by Owen Marcus on September 7, 2009
Many years ago, I learned that Dr. Rolf was not the typical scientist; she had an esoteric bent. When I moved my Rolfing practice from Boulder to Scottsdale, one of my teachers introduced me to an old friend of Dr. Rolf’s in Mesa, AZ. This woman made her money in the stock market by using numerology – she did well at it. Being a young man and her being a grandmother, she took me under her wing and feed me. I heard stories of how my new friend and Dr. Rolf would hang out and speak about the occult and esoteric interests from astrology to numerology.
Carole LaRochelle a Rolfer in Santa Rosa, CA wrote a fascinating post on Dr. Rolf’s hidden interests. William Garner Sutherland, the founder of Osteopathic cranial work and Emanuel Swedenborg, a scientist and mystic as Carole describes were two of Dr. Rolf’s primary teachers. Check out her post to learn more about the foundations of Rolfing – they go deep.
Let us know what you think.
September 7, 2009
by Owen Marcus on August 6, 2009
NPR airred a report on how back surgery and many other standard allopathic procedures are not proven to work, yet they are still done.
Many have questioned the effectiveness of various other back pain procedures. For example, long after surgeries for slipped disks had become common practice, it was determined that the surgery has only a slight advantage over rest and rehabilitation. Spinal fusion also remains controversial. In many cases, the passing of time alone can heal the back.
“We do need to today have these kinds of studies done before we implement these strategies in clinical practice,” says Weinstein. “And where we can’t do them because of funding or support or for whatever reason, maybe we ought to think twice about introducing them into the common marketplace.”
In my practice over the years I have seen many clients who had back surgery who came to me saying it didn’t hold. Some of these clients were surgeons who were not going to have another back surgery.
August 6, 2009
by Owen Marcus on July 22, 2009
In the 1940s, a few obscure, forward-thinking osteopaths were working with fascia, after it was first discovered that fascial adhesions were the cause of many conditions. But Dr. Ida P. Rolf made fascia famous. Dr. Rolf’s new therapy, Rolfing, expanded what osteopaths understood about fascia, and what they could do to treat it.
Fascia is the thin, tough connective tissue that extends throughout the body from head to toe as a continuous three-dimensional web. Physical trauma, poor posture, prolonged stress, or inflammation force the fascia to bind up, twist and constrict, creating scar tissue and leaving you with adhesions in your fascia. These adhesions cause constriction around nerves, muscles, bones, blood vessels, and organs. That tightening pulls your body out of alignment, causing everything from back pain, to poor, inefficient breathing, even ankle or knee problems.
Traditional tests such as x-rays, myelograms, CAT scans, and electromyography don’t show these restrictions. Because medical tests can’t show fascial restrictions and their consequences, many people go undiagnosed. Doctors treat their symptom—sore back, “bad” knee, whatever it is; Dr. Rolf , however, recognized the importance of focusing not on the symptoms, but on the fascial adhesions.
Dr. Rolf also understood that you can’t force change; the restriction will just return. Inevitably though, some practitioners thought if a little pressure was good, then more would be better. The “old school” became associated with pain. Then gentle Rolfing evolved as the antithesis, more light massage or myofascial release than Rolfing. Over the last decade, myofascial release has become popular. Practitioners claim that light pressure releases the adhesions.
There is a place for the more gentle approach. If you were working on a young child or the elderly, you would certainly be lighter. For the majority of clients, though, more pressure is often needed. The hallmark of effective Rolfing is the slow, precise and indirect pressure (following the tissue-releasing pattern) that sometimes may be firm. This combination of Dr. Rolf’s firm approach, the sensitivity of osteopathic manipulation, the indirect manipulation of myofascial release, and cranio-sacral work creates the most powerful results.
In the beginning with any client, there will be a place or two that will need deep and precise pressure to get the tissue to release. Without genuine pressure, soft tissue that feels like bone will not release. I don’t care how much intent, time or skill you apply. That hard, dead tissue needs pressure. I often see clients who had work from a practitioner who used gentle pressure on these more tough areas. Other parts of the client might have changed, but these areas didn’t.
I will do the more gentle manipulation when needed. I will also refer out to cranial osteopaths, cranio-sacral therapists, and myofascial release practitioners when needed. That said, there is still a need to do deeper work on many people. My old friend Denis Leri is one of the original Feldenkrais practitioners. He’s told me that Dr. Feldenkrais, the originator of this very gentle movement therapy, would, when needed, get in there to break up hard restrictions.
Just as others learned from Rolfing, we learned that integrating the firmer pressure with slow indirect manipulation could be the most effect approach.
My caution – don’t be lured into thinking gentle manipulation will do it all. When, as a Rolfer, you need to get the tissue released, go slow and go deep as you respond to the tissue releasing. As a client, trust a Rolfer with the skill to go deep in an indirect manner. It can feel good, and it is certainly safe and effective.
July 22, 2009
by Owen Marcus on July 21, 2009
Here is a link to an post about using duck tape to stand straight. If I can’t make it as a Rolfer, I can go out and buy a case of duck tape to custom posture braces.
July 21, 2009
by Owen Marcus on June 26, 2009
While I had my clinic in Scottsdale, AZ I treated many ultra-marathon runners and trail runners. These runners like others saw a huge improvement with their injuries and their performance. Walking and running are natural activities for our bodies. When performed with the help of gravity you move as if you are going downhill.
The elite runners in the study we did with ASU collaborated what my clients were experiencing. Rolfing fixes the problems, then enhances you ability to run naturally with more ease.
Certified Advance Rolfer from Boulder, Colorado Dave Sheldon wrote an excellent article on trail running for Trail Running Magazine. I highly recommend the article for any runner.
June 26, 2009
by Owen Marcus on June 11, 2009
Deepak Chopra, a physician by training wrote an excellent manifesto on the efficacy of holistic health. Quoting statistics from several diverse sources that support what many of us know – we are turning to holistic health even when it means we have to pay for it all out of our own pockets.
Rolfing as one of the first holistic therapies is at the core of this shift Chopra speaks about in his article. For decades, Rolfers have shown that improving you total health is the best investment you can make.
Self-responsibility is the key ingredient to creating a sustainable shift in our healthcare. More people need to see themselves, not a doctor, a health insurance company or the government as the one responsible for their health. Living in a country where it citizens expect a free pill that will immediately cure their current problem with no side effects only perpetuates this dilemma. There will never be such a pill.
June 11, 2009
by Owen Marcus on April 24, 2009
by Owen Marcus on March 15, 2009
Cover of Semi-Tough
The movie Semi-Tough released in 1977 starring Burt Reynolds, Kris Kristofferson, Jill Clayburgh, and Brian Dennehy follows the story of pro-football friends who explore raising their conscious through experiencing a training similar to est and other new age endeavors. Even to this day, I occasionally run into someone who remembers the parody in the film portraying Burt Reynolds being Rolfed. Now you can watch the film for free via your computer -http://www.hulu.com/watch/49754/semi-tough. This film added to Rolfing’s rep of being painful.
Watch it. You will see what you are missing by not receiving the “old school Rolfing.” Let us know what you think.
March 15, 2009
by Owen Marcus on February 26, 2009
Our local newspaper publisher writes about his first session of Rolfing. He is a runner, check it out.
February 26, 2009