other therapy
Cranial Sacral Therapy
Cranial Sacral Therapy (CST) is a gentle, non-invasive technique based on the principle that our bodies know how to heal themselves. The practitioner listens to the body through palpation, then allows or introduces movement, which will release restrictions. Restrictions are caused by physical or emotional traumas. For instance, neck injuries from a car accident are locked into the body, as are sports injuries, accidental falls or birth complications such as forceps deliveries. Emotional traumas are also stored. The events are essentially 'frozen' into our bodies until they are released.
The medical theory is as follows:
While CST had its origins in the medical model, many practitioners discovered that it could be easily incorporated with Eastern theories involving chakras and energy healing. Being able to approach conditions with a flexibility of mind allows for more possibilities.
Cranial Sacral Therapy has been used on everything from autism to broken bones. The work requires sensitivity and respect for the body's wisdom. While certain conditions or diseases create similar patterns, each person is unique in how his/her body needs to be treated. It is like solving a three-dimensional puzzles that requires you to do things in a specific order with the added complication that no two puzzles are ever the same.
What will it feel like?
Outwardly, the treatment can seem very passive and uneventful. Many of the movements are imperceptible to the recipient on a conscious level. People vary in their sensitivity to their body and its sensations. Some people experience emotions, memories, physical sensations and insights into patterns or problems in their lives. Others feel as thought they've gone to sleep. Regardless of what the conscious mind thinks, this work taps into the nervous system and subconscious levels of the mind that can have a profound impact. It is not uncommon for people to feel exhausted a few hours after a treatment.



