
Tucson
Citizen
Ouch – it feels so good….
When it stops, that is. Rolfing
is a type of massage designed to
realign the body. Results are
positive and immediate, say many
who’ve experienced it.
By Matt Stewart
Citizen Staff Writer
It’s a type of massage you won’t soon forget. The therapy is called Rolfing, and the object is to put the body, twisted and turned by life’s stresses, back into its natural order.
Rolfing realigns the body, so
the person can “stand up
straight in the field of gravity
without trying,” said Clay Cox,
52, a certified advanced Rolfer™
.
“There’s a blueprint in everyone
for every cell to go back in
place,” said Cox, who has worked
in Tucson for 17 years. “The
body holds a memory in the
tissue. How we fix aches and
pains is by correcting people’s
posture.”
Muscles that are stressed
through emotional trauma,
physical injury or poor posture,
explained Cox, often remain
stressed. Over time, these
muscles become frozen in that
stressed state, held in place by
envelopes of fascia which
eventually adhere to each other.
Rolfing separates the fascial
envelopes from each other,
enabling the muscle to return to
their normal anatomical
positions, Cox explained.
The rolfer first takes a picture
of the patient, wearing a
bathing suit or underwear. They
then discuss what needs to be
done to straighten the patient’s
posture.
“We need to get to know each
other a little bit before we
trust each other through this
process,” Cox said.
The rolfer then manipulates the
fascial envelopes, freeing the
muscles to move closer to their
ideal position.
“A rolfer creates space in which
the muscles can move,” Cox said.
“Within that space, the muscles
can go back where they belong.”
Rolfing doesn’t make you stand
straight,” Cox said. “It gives
you the choice, and people find
that it feels much better to
stand straight than to stand
slouched.”
Rolfing consists of 10 sessions.
Each session focuses on a
different part of the body. Many
patients say they see immediate
results.
“you go in for one session and
you can tell your body has
changed,” said Erich Brauer, 23,
a patient who has gone through
three sessions. “before my back
felt normal, but now it feels
more normal. The old normal is a
joke.”
Rolfing is named for its
creator, Ida P. Rolf, a
biochemist who spent 50 years
perfecting her technique for
permanently correcting a
person’s posture. She theorized
that people could be physically
and psychologically balanced
only if their bodies were
properly aligned.
When people get rolfed, they
report felling more graceful,
more fluid,” Cox said.
Rolfing has become accepted in
the athletic community.
“I’ve Rolfed many athletes,” Cox
said, “and it definitely
improves performance. It also
reduces the number of injuries
because the body is not working
against itself to do the task at
hand.”
Some fear that being rolfed may
be painful, but Cox insists the
procedure while uncomfortable at
time, need not be painful.
“The body holds memories in its
muscles, and oftentimes, once
you start working on those
muscles, the memories come
back,” Cox said.
“Parts of it hurt and parts of
it don’t,” Brauer said. “When he
hits a spot, I remember, ‘Yeah,
I used to have an injury
there’”.
Cox got into rolfing through his
own injury. At age 30, he fell
off his motorcycle and broke his
neck in two places. While in
traction, a friend who was a
rolfer, guaranteed he would get
him out of bed and back to a
normal life.
“I had been flat on my back,
totally immobilized in traction
for two weeks. He spent 20
minutes with me and I got up and
dressed myself, and we walked
out of the hospital.”
The technique impressed Cox
enough that he decided to learn
it himself. He resigned as a Los
Angeles County probation officer
and applied to the Rolf
Institute in Boulder, Colorado,
the only certified school for
rolfing in the world. So
determined was he that he would
learn the technique that he
moved to Boulder before he was
even accepted into the program.
There are currently 850
certified rolfers in the world,
Cox said. To become a certified
rolfer, one must study for two
years at the Rolf Institute, and
then continue training for seven
years.
Its an amazing process,” Cox
said. “Everyday someone comes in
and changes right before my
eyes.”