Rosen Method Bodywork Releases Pain and Emotion
Auto accidents can cause trauma. Repetitive
movement may lead to repetitive stress injuries. Can emotion
cause chronic physical pain?
Physical therapists who use the Rosen Method, find that the
gentle hands-on bodywork combined with a certain kind of talking
during the treatment session can enhance physical therapy
treatments and alleviate chronic pain and dysfunction in the
body.
Marion Rosen, PT, who developed the method, explained that
Rosen Method practitioners employ hands-on techniques to relax
chronically tense muscles in order to access the emotional
background of pain that is often at the root of chronic pain.
"The emotional causes of physical pain," she explained, "are
typically ignored in physical therapy."
"Physically we do not try to take away the pain (with Rosen
Method bodywork), but we try to relax people enough so that
through the relaxation, feelings can appear that cause the pain,"
said Rosen, who has a private practice in Berkeley, CA.
The Rosen method maintains that people have emotional
attitudes about themselves that occur during childhood, that
cause a person to tense or hold certain muscles. People are
usually unaware of the tensions unless they cause pain or
discomfort. While talking with the person in a particular manner,
practitioners feel for muscle tension and watch the natural
breath as they work.
"In a typical Rosen session," explained Teri Katz, PT, "a
person might say that he has a pain in his back. I might ask,
'When did it start?' He says he had an accident three years ago.
As a Rosen Method bodywork practitioner, I would then ask what
was happening in his life three years ago. Very often, there is a
connection between what was happening in his life and the auto
accident. As a person starts to relax, their breath changes."
Normally, muscles contract, then relax, and the relaxation is
reflected in the breath. Rosen method practitioners look for
muscles that don't relax with the breath, and begin to talk to
the person about associations that could be linked with the
muscle tension.
"Some session are very quiet, and in some sessions there's a
lot of talking. We feel that the talking deepens the work. When
people can verbalize things that they have never been able to
verbalize before, there's a shift that happens in the body that
allows people to let go," she said.
The Rosen method is not psychotherapy for solving mental
problems, cautioned Katz. "It's not oriented that way at all.
It's much more about whatever the experience is that someone has
embodied."
For instance, parents might have told a child to stop crying,
that it's not OK to cry. "In order to stop crying, you have to
tighten muscles in your neck," Katz explained. The unexpressed
emotions can cause tension in those muscles throughout the
person's life. "As the neck muscles relax, these feelings surface
and the person may express them."
Rosen explained that such muscle tension often originates
while a person is growing up, especially from the loss of a
parent, fear when going to a new school, the birth of a sibling,
moving away, in addition to a whole world of difficulties in
relationships.
The population that a Rosen method practitioner sees varies
with the background of that practitioner, noted Katz. As a PT,
she may use the Rosen method with people who have complaints
including disk problems, post-polio syndrome, Parkinson's
disease, AIDS and whiplash.
She also sees people with general everyday aches and pains, or
people who are using it for personal growth who find the
treatment both relaxing and emotionally beneficial.
Before deciding to use the Rosen method for physical therapy,
Katz first rules out mechanical, inflammatory, repetitive injury
problems or join dysfunction problems that could be treated with
traditional physical therapy. She also talks to people about
their lives as she works with them.
Physical therapy is very goal oriented, she explained. A
problem is identified, and techniques aimed at alleviating the
dysfunction underlying the problem are employed. "I'm constantly
evaluating and re-evaluating the effectiveness of my work. With
the Rosen method, I don't have a kind of physical goal, because
it's more about people getting in touch with who the really are,
and what it is that holds them back from being who they really
are."
"As a soft tissue technique, the Rosen method is
reimbursable," said Katz, who also has a private practice in
Berkeley, "as long as progress can be documented over time."
The sessions usually run an hour. Clients lie on a massage
table and remove as much of their clothes as they feel
comfortable, always keeping on their underwear. Some clients
remain clothed or gowned. Katz explained that there is no set
order to how she begins the hands-on work. Frequently she begins
with the person lying prone and does soft tissue work on the
trunk, chest, abdomen, legs, diaphragm and neck.
As she works, Katz may talk to the person while paying
attention to the person's natural breathing. "People get better
faster when they talk about their lives," she said. "The aches
and pains that never went away with physical therapy-or that went
away and came back later-go away and don't come back with Rosen
work."
Why this effect occurs is still a mystery to Rosen, yet this
is the key to results in her method. She shows new practitioners
through experiential training, so they can see for
themselves.
Rosen, now over 80 years old, has been a practicing PT in the
United States for half a century. In the 1970's, she and her
method were "discovered" by a few clients who went on to found
the Rosen Institute in Berkeley, CA, in 1983. Since then, Rosen
has taught extensively in the United States and Europe.
The Rosen method has positively influenced Rosen herself, she
believes. "You know when you are 80 and you can still work pretty
much a full day and you have no pain, it should have something to
do with it."
She still receives treatments from other practitioners to see
how it feels. "There's always something new that comes up even
after all these years."
"The body likes to be well," she said, "and if you help the
body get well and it feels better, why then would the same
problems recur? Any person who has a chronic pain, there's
something else behind it."
Constant pain that can't be treated through physical
relaxation methods may not respond to the Rosen method either.
The Rosen method is highly appropriate, however, when the person
gets better through muscle relaxation and talking.
While the Rosen method has applications to physical therapy,
Rosen herself sees it as more of a preventative technique. Still,
the method is also worthwhile for those who have serious pain and
are far along in their condition. "Like my best patient who was
supposed to have hip surgery and the pain went away with her in
one treatment," said Rosen. "That doesn't happen with everybody,
but it can happen."
"People are often surprised to learn what kinds of influences
have caused them to retain physical pain," related Katz. Sometimes
the revelation comes while the person is lying on the table, and
other times people uncover the cause outside of the
practitioner's office.
"It's not like some experience jumps out at you from a black
hole in your life and all of a sudden your eyes are opened," Katz
cautioned. More often the experience is a subtle memory of an
incident or a pattern of experiences. Sometimes it's just the
experience of being met with gentle touch in a way that
acknowledges their pain and suffering that allows healing to
occur. A reaction will not likely cause a physical shock, but
could provoke a teardrop or two, she concluded.
-John Murphy, Staff writer for ADVANCE for Physical
Therapists
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