Feature Articles
An Integrative Approach to Talk Therapy and Somatic Approaches
Focus on the Physical
-The Challenge for the Non-Physician Psychotherapist
Ronald J, Hook, M.S.W. (published in the International Journal of Psychotherapy and Critical Thought. Vol.IV, No. 2, Fall 1997)
A focus on the physical representations of emotional distress is critical to the success. of psychotherapy, and to overall health. Non-physician therapists and many psychiatrists are often weak in this area, getting caught up in.verbal content. Since my training was in social work rather than medicine, it has been helpful to me to refer to the people on my caseload as patients, not clients. They are, in fact, living organisms ailing from emotional disorders that are lodged in their physiology. Many well-meaning practitioners treat emotional illness and confusion as a deficit in understanding, calling for cognitive assistance. Their course follows that assumption, but disappointment is often the result since life experience is not centrally cognitive. It is only interpreted cognitively, and then often under the distorting influence of emotion.
My own interest .in psychotherapy came out of an admiration for psychoanalysis. I harbored a fantasy of exploring for hidden psychic patterns in the verbal productions of my patients, and dreamed of becoming an esteemed benefactor of health through well-formulated interpretations. and elegant timing. The analytic model provided the tools to detect primitive archetypes behind the curtain of consciousness, so I anticipated a fascinating life of discovery, holding the secret belief that the patients would forever love me as a brilliant sleuth. Like most people I was not comfortable with the stir of emotions deeply embedded in my own body, though I must have been half aware of the sense of emotional pressure there. To ward it off I used my head to become a first-class rationalizer. A.decent intellect had drawn praise and had given me a competitive edge from early on, so of course it had become my subjective center of power and control. Naturally, I originally assumed I could help others by that same route.
This faith wavered when I found that a favorite graduate school professor had been twice analyzed, and even he knew he was hardly the picture of, health. A new professional supervisor had done the same twice, only to be disappointed. Other colleagues tried analysis for several years each and, while valuing the human support of the analyst, found it lacking in terms of a substantial effect on their personality. I, too, tried it for several years, terminating quite unfinished. And, by this time certain that the analytic mode was not enough, I somehow could not stop those wise interpretations flowing out of my mouth to my patients…only to see limited progress.
One experience that pulled me away from the cognitive perspective was a training requirement to take a guided personal tour of the gross anatomy lab at a nearby medical school. Until that day the body was to me a set of concepts and abstract functions from a biology class. Suddenly, in front of me was a dismembered human leg (..could someday be my leg). Not far away were eyeballs, testicles, a half-dissected skull and a new whole arrival bloating with formaldehyde as his life’s blood slid into the floor drain. Thirty more corpses lay in plastic bags on a top shelf, awaiting their turn.
As a non-physician, 1 was startled into the physical reality of death and, by contrast, into the physical reality of life. After that three-hour experience I could no longer work comfortably from concepts about neurotic complexes and personality types. Playing on my mind was the actual physical impact of chronic emotional strain over a life span. Digestive troubles, tension-induced pain and malfunction, depression-induced resignation of the system, and all of the other familiar symptoms soon produced vivid physical pictures in my mind. The old psychological models seemed sadly removed from real flesh-and-blood life.
A second experience was an extensive course of body work as part of my training at the Radix Institute, established by Dr. Charles Kelley, who made advances in methods originated by Wilhelm Reich. Experiences here helped me to sense directly how my own viscera and musculature captured, retained or released emotions. With trusted guidance and through proven physical techniques my own body eventually released long-suppressed sobs, mobilized repressed rage, and over time experienced a gradual muscular relaxation. This softening finally allowed open sadness, and happiness, and greater overall emotional responsiveness.
These experiences confirmed the truth: emotions reside in the body. Physical and perceptual distortions created by emotions reside in the body. Inhibitions to experiencing emotions, or to expressing them, reside in the body. Therefore, the path toward cure resides in the body…not in the intellect, not in free association and not in modification of social circumstances alone.
Because this is true we psychotherapists have to change our focus to the physiology. To accomplish this we need a major shift in our training. We not only need competent help to get beyond our own intellectual defenses, but also experiential preparation by way of body-oriented work with the way our own emotions play in our musculature. It wouldn’t hurt to be conversant in some of the relational wisdom coming out of neuroscience. Thus we can begin to prepare ourselves as healers, as persons who treat the body.
Any focus on emotions in the body requires spending time on a review of Reich’s work, which cannot be understood fully from reading alone. Since people often become afraid of the fundamental change that a pioneer portends, many have dismissed him prematurely without fully realizing the merits of his work. Witnessing many clinical incidents demonstrated in his model, I began to grasp the clinical power of his assumptions. You, the reader, may well have to witness the same.
Reich (1945) studied emotional processes in man based on his observations of features we share with more primitive organisms. [See Darwin (1872)]. Building on repeated observations of the physically ill, he identified a natural path of pulsating, life-giving motion through the body. This same physical pathway was also a channel for the natural and spontaneous expression of the various emotions. Reich saw that, during childhood development, fears of parental reactions and other restrictors began to produce physical patterns of restraint within the child. The child’s participation in such restraint would include holding its breath and tensing particular muscle groups, including some internal organs. In this way painful or forbidden emotions could be physically “stopped” from expression, gaining the child a greater sense of subjective power and stability. A physical block could force the emotions into the background, and upon repeated use could force the awareness of those emotions completely out of consciousness. Over time these blocks would develop into chronic, unconscious patterns of tension; with distinct features in set parts of the body. As these specific tensions blocked awareness of “selected” inner life, they tended as well to distort “selected” perceptions of external reality. Chronic patterns of tension would become part of a larger pressured physical mold, the basis of a character typology upon which Reich (1945), Lowen (1958), Kelley (1979) and others have elaborated. The pressured character mold, insofar as it chronically blocks a healthy flow within the body, can contribute to physical symptoms and syndromes.
Reich (1945) referred to the patterns of physical tension as “armor” and determined how it is laid out in distinct segments of the body. He specified that since the physical habit of armoring originated in the body.of the infant or young child, it is the body which retains the effects from the past (p.423) in its structure.
Bar-Levav (1993) observed similarly something he called “tissue memory.” He asked, “How can we ever know what happened before the patient had a memory and any consciousness?” and answered, “We cannot know it from what the patient says. But we can deduce it from what the patient is, and what he or she shows characterologically and characteristically” (p.5). Bar-Levav’s view is that a sense of subjective fragility is the baby’s basic emotional condition, causing tension to take root in the physical tissue of the developing infant’s body. He elaborated how certain types of encounters with the earliest mothering person can inflame that sense of fragility, producing a primitive fear either of abandonment or of engulfment. Claiming that nearly all character structure (with its physical features) is a result of layered adaptations to one of these two primary fears, Bar-Levav (1988) may well hold another key to the core of human functioning, physically and emotionally. His theory is one that steps beyond Freud and Reich, but more importantly, it opens yet another door to. the preverbal core of the physical/emotional structures that we (and physicians) see. To elucidate his assumption that character adaptations to early fear are a main source of emotional and physical illness, Bar-Levav (1988) says:
“The tendency to be sickly is annother aspect of the physiologic base of character. Some people typically respond to subjectively unbearable stress by developing physical symptoms, the direct body equivalent of emotions. (p.89).
Even though we idealize the brain in our culture, much more than ‘peace of mind’ must be found before relief is obtained. It is confusing and incorrect to regard body and mind as separate entities split from each other, since they react together, as parts of a whole usually do (p.90).
While he did not focus on these specific primitive fears, Reich (1948) too spoke to the issue of a single source of physical and emotional trouble:
There is a general misconception that the organism is divided into two independent parts: one is the physico-chemical system, “soma” which is destroyed by cancer tumors and cachexia; and the other is the “psyche” which produces hysterical phenomena, so-called conversion symptoms in the body, and which “wants” or “fears” this or that, but has nothing to do with cancer. This artificial splitting up of the organism- is misleading. It is not true that a psychic apparatus “makes use of somatic phenomena”; nor is it true that the somatic apparatus obeys only chemical and physical laws \,but does neither “wish” nor “fear.” In reality, the functions of expansion and contraction in the autonomic plasma system represent the unitary apparatus which makes the “soma” live or die. (p. 166)
The advent of technological-medicine has delayed such pursuit of a unified emotional/physical source as many physical symptoms can now be approached from a more mechanical perspective, perhaps attractive to those doctors uncomfortable with involvement on an emotional level. Ferguson (1980) refers.to this as a period of “unleavened”medical science. The emotional shortcomings of technological medicine, the remarkable results from emotion-oriented approaches to physical illness, and our new knowledge of more unified medical approaches from the Far East are encouraging us to again focus on a central disease process, and not just on symptoms.
Physical disease process is accompanied by emotional representations, just as emotional disorders have always had concomitant physical expressions. Some physicians testify that half of their patient visits are essentially emotional in nature. Sophisticated psychotherapists always see physical distortions produced by character adaptation. Therefore, while there has never been much question about a mind-body relationship, there is a compelling need to focus now on the intrinsic involvement of emotions within the body.
This intrinsic involvement is active and never truly still. Even tension is, in fact, concentrated emotional/physical activity, a fact difficult for many to see.
We typically prefer to see things as fixed. We like to give everything a definitive name, perhaps to gain a subjective sense of control over it.
Ferguson (1980) quotes Dr. W. Ellerbroeck, a surgeon-turned-psychiatrist, who said: “We doctors seem to have.a predilection for nouns in naming disease, (epilepsy, measles, brain tumor),and because these things ‘deserve’ nouns as names, then obviously they are things to us. If you take one of these nouns, measles, and make it into a verb, then it becomes, ‘Mrs. Jones, your boy appears to be measling,’ which opens both your mind and hers to the concept of disease as process” (p. 257).
Fixed diagnostic categories and labels, both physical and emotional, frequently serve as an avoidance of truly “being with” our patients. This is a symptom of our discomfort with their internal primitive emotional processes. If we professionals can become internally secure enough to relate deeply, and without confusion, to our patients in their core state of commotion, we can then take steps closer to treating the central motivational process in them.
To summarize, physical and emotional health emanate from within a constantly pulsating, sensate and responsive container. Disturbances in the container, the body, are often created by emotional contractions. Chronic strain produced by these disturbances can finally break into a variety of physical symptoms. It only makes sense, then, that physicians should make an effort to see each patient as a living unit of activity, measling or cancering, depressing or fearing, and to look for the interplay of the patient’s emotional process in disease activity. Likewise, it makes sense that psychotherapists “examine” each patient’s body to better grasp and work with the interplay of the physical and the emotional, gradually abating the amount of physical distress over time. How senseless it is to focus on verbal content alone! The sound of the human voice, enclosing a vibration (as a word) and propelling it with the respiratory apparatus into the air gives a much better reflection of the physical/emotional state of the speaker than the words themselves, which are secondarily selected by the intellect.
The lungs and diaphragm work in tandem with muscular and organ tension to produce the propulsion behind the sounds. We, as “professional instruments” listening to and accurately “feeling” the music from inside the speaker, can obtain reliable clues about his or her actual subjective experience. A sensitive diagnostician can see, and to some extent feel, the outline of this process and, having done so, can very accurately identify with the patient. And, the ability to accurately identify with the inner experience of the patient is the baseline of the therapeutic alliance and a fundamental step toward cure.
Each time people enter your office for individual or group sessions, you are obliged to evaluate their physical presentation. Sensitivity to music helps one record the rhythm, volume, tone, size and percussiveness almost before they sit down. Posture, coloration and localized changes, typically around the eyes or mouth, are all part of the recording. Getting to know these people well over time permits greater sensitivity to subtle change in individual manner and presentation. We hear what is being said in the context of what is being presented in the body. These bodies speak volumes and routinely communicate reactions Deton a much different way. Once the diagnostic read is taken, the next step is to make meaningful interventions in ways that will not only make corrections in transference or projections, but will also be experienced in the physiology.
Let me broadly describe one group and a case illustration from it:
Patti, 20, leads the way in. While short and quiet of foot, she travels in a straight line to her seat. Her eyes are hidden. Her history is, one of withdrawal, and she will not likely speak early in the session. She is very sensitive but often holds her responses deeply inside. She always has. Peter, a tall young professional in a dark suit, smiles officially and is sure to add a proper “hello.” His speech is so fast that individual words are often hard to distinguish.
And, he smiles much too often. All of this is motivated by his chronic anxiety and his urgent wish for approval. Todd, 32, is six-foot-three, athletic, and
“jock-walks” his way in. His booming voice and manner defend against his sense of vulnerability. Underneath he has had frequent episodes of physical pain and massive anxiety. Over the years he has seen several therapists where he had been prescribed numerous psychotropic medications. Bob, a young man wearing glasses befitting an intellectual, has a soft manner and a mild whine in his voice. He wears wrinkled slacks as a badge of the liberal, is heady and watchful, and often not in touch with his emotions. This (I believe) is evidence of not ever having felt safe enough with the mothering parent to have his feelings, and therefore his individuality confirmed.
Belinda has angles,everywhere. She is thin, polite, almost perfectly kept and almost never raises her voice. She has had a mild eating disorder. Again, the early mothering experience is disturbed in her case. While she can be more in touch with her emotions than Bob, she has a way of putting them cleanly out of sight. She occasionally flares up with colitis. Maybe it should be called colitising Nelly, middle-aged and absolutely appropriate, is wrapped with tension showing in a very deliberate walk and manner of speech. She is covered well by tasteful clothing and attitude. Serious headaches are just one of the resultant symptoms. For her, too, being “just right” has not left much room for the real her.
Naomi is a fifty-ish synthesis of old lady and little girl. She is semi-withdrawn, with very strained vocal cords. Her eyes can widen suddenly, or appear
remote. She is very bright, but relates better to plants than to people. These living beings will relate to me and to each other from within their individual physiologic frameworks. During nearly every verbal exchange it is my job to be aware of the eyes, posture, breathing, color or other relevant physical
features. When the breathing becomes shallow, or the eyes appear remote, or the shoulders tense, or colors change, it is a signal that some emotional
activity is at work. (Emotion: movement is an intrinsic part of the word.) The verbal content is not to be ignored, but it is usually not as important as the feeling behind the physiologic process. Each individual body actively engages in the process of expression, or in resistance to expression. Even frozen withdrawal is a condensed physical involvement. At the high points of each person’s unique type of physical involvement, a well-timed and well-dosed intervention is most important. As an example, during one group session Naomi was talking with her characteristic mannerisms fully engaged, but almost no one was listening. She sat on the edge of her seat. Her voice strained and scratched more intensely than usual. The back of her neck was so tight that her chin tilted up and her head tilted back. In that position her glasses magnified her eyes which were focused so deeply within herself that she literally did not see other people.
My co-therapist noticed and asked her if she was seeing anyone as she spoke. She paused momentarily, then acknowledged that she was not. She tried with spastic difficulty to go on with her story while attempting to see others. Her struggle for contact added to her agitation as her neck tightened even further and her breathing, became severely distressed. She could not continue. After a tense reflective moment she cried out that.she must be frightened just to be with people while she was this open (emotionally). I had sat next to her, so I asked her permission to slightly move her neck and head as she spoke. [I typically have a “no touching” contract. And only with renewable permission do I occasionally intervene in this way.] My aim was to loosen the fear-induced physical contractions in her neck and eyes, hoping to help her eventually become more present to literally see, and to be with others. This physical work, through moments of irregular visual and emotional contact, finally allowed deep direct expressions of fear coupled with tremor and crying. Eventually, her whole physical being and manner softened as her primitive fear discharged in a safe, reality-based context. Finally, the restraining tension in her eyes, neck and vocal chords yielded to allow some real contact with the others, even while she remained somewhat afraid.
Sometimes physical intervention is needed to promote presence of mind, meaningful contact and.a beginning physical shift in respiratory and other tensions. But useful interventions do not always require direct physical touching. In fact physical touch can have complex meanings to the.patient and, therefore, may be hazardous unless the therapist is very well trained (Bar-Levav, 1993). But useful interventions require at least knowledge of the body and its emotion related features, as well as aset of valid techniques (Kelley, 1979, Bar-Levav, 1988, Reich, 1945, Lowen, 1958).
Over enough time most of the body’s characteristic inhibitions and expressions will surface in the relationship with the therapist, presenting continuing opportunities for slight shifts on the physical level. Measuring such changes at the body level will eventually give us our criteria for success. Chronic physical strain from emotion often leads to real physical illness, a fact that requires the non-physician therapist to establish a relationship with a physician-ally. At this time neither specialty is able enough by itself to assume the entire responsibility for treating the patient’s emotionally and physically interrelated system.
Finding such an ally for a therapist can difficult, as is finding a therapist-ally for the physician. Physicians, for valid reasons related to previously disappointing results from psychotherapy, may be reluctant to cooperate. And now that they have powerful new psychotropic medications at their disposal they may see less reason to. As a result, we therapists have no choice but to become more expert in this area of the physical aspects of emotions and then to make ourselves fully known to potential medical allies. As pioneers on the frontier of emotions within the body, the ideal way to proceed is in such a relationship, when available. Once allied, we need to work together against the ”quick fix” delusion. Business-driven medicine presses for short-term treatment to contain costs. Aiming at symptom alleviation rather than system cure, it will, over time prove to be cost-defective. At the moment, though, short-sighted economics is king, more so than standards of health.
And at the time of this writing this system supports only a token involvement in psychotherapy. Since some of us now know how to proceed more effectively toward the emotional roots of many illnesses, we must substantiate our position to dispute the short-term trend. Academic study alone will not bring us the expertise we this very difficult task. Each of us needs a qualified mentor to guide us through the new depths of this art. Unfortunately, at present there are only a few. Some of the more able have developed and tested new theories which are available for study: the theories of Bar-Levav, Kelley, Lowen and a few others even shape frameworks for-practice. They differ somewhat from each other, but one can learn a great deal by studying their similarities and differences. The real learning key, however, as to gam personal experience with one of their more able second generation proteges.
And beyond acquiring a valid theory, we need to be trained to become reliable emotional/physical instruments. We are at the same time the observer and the tool of influence on the emotional/physical being of the patient. Only after we work through the blocks in our own personality can we frame a relationship in which the patient can join us on the road toward health. After all of the above is in place we should be able to see the significant emotional history of each patient, “bred” into the physical structure. The earliest life experiences, ‘^written” nearest the core, profoundly color what developmentally follows, physically and emotionally. If subjective fright was a common condition in the earliest months and. years, then later developmental experiences would be perceived with that fright and its resultant restraints already in place as a core experience, discoloring the later experience somewhat toward fear. Therefore, reaching those earliest affective states is fundamental if we mean to influence the entire organism, emotionally and physically.
While there is much more to learn, we are in a position to significantly impact many of these difficulties if a secure therapeutic relationship is in place over a long enough period of time, and if we are competently equipped with knowledge of the body and appropriate interventions.. Much more refinement is called for and, while it seems to be a huge job, we all ought to carefully think through the alternatives. The costs of not doing il this way to individuals, their families and our culture are too heavy and far-reaching to ignore.
REFERENCES
1 Bar-Levav, R. (1993). A rationale for physical touching in psychotherapy. International Journal of Psychotherapy and Critical Thought. 1 (1), .5-7.
2 Bar-Levav, R. (1988) Thinking in the shadow of feelings. New York: Simon and Schuster.
3. Darwin, C. (1965). The expression of emotion in man and animals, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. (Original work published 1872)
4. Ferguson, M. (1980). The aquarian conspiracy: Los Angeles: J.P. Tarcher. [citing Wallace Ellerbroeck in Perspectives on Biology and Medicine
16(2), 240T262].
5. Kelley, C. (1992) The radix (Vol. 1). Radix personal growth work. Vancouver, Washington: Kelley/Radix. 6 Keltey, C! (1992). The radix (Vol. 2): the science of the radix process. Vancouver, Washington: Kelley/Radix.
7. Lowen, A. (1975). Bioenergetics-‘.-New York: Coward, McCann, &”Geoghagen 8 Lowen, A..(1958).’ The physical dynamics of character structure.-
New York: Game and Stratton.
8. Reich, W. (1948) The cancerbiopathy. New York: “Orgone Institute Press
9. Reich, W. (1945). Character analysis.’ Hew York: Farrar, Straus; & Giroux.
Ronald J. Hook has been a IIGP faculty member for years. He specializes in direct body approaches to emotional release and was trained by the
Radix Institute. He has presented at local, national and international conferences and practice’s privately, using combined individual and group therapy alongside bodywork, in Southfield, Michigan
Self and Other: Samples of Physical Character-Armoring Viewed with the Radix® Model
Fifteen of my teenage friends and I sat together in an oak pew to the extreme left of the pulpit,10 rows back. The 90-minute Sunday evening service was plodding along. The reverend, in his regular three-piece black suit, was deeply engaged in his uber-eloquent long prayer that would go on for at least 10-15 minutes. Not really into it, we were restless. Every kid had his forehead resting on the pew ahead, pretending to pray. But below pew height, we communicated with each other by gesture, hoping none of the 400 others in the sanctuary could see us. Then, in the middle of our row one of the guys deliberately started to drool, letting his gob wind its way to the floor and slowly spread into a bubbly puddle. The convulsions began. We fought hard to keep that laugh down. I closed my eyes, backed my tongue into my nasal pharynx, tightened my lips, forced my glottis shut, tightened my chest muscles, tensed my diaphragm, and squeezed everything below that, hoping to keep any sound from leaking out. But 16-year-old boys drooling on the sanctuary floor, stifling a belly laugh? Impossible. The preacher stayed in his fervent prayer until its proper end. And then, waking up from his encounter with God, he turned to us.
Finding my Body
In my 20s my vision of practicing psychotherapy was entirely head-oriented. I pictured myself admired for
lending brilliant interpretations for insight and understanding. But, in the end, the only way I could really become a therapist was through
my body. I was always a head-type. (Strangely, at birth it was feared I was hydrocephalic, though the final diagnosis was simply, “big head.” According to legend, I fell out of a bassinet at six months and fractured my skull. As an active little kid, I skinned my head when I fell while the other kids skinned their knees.) My speech was not centered in my core. I was not able to write more than a page or two without intellectually meandering. I appeared aloof; to my dismay, some would accuse me of being condescending. I felt inferior, like a fraud, supplicant and all the rest that comes with the self-esteem of a speedbump. It was just too painful to experience consciously, so I denied and projected. It took a long time to recognize the childhood damage of indoctrination, physical punishment and shaming that passed for “discipline,” and official declarations from men in three-piece black suits that I was a sinner with no capacity to redeem myself. Rather than experience the painful and infuriating emotional consequences in my body, I disconnected and went
into my head.
I was much too afraid to volunteer for bodywork. A mentor, who knew better what I needed, pushed me into a training program that required more than 150 hours of work with my body. It turned out to be critical for me to look below my head to physically experience the rest of who I was, to see and accept my real strengths and vulnerabilities.
Radix® Bodywork Foundations
Fifty years after the drooling incident I still use it as a reference. The reader can usefully pretend to be desperately trying to stop an intensely pressing laugh, or a cry. Do it for at least 15 seconds. Feel the articulation of the muscles from the eyes down to the abdomen
(as I described above). Hold it to the point of discomfort. Then, take a moment to allow your mind to record the impression of the involved muscles. If you skipped this exercise, please go back and do it. The natural flow of emotional expression is longitudinal, basically from the abdomen upward through the face and eyes (sometimes with tears). The path of a wild laugh or a deep sob is easy to see. Anger seems to move up the back and forward through sharply focused eyes and sound. Fear appears to move suddenly upward and back with an inhalation, complete with widening eyes and raised arms. Love, happiness, disappointment, pleasure and pain (after the initial clench) all have their natural physical paths of expression. Generally the softer feelings move expansively up, out and forward, while painful
and fearful experiences produce contraction and protection. During the developmental process of growing up we are being “civilized.” Part of
this involves learning to suppress full emotional expression. We do this hundreds if not thousands of times. When we are about to cry, laugh or scream in unaccepting places, we use sections of muscle power to hold it back or to push it back down. Over time, such muscles can unconsciously become fixed into layers of chronic tension. In the clinic we see rigid or highly defended character structures of all types. Properly conducted direct bodywork can safely free underlying emotional flow, like carefully opening a dam allows the fluid to move through.
The suppressing muscles are arranged in seven transverse layers: Around the eyes and base of the skull, around and in the mouth, in the neck and throat, in the breathing muscles of the chest and diaphragm, and on down into the abdominal and pelvic muscles (Reich, 1949). Ellsworth Baker illustrates them as “The Seven Segments of the Body: Ocular, Oral, Cervical, Thoracic, Diaphragmatic, Abdominal and Pelvic” (Baker, 1967). The point of your earlier exercise was to learn about these muscle groups by feeling them within yourself.
For me, grasping the body component in psychotherapy began in 1985 at the Radix Institute, then in Ojai, California. The chief mentor was Dr. Charles R. Kelley, who learned directly from Reich and others, and eventually founded his own institute, revising some aspects of Reich’s work. (For reference see www.radix.org and www.kelley-radix.org.) One principle was working first with muscle tensions around the eyes, always making sure they reflected presence—being in the here and now, not preoccupied or flighty—before working on the next segment below in the “character armor” (Kelley, 1971). In regular psychotherapy, we want the person in good contact with reality before opening a suppressed emotion. In body-oriented work, presence in the eyes is the indicator. Are they spaced-out (withdrawn), staring or flighty (frightened), watchful, or allowing themselves to be seen. With this small sample of the eyes, one can begin to see that psychological defenses manifest in the body as muscular events. And protections are lodged in the muscles of each of the rest of the segments.
Case Study: Nancy
Nancy was a mid-level executive, attractive and competent. She presented with straining eyes and voice. Her history included confusions about men, a depressed outlook under a masquerading smile, and deep, dark, circular ruminations. Such a circle had proven tough to penetrate in regular intensive psychotherapy. When her therapist suggested she take some bodywork sessions with me as a supplement to her ongoing treatment, she quickly declined. With some help she eventually came, suspicious and fearful, pained in her presentation as she spoke about the hopelessness of her therapy and life. Initially, I spent time making contact with her, verbally creating a context for our
work. I framed it as sensory education. That is, I would help her sense ways in which she stopped the flow of energy and feeling in her body so that she could eventually choose either to continue to constrain it, or to let it come through, at will. We followed this with a period of
warm-ups, moving typically constrained muscle groups, learning to stand with unlocked knees, and to breathe through an open mouth,
letting the jaw hang open.
We proceeded to kindle interoceptive awareness (sensitivity to stimuli originating inside the body—see, e.g., Duquette, 2017). At first we adjusted the focal point of her eyes from intensity on the external object (or intensive thought), turning inward and downward toward the wordless, subjective and fluid realm of body processes.
At my suggestion she expanded her breathing, following her breath down toward her emotional center by sensing the air passing downward through the moisture of her lungs. Further, she learned to experience her relationship to the ground by literally tuning in to the pads of her feet as they related to the carpet fibers and ground beneath. As I instructed her to
allow her weight to fall through her feet, she began to experience and let into awareness the profound reality of gravity, pulling her through the floor toward the center of the earth. As the force of gravity pulled downward through her feet, she (with help) became aware that the pressure was being recorded by the small nerves in the pads of the feet, moving up the longer nerves of the feet and legs to the spinal cord, then on to the brain registry. She became aware of gravity pulling downward, and the sensory awareness of it moving electrically upward at the same time. Tuning in to this process helps set the sensory stage for further inward looking and perceiving. I suggested to her that she let
herself be surprised by what sensations or feelings come up through her body. Body awareness was ignited. A few minutes later Nancy and I encountered each other more closely, face to face, and she was already in good faith letting herself explore in a sensory way the moving
processes within her. She had unlocked basic “talking head” musculature by breathing, unlocking her knees and jaw, and doing a series of exercises to soften her eyes from their alert executive position. At this point we were less engaged in dialog, allowing a more
open and complete presence with each other which some describe as more right brain to right brain. I encouraged her to continue to breathe through her mouth and more deeply than normally. While I stood two or three feet in front of her, she leaned back into a mattress standing against a wall, jaw and knees and eyes still unlocked. I guided her mind’s eye back to her mid-section, simultaneously allowing awareness of her hands and feet, suggesting that the center of her self lay between her hanging hands, above her feet and hips, and below her collar bone. She continued to breathe into this space while recognizing the stirrings within. Her “public relations” smile surfaced only briefly
during this process.
By this time she had acquired enough trust to give me her thick glasses. She didn’t need to watch me so closely. The tension had released enough in her eyes. My attention could now be drawn downward toward some constriction in her throat and vocal cords. When she exhaled, it sounded like the air was being pushed through a narrow pipe. Since I can breathe more openly, I brought her breathing into awareness by comparing her exhalation with mine, then asked her to imitate mine. After a few tries, she succeeded and continued this more open breathing without losing the presence in her eyes. This provided a path for her to open herself a little more, so I moved her to a floor mat, lying down, with me sitting on a low stool by her side. At my instruction she brought her knees up, feet flat, taking some pressure off her lower back. She continued to breathe, open-mouthed. She remained easy in the eyes with me, as I was with her. I felt privileged that this fearful person was allowing me into this more vulnerable place.
Her eyes had adjusted enough, and her breathing had opened enough to be more aware of her internal process without losing contact with me. I noticed a stillness in the rest of her body so I suggested making strong arm and leg movements—pounding the mattress with her fists and feet to engage the rest of her body and build the energetic charge throughout. She completed this movement, and let her body settle in its own time from the effort. When she was restored to full and restful presence, I asked her permission to touch muscles on her face. She granted it, trusting I wouldn’t hurt her, and I placed adjacent fingers on the high end of her upper lip where it met her cheeks (the smiling muscles) gently pressing into this area on both sides of the nose to lessen the tension there, remaining steady, on the crease, while encouraging her to continue breathing fully. This area is a boundary between the ocular and oral segments, likely the place where she unwittingly stopped body awareness and kept things stuck in her head. In less than a minute deep sobs burst forward, heaving up from the bottom of her belly. I encouraged her to let this expression run as long as it needed to and to simply stay out of its way. In about 45 seconds it started to wane. Within a minute or two she recovered her breath and regained easy eye contact with me. Incredulous, she blurted, “How’d you do that?” Staying easy and gentle, I said, “It was you who did that.” In this instance Nancy had a deeper and fuller emotional experience and more expansive expression than usual, whereas previously she had had narrow experience and constricted expression. The expressive door from the core up and out through the face, eyes, and mouth had been clamped. Now she lay there with the door open. At this point
I simply asked her to let her senses passively record all the physical sensations of this new, open, non-thinking, but experiencing body.
A while later, when the session was officially ending, she expressed much gratitude and took the experience back to her regular therapy, where she has enjoyed deeper responsiveness and participation in the group process.
Conclusion
Nancy’s work addressed her unique tensions in her ocular, oral, and cervical segments. Her bigger breathing loosened her diaphragm and abdomen. After the initial contact, the order of the work was essentially top down. When opening the breathing, it is common that tensions typically blocking emotional awareness start to present themselves, giving the body-oriented therapist points of access. Each person is different, and the sense of who they are and how their body operates in the world is broader than I can describe here. But the particulars of Nancy’s work give a sample of how working with the body, conscious of the segmental nature of the character structure, can be helpful to
an ongoing therapy. My aim in bodywork is not about me changing the client. Instead, it is about awareness and freedom. It is about placing and replacing attention on the sectors that inhibit emotional flow. We cultivate an attitude of curiosity and learning, through the sensorium,
about this totally unique self, and we do it one step at a time. Done properly, people really learn to accept themselves as they operate in the world, gaining the sensory knowledge that can offer freedom to change. Along the way often come a sense of empowerment, a sense of aliveness, and a sense of being a unique part of the creative process in nature. All in all, competent work with the body over time, whether it’s for personal growth or in support of psychotherapy, slowly releases the flow of the life force through that person.
Safety Caveat
I add a word of caution. Body psychotherapists have to be settled in their own bodies before they can clearly respond to the impulse, movement, coloration, and breath of the client. It can be hazardous to experiment in your practice with what I described here, except maybe
the kindling of interoceptive awareness, if your client can take it. While I believe bodywork is universally needed in therapy, the specifics of a session depend on accurate diagnosis, accurate perception, and accurate intervention. There are methods that can be learned. Half the learning is through one’s own body, where a sensory recognition of the other makes its imprint. The other half is learning a coherent theory for context. And, personal boundaries, of course, have to be clear.
The Radix Institute (www.radix.org) still operates. About a dozen other schools gather at the U.S. Association of Body Psychotherapists (www.usabp.org). Questions and further inquiries are welcomed (ronhook@gmail.com).
References
Baker, E. (1967). Man in the trap. New York: Macmillan.
Duquette, P. (2017). Increasing our insular world view: Interoception and psychopathology for psychotherapists.
Frontiers in Neuroscience, 11, Article 1:35.
Kelley, C.R. (1971, 1980-81). Segment one program, a pre-training Radix course (unpublished).
Reich, W. (1949). Character analysis. New York: Noonday Press
Ron Hook, LMSW, practices north of Detroit and travels to do
quarterly body-oriented sessions with ongoing patients of other therapists.
He has practiced individual and group psychotherapy for 40
years. He learned Radix® bodywork in 1985 as an adjunct to psychotherapy,
and so is fluent in both. He is a faculty member at the Institute for
Individual and Group Psychotherapy in Southfield, Michigan. ronhook@gmail.com
“This article previously appeared in Voices, the Journal of the American Academy of Psychotherapists. Vol. 53. Number 1.
Copyright [2017]
Radix Bodywork
RADIX¨ is a body-oriented personal growth practice. It was developed originally by Charles Kelley, PhD, who established a well-grounded training program which incorporated Reich’s principles of bodywork, enhanced by eyework developed from the Bates Method of vision improvement. Dr. Kelley chose the word “Radix” from the Latin work meaning “root” or “source,” referring to that force which underlies all movement, feeling and growth in a person and in life. The goals of Radix work are to help people become more fully alive and more authentic. Radix work is applied with different clients according to their individual needs, and yet common themes underlie the work such as mind/body integration, grounding, centering, creating effective and flexible boundaries, developing the ability to contain feelings, ego strengthening, pulsation, charging, discharging, intimacy, pleasure, choice, and awareness.
There are a variety of methods used within the work to address these themes, including movement, visualization and intentional touch as permitted.
The Story
Even though the task of Psychotherapy is to be objective, along with being empathetic, we must know our own story and how we got to where we are to be an effective Psychotheripist.
Contact
info@RonaldjhooklmswEmotionalWellness.com
Hours
By Appointment Only:
Mon – Fri — 9:00 am – 5:30 pm
Saturday — 9:00 am – 3:00 pm
Sunday — Closed
29600 Northwestern Hwy, Ste 100A
Southfield, MI 48034