Therapeutic Touch: An Interim Summary
By Barbara Janelle M.A.
The following article summarizes many observations and understandings about Therapeutic Touch and is based on my twenty-two years of experience of using this work. That experience encompasses a wide range of situations fom teaching in university and hospital settings to leading a volunteer hospital team, and seeing a large and varied private treatment group. The experience also includes working with both domestic animals (large and small) and animals in wildlife rehabilitation centers. Most of what is contained in this article has appeared in my articles and books. (1)
The Steps of Therapeutic Touch
Therapeutic Touch is an energetic treatment approach based on centering, assessment, and support and increase of energy flow down through the field. TT affects all aspects of the receiver – physical, mental, emotional and spiritual, and supports a shift toward greater wholeness. Therapeutic Touch also affects all aspects of the practitioner too.
Centering
Centering is quieting one’s self and moving into a profound state of peace. In TT, it is wedded with a compassionate awareness of both self and the receiver and the acknowledgement that we exist in a universe of compassion and order.
Centering sets the stage for sensing the field and is the primary treatment step as well, even more effective and more important than unruffling and energy modulation. Centering establishes a resonance effect which both relaxes the receiver and supports the field’s move toward better function. Deepening center is the most effective step a practitioner can do to support a shift in field function. (2) Centering is ongoing throughout the treatment, and when it lightens or becomes difficult to maintain, that is the signal to finish the treatment.
Heart Support. Merlin Homer’s approach of deepening center while focusing on the Heart Chakra takes both receiver and practitioner into a profound healing state. (3) Centering with compassion is the essence of TT and indeed many contend that we can do TT by simply centering with compassion for another. (4)
Assessment
Therapeutic Touch is based largely on assessment, although it may also be done without the assessment component. Observation, using the hands to sense for energetic clues, and intuitive awareness all give information about the state of the field and its response to treatment. Assessment plays an important role in treatment approach. (5)
Observation of body proportions, movement, skin colour (indicative of blood circulation and nerve function), tone, resiliency, condition of eyes, facial expression, and so on can give information about the state of health. One example of information obtained through observation and its relationship with the energy field is the condition of san-paku eyes (6). When a person is under stress and feeling powerless, one or both eyes have white showing beneath the iris. The person’s energy field usually shows a strong deficit of energy which may be sensed even in the first seconds of assessment through the strong pulling of energy from the practitioner’s hands.
Energetic assessment using the hands checks for energy flow and rhythm, energy pulling and congestion. In a well-functioning state, a lot of energy moves through the field continuously. The field feels fairly uniform, pleasant and rhythmic. Where there is a problem, energy flow is disrupted. Energy intake and flow slow down as congestion builds in the field. The field’s attempt to draw energy in through congestion can make the area feel warm or even slightly painful to the practitioner’s hands in assessment. Areas that feel cool and empty seem to be closed down and even bypassed by normal energy flow.
Intuitive assessment is done by attending to images, sounds, colours, and other forms of internal information received from the field. In addition, mirrored physical and emotional feelings in the practitioner can provide information too. (7) An important part of intuitive assessment is checking the grounding aspect of the field. A field that functions well has a strong connection with the Earth; among the ways this may be sensed is through images of deep and widespread roots from the feet and root chakra into the Earth.
Assessment is ongoing. The initial hand sensing assessment is best done after a light unruffling of the field to get beneath the quiet energetic cap. (8) The initial assessment usually gives a general picture but more information comes as the treatment progresses: areas of energy congestion, deficit and imbalance that were not apparent earlier may be revealed (this can occur over several sessions too). Information about the field’s response to treatment comes with ongoing assessment. The field can change just in response to assessment. Growing uniformity, energy flow and connection (integration) through the field can indicate that the treatment is finishing.
Unruffling and Grounding
Unruffling and grounding go together. To simply move energy from one place to another means that it will begin to build up where it settles. Grounding or some visualization that effectively removes unusable energy from the field is necessary to prevent build-up in the field. (9)
Unruffling describes hand movements and intention to support energy flow. Unruffling always occurs within a framework of intention and visualisation; hand movements alone do very little. It is important to recognize that unruffling movements affect the entire field not just the space between the practitioner’s hand and the receiver’s skin.
Unruffling supports:
The signal to end may come at any time, even if the field has not yet achieved greater uniformity. The practitioner must recognize that the treatment starts a process that the field will continue to deal with for some time after the session ends.
If the practitioner continues to work when the field is calling for an ending, the field will begin to block these efforts. The effect of the treatment will start to decrease and may result in stressing the field. A simple guideline is to be content will doing less rather than more and to trust the field to take the work and use it well.
Therapeutic Touch treatments may last anywhere from a few seconds to about 15 minutes. In some situations, it is appropriate to give brief treatments (1 to 5 minutes) every 30 to 60 minutes over a period of several hours, as for example, in the cases of critical stage pneumonia in humans, or impaction colic in horses.
Rest after a TT treatment is standard practice. TTNO Practitioner Diane Lindsay was the first to comment on the wave of energy that moves through the field at just about the 20 minute point in the rest period. (22) This has led many practitioners to incorporate a minimum 20 minute rest period into their treatment sessions.
Partnership in the TT Treatment
The Therapeutic Touch treatment is a complex partnership involving the practitioner, the receiver, the force of compassion and order, and a range of other intelligences. (23) Dora Kunz directed practitioners to recognize that we exist in a universe of compassion and order. In the TT treatment, through centering and compassion, the practitioner becomes a conduit for that force.
The field largely directs the treatment through affecting the practitioner’s centering and by way of information revealed to assessment and through visualizations.
The Earth is a conscious living being and all life forms are a part of her. Life is maintained through grounding and death is accompanied with the complete loss of grounding. Grounding may be supported either by visualizing roots from the feet and root chakra (and other areas) into the ground, or by asking the Earth to deepen her holding of the receiver.
Many TT practitioners and healers in other energetic disciplines recognize that there are often other loving presences involved in the treatment. (24) These beings may work by directing, giving suggestions, or simply infusing the whole treatment with love. Their presence takes the treatment to an extraordinary level of effect.
Existence on Earth is a cooperative effort and it is possible to invite nature intelligences to play a role in the TT treatment. Plants are very effective at supporting grounding. Animal spirits, traditionally used by First Nations healers, can be invited in to play a role.
In the case of illness caused by disease organisms, it is possible to request their cooperation and enter into agreements to support the well-being of all (viruses and other organisms can mutate fairly quickly into innocuous forms.) (25)
Therapeutic Touch: A Frontier
With every treatment, the Therapeutic Touch practitioner walks a frontier. This is a whole new universe of understanding and it is critical that experiences be examined, shared and discussed in an atmosphere of honesty, respect and curiosity. This discipline is one of many that offer opportunities for human beings to expand in understanding and partnership with the whole of existence. Courage, commitment, and a willingness to examine motivation, meaning and metaphor are necessary to this growth. The adventure continues!
Notes
1. Barbara Janelle,
- Our Healing Power: Therapeutic Touch for Humans and Animals, self-published, London, ON: 1999, 2nd Edition 2004, ISBN#0-9746421-1-8
= Embodiment of Spirit: Learning Through Therapeutic Touch and Interspecies Communication, self-published, 2004, ISBN#09746421-0-X
Please note that all articles by Barbara Janelle are available on the website: www.barbarajanelle.com
2. Barbara Janelle, “On Wholeness,” In Touch, Vol. X, No. 1, February 1998; also in Our Healing Power
3. Janelle, “Heart Support,” In Touch, Vol. XII, No. 3, August 2000; also in Embodiment of Spirit
4. Merlin Homer was the first to make this statement and many teachers and students now follow suit.
5. Janelle, “On Energy Assessment in the Therapeutic Touch Treatment,” also in Embodiment of Spirit.
6. John Diamond, Your Body Doesn’t Lie, New York: Warner Books, 1979
7. TTNO Recognized Teacher Mary Simpson teaches very important exercises that require the practitioner to be aware of how and what they feel physically and emotionally before they attend to the receiver and note if any of their feelings change.
8. Janelle, “Preparing the Field for Assessment,” In Touch, Vol. VIII, No. 3, September 1996; also in Our Healing Power
9. Janelle, “On Grounding Visualizations,” In Touch, Vol. IX, No. 4, November 1997; also in Our Healing Power
10. Janelle, “The Effects of Unruffling,” In Touch, Volume XII, No. 2. May 2000; also in Embodiment of Spirit
11. Janelle, “Unruffling Action,” In Touch, Vol. XIII, No. 3, Autumn 2001; also in Embodiment of Spirit
12. Janelle, “Unruffling Action, In Touch, Vol. XIII, No.3, Autumn 2001; also in Embodiment of Spirit. This is very helpful for a wide range of things from back pain to charley-horses.
13. Janelle, “Working with the Edge: Scanning and Unruffling,” In Touch, Vol. XIII, No. 2, June 1996; also in Our Healing Power
14. Janelle, “On Wholeness,” In Touch, Vol. X, No. 1, February 1998; also in Our Healing Power
15. Janelle,
- “Finding Edges within the Emotional Field,” Our Healing Power
- “Thoughts on Working with the Emotional Field,” Embodiment of Spirit
- “Observations on Unruffling Animals,” Vision & Reality Conference Papers, November 1997; also in Our Healing Power.
Please note that I no longer refer to distant edges as emotional field edges. The second article gives my reasons for this.
16. Janelle,
- “Energizing the Field,” Our Healing Power
- “The Field Leads the Dance,” In Touch, Vol. 10, No. 4, November 1998; also in Our Healing Power
17. Janelle, “Guidelines for Therapeutic Touch,” Paper for the Ontario Therapeutic Touch Gathering 2006, previously unpublished
18. Offering a “Ball of light” was developed by the Cypriot healer Spiro Sathi: see Kyriacos C. Markides,
- The Magus of Strovolos: The Extraordinary World of a Spiritual Healer, New York, Arkana/Penguin: 1985
- Homage to the Sun: The Wisdom of the Magus of Strovolos, New York, Arkana/Penguin: 1987
- Fire in the Heart: Healers, Sages and Mystic, New York, Arkana/Penguin: 1990
A ball of light is also mentioned by Choa Kok Sui, Pranic Healing, York Beach, ME, Samuel Weiser: 1990
19. Janelle, “Attention to the Major Chakras in the Therapeutic Touch Treatment,” British Columbia Therapeutic Touch Network Newsletter, June 2005
20. Janelle, “Energizing the Field,” Our Healing Power
21. Janelle, “The Therapeutic Touch Treatment: A two-Way Conversation,” Embodiment of Spirit
22. Janelle, “Honouring the Receiver,” In Touch, Vol. XIII, No. 1, February 2001; also in Embodiment of Spirit
23. Janelle, “The Therapeutic Touch Partnership,” Embodiment of Spirit
24. Barbara Ann Brennan includes illustrations of Beings of Light in treatments in her book Hands of Light: A Guide to Healing Through the Human Energy Field, Bantam Books, New York: 1987
25. Janelle, “Let’s Make a Deal,” Embodiment of Spirit
BJ/April 2006