer, but the experiences that many people go through are similar. In new age speak its may be referred to as ascension, and undoubtedly ego death is a prerequisite for this shift in consciousness. Some branches of psychotherapy refer to it as a process of integrating the shadow, and suggest that it is also the entry point into adulthood. However not all people are destined to go through an ego death in their lifetime, and not all people have the ability to look into themselves that an ego death requires…

So where does this leave us? Well, there are some very common sense ways of looking at the whole issue to demystify it.

As children we learn that some emotions and behaviours are acceptable to our parents, and other’s aren’t. The stuff that is too much for us to feel or that isn’t allowed gets put in a separate compartment in the unconscious mind, to be forgotten and ignored till a later date. This means we end up rather like a donut, with a sticky centre that we don’t really know about and can’t access. The sticky centre is what psychotherapists call our “Shadow”.

The process of ego death is a bit like having a café latte in 2 layers, coffee on the bottom and milk on top, black and white, and gently stirring the two together till they become a homogenous light brown mixture. The outer layer of our peronsality that we have developed in childhood to please our parents and survive can’t stay separate from the true self or inner layer forever. Over time the tension seems to build as those other hidden energies make a bid to be included.  Eventually some external event like betrayal by a partner, or death of a loved one, loss of a job or something else really significant, will challenge the person’s world view so drastically that they let go of control and their whole personality structure starts to disintegrate. It can seem a bit like falling into a hole between two worlds, or letting go of all that is known and familiar. Indeed, that seems to be what happens.

To be really clear, the ego does not actually die. People can’t survive without an ego. Rather the very rigid protective structures formed in early childhood dissolve and reconfigure as a new ego that is rather more in line with the “true” self. People often have the idea that they want to get away from or live without ego, but this is a new age myth created by lack of understanding of psychological process. Without ego, an individual would be totally overwhelmed by the contents of the unconsious mind, and would be classed as insane. Ego is the necessary filetring mechanism or gate keeper between the unconscious and conscious experience, letting the person decide how to respond to the emotions that they experience, rather than mistaking them for reality…

Emotional Process

When you have an experience that is so immense or painful or shocking that it can’t be grapsed by the thinking mind, it opens up a space for unconscious emotions to be accessed, and become conscious. It’s as if the contradictions that are experienced are too big to reconcile and something breaks or gives. The whole personality structure can start to collapse and it can feel as if internally it is raining bits and pieces. There can be intense confusion, sadness, anger and terror as the whole world seems to fall apart and all fixed reference points are lost for a while. Often at this point you lose your partner, job, home, money and various other external factors which contribute to the general sense of insecurity and loss.

However at the same time an energy begins to rise from the base of the spine, which flushes out all the old emotions and patterns as it rises. It also ignites creativity and when it becomes established, it can become a new point of reference in reality. This is a well documented process which you can read about in texts on psychotherapy or jungian analysis. Jungians follow the dreams to help bring the unconscious energies that arise into conscious awareness, and make the most of the opportunity to integrate these elements. This can help the therapist to monitor what is going on with the client – things can get very intense, and its good to have a guide or an anchor in reality to hold onto… Yogis also recognise this experiene but tend to refer to it as kundalini uprising. Different traditions have different ways of dealing with the same experience, and the overlap between these is considerable.

People tend to go through increasingly deep cycles of fear/terror, anger and sadness. In effect this is deep grief. One way of looking at it is that you are mourning the attention you never received from your parents as a child, and your own wasted potential. Another perspective is that you are grieving the loss or death of everything you have been – of your personality and the life that was familiar to you. When the shadow integrates and a new functioning ego has been established, you will literally be a different person, though maybe only your closest friends will notice. The grieving process simply has its own place and time, and there’s not much you can do but sit it out… it will pass.

Despair, powerlessness and total hopelessness often accompany this process. If you look at it from a common sense perspective, this is a natural response since your personality structure, which you have used to survive and make your way in the world, is dissolving before your eyes. These emotions are best experienced but not taken too seriously, since they will pass, and are not to be confused with reality. It is only your ego that has anything to despair about, since it is on the way out, in the form that you know it… You will be fine. If you are experiencing terror during the day or night, please read the article in the blog on fear for a detailed discussion and practical tips.

Clients often come complaining that they can’t handle it, that they want it to be over, that they have to get through it, that they need to find their real purpose now. This is often the ego wanting things to be different, wanting to stay in control and wanting things its way. Despite complaining, often these people also have a deep underlying sense of peace and the rightness of what is happening at the same time. When people eventually surrender and let go, it can seem as if life begins to live through them, and an ease, logic and lightness informs their experience. And often in the middle of this process a strong and spontaneous sense of clarity of direciton arises which gives the person a focus to help move through the emotions. This doesn’t however come through the will, but from surrender to a higher intelligence which is beyond the grasp of the thinking, wanting mind.

It is a very intense and bewildering process because it involves going totally into the unkonwn, and just experiencing the emotions and changing perspectives of reality without any guarantee of success or safety. There is no guarantee, and the beginning of this realization can be very upsetting. Effectively when this happens you are breaking into the childhood emotions that you were not able to feel at the time. Things can be pretty disorienting because feelings come up that you can’t place or recognise. Often it takes time to find the corresponding inner images and link them with the feelings. However this is an important part of the integration process.

People sometimes talk of it as having fallen into a black hole, and experiencing intense loneliness, isolation and sadness. The natural instinct is to want these feelings to go away. However they can’t be kept away forever, since they are present in the unconscious, and are arising to be integrated. The most helpful stance to take is one of acceptance and embracing the experience. It makes sense to accept it, because it’s happening anyway. If you don’t fight it mentally, its less painful, and you can adapt your practical life to make allownce for it better.

It’s hard when I have to tell people that on the whole it tends to take 6 months to a year before they have moved through this experience. Especially when they are expressing that they don’t think they can stand even one more day in their current state. This is understandable given the extreme emotions, sense of lostness and depression that can be present. But from another perspective this is one of the most profound experiences you can have as a human. And not one that everyone has the opportunity to live through…

Trusting the process

Sometimes it can be helpful to know that things tend to work out for the best, and afterwards when you come out at the other end, life is in fact much easier than before. The thought that “everything that happens in life is for me” can be a helpful mantra. You may still be doing the same occupation, or indeed something totally different, but there will be much less stress and difficulty surrounding the everyday basics, making money, relationships etc. Knowing this makes it a lot easier to surrender to the process, which is happening whether you like it or not, via the age old forces of evolution.  It also helps you develop a sense of trust and flow, and its wonderful to experience the helping hands and experiences that come towards you on the way, especially when you feel that you don’t know how you will or can make it through…

Physical symptoms

Ego death is an extended process with different sysmptoms at different stages. Dizziness and nausea are very common as core energy starts to expand, and unusual sensations are experienced in the body. Often it’s a major challenge for people to learn to feel sensation, and experience the life force or sexual energy that is beginning to expand through their bodies, rather than to disconnect or dissociate. Exhaustion is common. The body and mind go through huge internal changes – doing inner emotional work uses energy, just as does running a marathon. It helps to slacken off the pace of life and extra commitments, and on the whole its probably not advisable to start new ventures till you are nearly through, since you may not be able to work consistently.

Many people experience a pulling through the ears that seems to connect into the chest. This can be extremely uncomfortable and disorienting, and accompanied by rage, frustration or general dis-ease. Although it may persist for months, it is nothing to worry about, and does not require medical attention. It is just energy that has been held in the core of the body, deep inside the central structures and membranes of the brain, that eventually finds a way to release bit by bit. Similarly, people complain of a pulling sensation or a pain in the eyes. Often this is associated with early childhood or preverbal neglect, and can be bewildering. Craniosacral therapy can be a gentle way to help you access and integrate these emotions, since they are often held deep within the body memmory. Behind the sadness that people experience in this area, there is normally rage or power, waiting to be felt and integrated. If you want to read more about experiencing and integrating anger, please see the article in the blog on anger.

Since so much is changing and releasing from deep within the psyche and body tissues, it can be helpful to be aware of removing toxins from the body during this expereince. Adding vegetable juices into the diet, as well as doing enemas several times a week, and can all contribute to helping your liver to eliminate the toxins coming out. If you want to know exactly what’s going on you can have your blood monitored with live blood analysis by a practitioner who can also prescribe appropriate actions to take, depending on the state of your blood. This can be very reassuring when you can hardly get out of bed due to fatigue, and find out that your blood is completely full with toxic waste. Then you can do something about it, rather than beat yourself up for being lazy…

Lack of boundaries is also an issue during this experience. Once your old ego or defence structure crumbles, and you start experiencing the pain underneath, you often find yourself in a very needy and vulnerable state. Not all people have the morals and awareness to deal with you kindly without taking advantage, so its good to be extra careful who you associate with. You may find it helpful to spend a fair amount of time alone. Certainly it helps to avoid loud, aggressive and negative people, as you won’t be likely to have much energy or resources to waste on such situations. In the long run this is a very constructive habit to train yourself in anyway, and will help your life run more smoothly and joyfully…

How can craniosacral support this process?

Craniosacral therapy is especially useful for calming the nervous system and helping individuals digest the considerable amount of emotional energy that can be stirred up. Having a weekly session can help keep things level and balanced, which can be very helpful in keep up your morale. Craniosacral therapy can also be helpful in working with persistent problems in particular body areas, such as lower back, and in helping your body build up the necessary energetic resources to move through certain patterns and trauma. In terms of handling mood swings and lack unusual emotional states it can be very helpful to see a practitioner regularely who can help you verbalise what is going on, and re-orient you to a grounded reality if you get a bit disoriented. The reason it works particularly well as a supporting therapy is the gentleness and subtlty of the method that allows unconscious energies to come into conscious awareness and be integrated, like drops of water returning to the pool. It can be extremely reassuring to have the experience of feeling relatively normal again after a session, when you are experiencing so much internal change.

Tagged as: anger, calming nervous system, Craniosacral therapy, dizziness, ego, ego death, fear, grief, integration, jungian analysis, life changes, shadow, strong emotions, transition, true self, unconscious mind

 

Filed Under: Health, Nutrition Tagged With: anger, calming nervous system, craniosaral therapy, disiento, ego, ego death, fear, gire, integración, jungian analysis, life changes, shadow, strong emotions, transition, true self, unconscious mind

Craniosacral Therapy & Resolving PTSD in children

July 25, 2011 by craniohealing Leave a Comment

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by Mira on JULY 25, 2011

Introduction

This article outlines the difference between simple trauma and PTSD, which is ongoing, and details common symptoms, as well as the physiological and emotional effects of PTSD.  It also looks at how craniosacral therapy can address the physiological and emotional symptoms of PTSD and assist in resotring the child to normal life.

 

What is trauma?

Ordinary trauma may involve threat to physical life, or to psychological survival. The world that was taken for granted may be shattered. The nervous system becomes overwhelmed, and shuts down. Following the trauma, children may initially show agitated or confused behavior.  They also may show intense fear, helplessness, anger, sadness, horror or denial. These are normal reactions. Normally the physical reactions that kick in as a result of the fear will die down within a few hours. Sometimes the stress may take up to a year to dissipate.

How is PTSD different?

But for some people it never goes away. A child or adolescent who experiences a catastrophic event may develop ongoing difficulties known as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). PTSD in children and adolescents occurs as a result of a child’s exposure to one or more traumatic events that were life-threatening or perceived to be likely to cause serious injury to self or others. In addition, the child must have responded with intense fear, helplessness, or horror. Traumatic events can take many forms, including physical or sexual assaults, natural disasters, traumatic death of a loved one, or emotional abuse or neglect.

Symptoms of PTSD

Children  with PTSD avoid situations or places that remind them of the trauma. Children who experience repeated trauma may develop a kind of emotional numbing to deaden or block the pain and trauma. This is called dissociation. They may also become less responsive emotionally, depressed, withdrawn, and more detached from their feelings.

Children with PTSD may also show the following symptoms:

•                having frequent memories of the event, or in young children,  play in which  some or all of the trauma is repeated over and over

•                having upsetting and frightening dreams

•                acting or feeling like the experience is happening again

•                worry about dying at an early age

•                losing interest in activities

•                having physical symptoms such as headaches and stomachaches

•                showing more sudden and extreme emotional reactions

•                having problems falling or staying asleep

•                showing irritability or angry outbursts

•                 having problems concentrating

•                acting younger than their age (for example, clingy or whiny behavior, thumb sucking)

•                showing increased alertness to the environment

The symptoms of PTSD may last from several months to many years. They seem to occur more often in children who already have a history of poor emotional regulation from the parents, and poor attachment security. This will affect their ability to make sense of the trauma and to draw comfort from others.

Why early treatment of trauma is important

Once the trauma has occurred, however, early intervention is essential.  Support from parents, school, and peers is important.  Emphasis needs to be placed upon establishing a feeling of safety.  Psychotherapy (individual, group, or family) that allows the child to speak, draw, play, or write about the event is helpful. Craniosacral therapy can help release the trauma from the nervous system in a series of cycles, and build up the capacity to feel sensation, and feel safe in the body again. With time the emotional energy and memories of the experience can be fully integrated and normal life can resume.

Craniosacral treatment can help reconnect the child with emotions that have been stored in the body, can slowly release symptoms such as headaches and stomachaches, improve the normal appetite for life and stabilize the emotions. Because craniosacral is such a gentle therapy, and practitioners tend to be extremely sensitive and finely tuned, this can be one of the few ways to reach a severely traumatised  and very frightened, speechless child and help them regain contactwith here and now reality.

The sooner the child is treated the easier and faster the recovery is on the whole, and prevents further chemical imbalance in the body and brain changes. Once posttraumatic stress symptoms emerge, PTSD leads to neurophysiologic correlates that impact brain function in developing children and adolescents

Severe emotional trauma has widespread effects on children’s development. These effects include undermining children’s sense of security in a reasonable and safe world in which they can grow and explore, as well as causing a child to not believe that their parents can protect them from harm. The premature destruction of these beliefs can have profound negative consequences on development. In addition, a child with such experiences may spend most of their time worrying about whether they will survive at all, rather than actually living.

How Craniosacral can work directly on the effects of trauma in the brain

Craniosacral therapy can address the unconscious memories of trauma that are stored in the amygdala – the most primitive part –  of the brain. This is especially important for very small children since before age 3 their prefrontal cortex has not yet developed and they can only process trauma amygdala, rather than over-riding this with the orbito-frontal cortex, which has not yet fully developed. In addition, verbalizing activities of the left prefrontal cortex are important for making sense of traumatic memories. Being able to talk about and name shocking experiences helps come to terms with them. However this is not helpful for small children…

The hippocampus, whose functioning in memory is negatively affected by trauma, is also required for processing feelings normally. Without these functions a child may get flashback states when a traumatic memory is relived because it has not been fully processed. Fortunately craniosacral therapy is sensitive enough to be able to detect separate areas of brain function or underactivity and by listening to what is going on, allow the system to re-establish an integrated working connection. It is also one of the few therapies able to work with the stubborn and inaccessible amygdala. This may take some time, especially with severe trauma, however the progress is often visible from the first session on, as soon as contact is made with the child’s core and soul, and a basic sense of safety and grounding in the body is established once again. Sometimes children can wait years for this to happen, and to an anxious parent; it may seem almost like a miracle when it does. Previous states are then quickly forgotten as life resumes again.

Tagged as: abuse, amygdala, anxiety, Craniosacral therapy, dissociation, fear, hippocampus, PTSD in children, stress, trauma recovery, trauma treatment

Filed Under: Health Tagged With: abuse, amygdala, anxiety, craniosacral therapy, disociación, fear, hippocampus, PTSD, PTSD in children, stress, trauma recovery, trauma treatment

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