Release Health & Wellness Clinic
  • Home
  • Our Philosophy
  • About
    • Acupuncture
    • Kinesiology
    • Massage
    • Coaching
  • Gallery
  • Contact
  • News
  • Home
  • Our Philosophy
  • About
    • Acupuncture
    • Kinesiology
    • Massage
    • Coaching
  • Gallery
  • Contact
  • News
0406 688 832 hello@releasewellness.com.au
Release Health & Wellness ClinicRelease Health & Wellness ClinicRelease Health & Wellness ClinicRelease Health & Wellness Clinic
  • Home
  • Our Philosophy
  • About
    • Acupuncture
    • Kinesiology
    • Massage
    • Coaching
  • Gallery
  • Contact
  • News
  • Home
  • Our Philosophy
  • About
    • Acupuncture
    • Kinesiology
    • Massage
    • Coaching
  • Gallery
  • Contact
  • News
acupuncture
January 18, 2018

Emotional Release

  • Posted By : Meagan Rashleigh/
  • 1 comments /
  • Under : Acupuncture, Chinese Medicine, Chronic Disease, Coaching, Kinesiology, Massage, Women's Health

Emotional Release: What It Is, How to Do It, And Why It’s Good For You

Have you ever had one of those terrible days where everything is going wrong?  You wake up feeling crummy and it’s all downhill from there.  In an attempt to salvage your day, you do your best to cover it up.  You paste a smile on your face, hoping the suffering will magically disappear.  But then something happens, and you just can’t keep it in anymore.  Maybe a final irritation is the straw that breaks the camel’s back, or an intuitive person senses what’s going on and their concern makes the floodgates open wide.  On other occasions, you may have been feeling just fine when a movie or story in the news hits a nerve, making bottled up emotions surge to the surface.  Suddenly, all that feeling and agitation comes pouring out.  Sometimes a million other things that have been bothering you for some time join the exodus.  After the rampage, you may feel remarkably better, as if a weight has been lifted from your shoulders.  Or maybe you feel even worse as all that contained misery is being aired out.  Whatever the case, there has been a definite change- the feelings are now exiting your system.

Energy is meant to move.  Air must be inhaled and exhaled constantly, the blood needs to circulate on an ongoing basis, and organs work consistently to keep the body healthy.  Disease occurs when the energy is blocked and the natural processes cease to work harmoniously.  Emotions are simply another form of energy, and caught feelings can be likened to how buildups of plaque lead to heart attacks.  When we feel happy, it is like a wave of deliciousness and we gladly let it flow through us.  Happiness makes us feel relaxed and open, and holding onto a wave of joy is counterintuitive.  Anyone who has tried to capture a happy moment in fear of losing it knows it never works.  Other feelings we don’t like as well, like sadness, anxiety, and fury, also need to move.  Just like happiness, these feelings are reactions to situations and are meant to arise and pass.  Feeling the emotions as they come will not hurt you, but trying to push it down will.  People often become afraid and confused by their emotions.  They may have a hard time acknowledging their reactions in fear that it makes them a “bad” person, or they may be so overwhelmed by them that they don’t know how to cope.  It is quite common for people to suppress and even repress their feelings so they don’t have to deal with them, or in an attempt to prevent the emotion from persisting and taking over their state of mind.  Wow, what a terrible idea!

Any energy that is not released will stay in the body.  The way having inadequate fiber leads to an accumulation of waste in the colon applies to emotions as well.  Feelings actually get trapped in the tissues.  Clearly, they are a burden to the body’s functioning.  This may not cause any problems at first, but over time emotional symptoms like depression and anxiety are common, as well as physical symptoms like digestive issues, colitis, fluid retention, and headaches.

The good news is there is a way to fix this mess.  Emotional release is a standard part of holistic therapies such as acupuncture, massage, cupping and energy work.  In the alternative approaches, the practitioner’s goal is realigning the system.  In the process of doing so, any blockages are loosened and pushed out.  What was once stuck rises to the surface and is released.  There are also more specific techniques that can be used to promote emotional release by targeting specific pressure points or areas.  Going through this treatment may not be pleasant.  The patient can experience intense grief, burst into tears, curl into a ball, be overwhelmed by rage, or feel a temporary spike in anxiety.  In some cases, patients are hit by uncontrolled waves of laughter.  Crying out, screaming, or physically pummeling the chair or massage table is not out of the ordinary. These reactions are a sign that the treatment moved sluggish energy, which is generally positive.  Patients are not always ready for or aware that these treatments can cause such intense reactions, and a good practitioner will know how to explain the outbursts to them.  Emotional release increases overall wellness, decreases pain, increases motor function, and improves overall quality of life.

There are other ways to release emotions, and some of these can be done without professional help.  Journaling stirs up feelings and can remove the blocks by processing what has been repressed.  Talk psychotherapy traditionally includes emotional release.  Some people are more comfortable confiding in a good friend or family member, and always feel like what they have been holding onto disappears once they share their troubles with a kind, compassionate ear.  The gemstone pink tourmaline is wonderful for releasing pain trapped in the heart, and something as simple as prayer can initiate a release of pent up worries.  Mind-body exercises like tai chi and yoga operate on the same theory as Traditional Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda, respectively.  The movements stimulate energy centers, meridians, and pressure points, and do away with obstructions as the body is aligned.  Like the previously mentioned first time patients, new students may not understand why they suddenly become an emotional wreck following an exercise class.

If you are having emotional problems, physical problems, or both, chances are they are either largely or partially tied to emotions contained in the tissues.  Finding a method to let them out is in your best interests, even if you feel embarrassed, shy, silly, or are afraid to face what you have kept locked deep within.  Doing this helps you appreciate the power of emotions and will helpfully encourage you to live your life differently in which feeling are acknowledged as they happen and not kept inside for days, months, or even years.


October 3, 2017

How To Be Comfortable In Your Own Skin

  • Posted By : Meagan Rashleigh/
  • 0 comments /
  • Under : Acupuncture, Chinese Medicine, Chronic Disease, Coaching, Women's Health

Most of us are not truly happy with who we are.

Maybe we are overly critical, or bury our problems under alcohol or food.

Some of us have such poor self-esteem that we let others tread on us.  Maybe we cover up insecurities with arrogance or lash out to alleviate our own pain.  These are very different behaviours and can range from major to minor, but the root of the problem is always an internal state of discontent.   So many of us are at odds with ourselves and just don’t feel comfortable in our own skin.  Simply, we are experiencing a lack of harmony.

Chinese philosophy embraces both mankind and the cosmos as fundamentally perfect and whole underneath all of the confusion and details.

An even deeper explanation would say that the universe is not separate from us, rather it is something that lies within.  When attuned to this wisdom, we experience a state of wellbeing.  It is at these times of equilibrium that we feel at ease with ourselves and life in general.  It is easy to accept ourselves and live life on life’s terms.  Balance can be achieved no matter the circumstances.  It is relative, meaning that it looks different for different people depending on their situation.  For one person it is being in peak physical condition, having a great job, and being wealthy.  A person with a terminal illness could find a state of harmony by accepting the disease, managing the symptoms, and appreciating positive support from loved ones.  Ultimate harmony is an enlightened state beyond all fear and doubts.  Few are ready to tackle such a momentous task, but no worries.  We can always do the best we can with what we have and find peace at this stage of the journey.  Another idea crucial to the Chinese way of thinking is the interconnectedness of all things.  Nothing operates in isolation; what affects one affects all, so being in harmony with yourself means being in harmony with the whole and vice versa.  There is an emphasis on being aligned with nature for good physical, emotional, and spiritual health.  The third major principle is the idea of yang and yin.  Yang and yin are elements whose interaction forms the basic building blocks of all things in existence.   Nothing is completely yang or yin, and one cannot exist without the other.  Instead the pair of opposites fluctuates in reaction to the other, like a see-saw.  Yang is hot, light, and active, and yin is cold, dark, and passive.  A balance of the two is necessary for a harmonious existence.

 

stone-balance

Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) applies the ideas from broader Chinese spirituality to individual functioning.

TCM sees the body as equipped with innate healing powers so the goal of TCM is to realign the system to a state of equilibrium.  When this happens, the mind/body/spirit becomes aware of its wholeness and heals itself.  Any mental agitation will automatically be treated by adjusting the physical system.  Health is harmony.  The human body is seen as a microcosm of the universe, complete with the same elements, natural cycles, rhythms, and processes you find in nature, and TCM seeks to regulate these while simultaneously aligning the patient with their environment and encouraging lifestyle habits that will maintain balance.  Not feeling comfortable with yourself can manifest in many ways.  Poor boundaries can make you feel confined and frustrated, and correcting weak liver energy may free you from this burden.  Maybe your shen (a person’s spiritual aspect) is disturbed and needs to be calmed to feel better about who you are.  Blockages in the heart causing low self-esteem may need to be removed.  No matter the cause, a variety of TCM treatments can help guide you back to balance. Click here to make an appointment http://releasewellness.com.au/.

Much of this work can be done mentally and it is best to be proactive.  Take a moment and think about life.  Imagine a brilliant light burning within all creatures.  Think of the universe as a vast, elaborate web in which we are all connected.  Look at the fluctuations of yin and yang.  How intricate and beautiful!

Now look at your own life.

  • Do you think of yourself as something whole?
  • Something precious?
  • Is this a concept you can even imagine?

If you are struggling, practice, self-acceptance, and self-appreciation.  There is no reason to reject something so glorious.  We cannot divorce ourselves from our surroundings.

Start examining the relationships in your life.

  • Are they positive and nourishing or negative and draining?
  • What is your relationship to your family, friends, community, occupation, and finances?
  • Are you aware of the rhythms of nature?
  • Do you know how to live harmoniously with them?
  • Are you aware of your own body’s patterns and rhythms?
  • Do you have sound lifestyle habits that support health?

Finding stability with the yin and yang of life can be so delicate.

  • Do you balance work and rest, seriousness and play, the inner and the outer?
  • Are you living an authentic life?
  • Are you making choices that feel good in your soul?

This can seem pretty complicated and overwhelming

The simplest way to feel comfortable in your own skin is to love.  Harmony is love, loving yourself, loving others, loving everything.  The world opens up in delightful and unexpected ways when we love because it immediately moves us towards a state of harmony.  It’s also good to be patient with yourself and remember Rome wasn’t built in a day.  It’s a process.  There is an important Chinese concept called “wu-wei”.  It translates as “not doing”, but means “not forcing”.  It says that things open up by themselves, according to their nature, and describes a state of being where our actions align effortlessly with the natural order of things.  It is the pinnacle of “going with the flow”.  We feel both relaxed and focused, and are able to easily respond to the ever changing climate of life.  Let yourself blossom.  It will happen if you allow it to be so.

 

 


Recent News
  • Piriformis Syndrome
  • How We Can Support You in this Time
  • Acupuncture for Stress
  • Acupuncture for Back Pain
  • What is Cellular Memory
  • Hair Analysis – Nutrition
  • Emotional Release
  • Acupuncture for Neck Pain
  • Why Avoiding Problems Harms Your Health
  • How To Be Comfortable In Your Own Skin
Recent Posts
  • Piriformis Syndrome June 17,2021
  • How We Can Support You in this Time June 16,2020
Follow Us

T & C
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
Copyright Release Wellness. All Rights Reserved