 |
ARTICLES
Visit my blog for Rolfing®
Structural Integration
videos..
Rolfing® may have an abrasive
reputation, but this 50-year-old
form of bodywork can help you
move with ease and grace.
Georgia Jacobs takes a step.

This
year, '70s and '80s retro crept
from the catwalks to the fitness
arena as celebrities like
Madonna and Geri Halliwell
attributed their svelte
physiques to yoga, Pilates and
ballet. Another throwback from
the macramé era, Rolfing®—a
unique soft tissue manipulation
technique developed by Columbia
Professor Ida P. Rolf —is now
gaining ground in Japan. Rumored
to be a painful form of deep
tissue massage, this kissing
cousin of chiropractic work with
surrounds a quirky name realigns
the myofascial (soft tissue)
webbing that surround bones,
joints and muscles that become
out of whack due to aging,
gravity, emotional stress,
injuries, and poor posture.
Imbalanced connective tissue can
not only zap your energy but may
cause chronic pain, headaches,
slouching, decreased athletic
performance, superficial
breathing, and even the blues.
So if you're looking to put the
spring back in your step and pep
in your spirit, one of Tokyo's
Rolfers can lend a hand.
Rolf
and Roll
Rolfing® takes its name from
Ida, whose pioneering work
spanned 50 years until her death
in 1979. A native New Yorker,
Rolf graduated from Barnard
College in 1916, moving on to
Columbia University where she
earned a Ph.D. in biochemistry.
She became interested in
alternative medicine in Geneva,
where she studied homeopathy in
the late '20s and began to
develop what she eventually
dubbed structural integration.
Rolf's many success stories
earned her media acclaim, and in
1967, the first guild was formed
in Colorado. Today, the Rolf
Institute of Structural
Integration in Boulder serves as
the official headquarters, where
new practitioners are trained
and a certified. Although once
perceived as experimental, as
early as the mid-'90s, the Wall
Street Journal and Newsweek
reported that the technique was
covered by some US insurance
plans—although not in Japan—and
it's currently embraced by
physicians, physical therapists
and fitness trainers across the
globe.
Because the technique involves
kneading, it's often confused
with other forms of muscle
therapy. But Florida
chiropractor and fitness trainer
Ginger Southall, D.C., says
there's a difference. "Rolfing®,
or structural integration, is
often lumped under the category
of 'massage,' but is actually a
unique entity unto itself. It
involves a distinctive technique
that stretches tight and
thickened fascia: the thin
sheath of connective tissue that
links the muscular system
throughout the body. Often
problems with this fascial
network manifest as chronic soft
tissue injuries, buildup of scar
tissue from surgery, injury or
intense training and even
muscular tightness and
inflexibility as commonly seen
in the hamstrings," she
explains.
The
treatment generally involves 10
sessions that reorganize the
fascia from head to toe, inside
to outside, lending the skeletal
and muscular structures more
support and allowing sticky
fascial sheaths to slide back
and forth with ease. The end
result is improved posture,
flexibility and breathing, as
well as the correction of
prohibitive patterns of
movement.
"Rolfing® can accomplish in ten
sessions what it takes five
years to accomplish with yoga,"
says Tokyo-based Nobuko Fukada,
owner of Life Harmony and
certified Rolfer since 2000.
Although Rolfing® has been
endorsed by famous athletes,
pianists, guitarists, and other
such people who have used it to
cure injuries and achieve higher
performance, everyone can
benefit from it, according to
Fukada. The institute in
Colorado recommends a 10-session
cycle, usually over 10 weeks.
However, Fukada says specific
problems can perhaps be
addressed in two to three
sessions. "Since each person is
unique, there is really no magic
number of sessions," she says.
Dedicated to working women,
Fukada has even created a
special treatment (one to two
sessions) tailored to stiff arms
and shoulders. In general, she
says ten sessions is enough to
make significant changes in the
body; however, it is not
uncommon for a client to return
six to twelve months after a
cycle for follow-up work or when
they feel stiffness settling
back in somewhere.
Rolfing® has a psychological
element as well. Rolfer
Yoshitaka Koda, who has been
practicing in Japan 10 years,
compares patterns of movement to
memories stored in the structure
of the body. "You hold your body
in a certain way because of a
past experience. Any posture has
an emotional content. Otherwise
the body is just a machine,"
says Koda. For example, slumped
shoulders can be a coping
mechanism to counteract
childhood fears. People who have
been Rolfed often report that
the treatment has a significant
effect on their outlook and
self-awareness. But, according
to Koda, the feeling of release
doesn't mean the problem is
fixed, particularly if the
client continues with old ways.
 |
 |
|
Before and After Rolfing®
Photo courtesy of the Rolf
Institute |
Shape Up
Rumors of Rolfers
roughing up their patients
abound, but speaking to those
who have had the therapy dispels
myths of severe pain. "It could
be very intense. A friend once
called it black and blue
massage. But it wasn't to a
point where I wanted to stop. It
was strange because there would
be certain places like the
forearm, where you wouldn't
think there was muscle, but it
was obvious I was holding
something there," says New
Yorker Charles Walters, a
55-year-old personal finance
consultant.
Pianist Leon Fleisher, who lost
the use of his right hand due to
a repetitive stress injury,
regained the ability to play
concertos with all ten fingers
after undergoing Rolfing®. He
told The New York Times his
muscles felt like "petrified
rock" before the therapy but
stresses to some extent the cure
lies in the discomfort. "It
requires active participation on
the part of the patient because
when you feel soreness, your
tendency is to contract and
protect it. But you have to give
in to the pain and relax under
it." Both Fukada and Koda insist
Rolfing® should never entail
significant pain. "A sensitive
and skillful practitioner can
change long-standing
physiological patterns without
causing great discomfort to the
client," Fukada says.
A
course begins with an analysis
of posture, and many Rolfers
take before and after photos of
a patient's front, back and
sides, pointing out any existing
imbalances. The therapist then
begins to systematically smooth
and loosen tight tissue.
Although each of the 10 sessions
is designed to meet specific
goals, the experience can vary
depending on an individual's
needs.
While
Rolfing® has not been widely
available in Japan, all that is
about to change. Lead Instructor
Cornelia Rossi from Brazil, and
assistant instructor Valerie
Berg from the US, have been
conducting a seminar here in
Tokyo in which 12 of the first
Japan-trained Rolfers will be
officially certified by the
institute and will join the 11
here and 1,200 worldwide.
The
cost ranges from ¥12,000-¥15,000
per session, each of which lasts
one and a half to two hours, a
small investment for the
plethora of benefits structural
integration can provide. Fukada
likes to quote the doctor
herself. "Dr Rolf said Rolfing®
is unnecessary only if you are
Fred Astaire. It can help anyone
who wants to find and experience
an increased sense of balance in
his or her body," she says.
Article From
Metropolis On-line Health &
Beauty Section 02/19/02
The
area of experimental known as
physiological psychology has
evolved in the 1990s.
Increasingly, the field is being
referred to as behavioral
neuroscience, replacing
physiological psychology and
biological psychology.
Nonetheless, the goals of
psychologists in this field
remain the same: to utilize
basic research to explain
behavior in physiological terms,
working on the assumption that
for every behavioral event there
is a corresponding physical
event or series of events.
The
physiological psychologist (or
behavioral neuroscientist) is
also concerned with the
functioning of the adrenal
glands and with the physical
processes involved in sensation.
Although physiological
psychology is concerned with
physical organisms, it is
distinguished from such life
sciences as physiology and
biology by its focus on
behavior. Researchers may
investigate questions such as
how the brain controls physical
movements or regulates eating;
the role of sex hormones in
violent behavior; the effects of
drugs on memory and personality;
the physiological basis for
sleep and dreaming; and the
areas of the brain devoted to
language functions.
Physiological psychology
overlaps with the field of
neurobiology, which is the study
of the nervous system and its
functions. A related field is
psychopharmacology, the study of
drugs and behavior.
Another sub field of
physiological psychology,
psychophysiology, deals with the
measurement of physiological
responses as they relate to
behavior. Practical applications
include lie detector tests;
clinical tests of vision and
hearing; tests of brain activity
in individuals with mental
retardation and neurological and
behavioral disorders; and
biofeedback training.
Gale Encyclopedia of Psychology,
2nd ed. Gale Group, 2001.
Child
psychologists study human
development from the earliest
stages of life through
adolescence and adulthood. These
scientists focus on many areas
of growth. In the early years of
life they include motor skills,
perceptual analysis and
inference, language and speech,
social behavior, and the
emergence of basic emotions of
fear, sadness, anxiety, shame,
and guilt.
The
two important strategies for
studying development include the
longitudinal study in which a
particular group of children is
studied over a long period of
time, sometimes from infancy
through adulthood. The second
method, which is more popular
because it is less expensive, is
called the cross-sectional
method. In this strategy a group
of children or adolescents at a
particular age are studied at
that age. In order to compare
different ages, different
samples would be studied but no
group would be studied over
time.
The
major question that
developmental psychologists wish
to understand is how the
maturational forces that are
inevitable interact with
experience to produce the
behaviors, skills, and motives
that we observe. For example,
all children will develop an
ability to speak and understand
language before they are three
years of age. However, in some
cultural settings, children
display this skill soon after
the first birthday, while in
others it might be delayed until
the second or third birthday.
A
related problem that puzzles
child psychologists has to do
with the temperamental factors
children inherit that make a
contribution to their individual
personalities. Here, too, the
puzzle is to understand how
these inherited temperamental
biases and experience in the
family and with other children
contribute to the traits the
child develops.
Prior
to Sigmund Freud's writings
which became popular after the
turn of the century, most
Western explanations of the
differences among children were
attributed to temperament or
constitution. Freud changed this
by arguing that family
experience was the more
important determinant of
differences in children's moods,
emotions, and symptoms. Freud
believed that those experiences
in the family made the child
vulnerable to conflicts over
hostility and sexuality. The
intensity of the conflict and
the defenses the child learned
to deal with those conflicts
were the main determinant of the
child's personality. These view
were very popular in the United
States for the period from 1930
to 1960. However, because of the
lack of strong scientific
support for these theories,
loyalty to these ideas has
eroded in a major way.
Erik
Erikson substituted for Freud's
famous stages on oral, anal,
phallic, and genital a more
humane set of stages which
emphasized the development of
attachment relations in the
first year of life and more
generative and creative aspects
of human nature, rather than the
more narcissistic and
destructive.
Jean
Piaget's contribution was to
motivate child psychologists to
pay more attention to the
child's intellectual and
cognitive development. However,
it is fair to say that at the
present time there is no
overarching theory of child
development. Child psychologists
are working on a series of
problems that cover all of the
important areas of growth. It is
hoped that as these facts are
gathered, brilliant theorists
sometime in the future will be
able to synthesize this
information into a coherent
theory that clarifies the
child's growth. Author/s:
Jerome Kagan
A
technique that allows
individuals to monitor their own
physiological processes so they
can learn to control them.
Biofeedback originated with the
field of psychophysiology, which
measures physiological responses
as a way of studying human
behavior. Types of behavior that
may be studied in this way range
from basic emotional responses
to higher cognitive functions.
Today, biofeedback is also
associated with behavioral
medicine, which combines
behavioral and biomedical
science in both clinical and
research settings. In
biofeedback training, the
monitoring of physiological
responses is performed for
therapeutic instead of (or in
addition to) investigative
purposes. Biofeedback has been
applied with success to a
variety of clinical problems,
ranging from migraine headaches
to hypertension.
The
technique provides people with
continuous information about
physiological processes of which
they are normally unaware, such
as blood pressure or heart rate.
Through special equipment, these
processes are recorded, and the
information is relayed back to
the person through a changing
tone or meter reading. With
practice, people learn
strategies that enable them to
achieve voluntary control over
the processes involved. For
example, persons trying to
control their blood pressure
levels may see a light flash
whenever the pressure drops
below a certain level. They may
then try to remember and analyze
what their thoughts or emotions
were at that moment and
deliberately repeat them to keep
the pressure level low.
Initially, they may simply be
asked to try and keep the light
flashing for as long as possible
and given verbal reinforcement
for their efforts.
The
biofeedback training may
continue for several days or
weeks, with the subjects trying
to keep the light flashing for
longer periods in subsequent
sessions. Eventually they will
need to produce the desired
response without electronic
feedback, a goal which can be
accomplished through various
methods. They may practice the
learned response at the end of
the training session or at home
between sessions. There can also
be random trials without
feedback during the sessions. An
alternate strategy is the
gradual and systematic removal
of the feedback signal during
the training sessions over a
period of time. After the
initial training is completed,
subjects may return to the
biofeedback facility to assess
their retention of the skills
they have learned or for
additional training.
Biofeedback training has been
used in treating a number of
different clinical problems.
Monitoring of patients' heart
rates has been used with some
success to help people suffering
from heartbeat irregularities,
including premature ventricular
contractions (PVCs) and
tachycardia, while hypertensive
individuals have been able to
control high blood pressure
through the use of biofeedback.
Clinicians have been
particularly successful in their
use of neuromuscular feedback to
treat complaints arising from
tension in specific muscles or
muscle groups. Tension headaches
have been alleviated through the
reduction of frontalis
(forehead) tension, and
relaxation of the face and neck
muscles has been helpful to
stutterers. Feedback from muscle
groups has been helpful in the
rehabilitation of stroke
patients and other persons with
neuromuscular disorders such as
foot drop. These patients may be
unable to relax or contract
muscles at will, and biofeedback
can make them aware of small,
otherwise imperceptible changes
in the desired direction and
allow them to repeat and
eventually increase such
changes.
In
addition to its alleviation of
physical complaints,
neuromuscular biofeedback has
been an effective tool in the
treatment of chronic anxiety,
even when it has resisted
psychotherapy and medication. By
learning deep muscle relaxation,
anxious patients, including
those suffering from related
conditions such as insomnia,
have seen a reduction in their
symptoms. Even for patients who
have been able to achieve
relaxation through other means,
such as meditation or
progressive relaxation,
biofeedback can be a valuable
supplementary technique that
offers special advantages, such
as allowing a therapist to track
closely the points at which a
patient tenses up and try to
learn what thoughts are
associated with the tension.
Biofeedback-induced relaxation
of forehead muscles has also
been effective in treating
asthma.
Another type of biofeedback
involves the monitoring of brain
activity through
electroencephalographs (EEGs). A
reduction of seizures in
epileptics has been reported
through biofeedback techniques
involving EEG activity near the
sensor motor cortex, known as
sensory motor rhythm. Brain wave
activity has also been of
interest in connection with
alpha waves, which are thought
to characterize a desirable
state of relaxed alertness.
Patients have been taught to
increase their alpha rhythms in
three or four 30-minute
conditioning sessions.
|
|