Water was ever my salvation
I dreamt of birthing a child
Into a deep blue pool
Glistening
With love(Sulis)
We begin our lives afloat in the womb and an aquatic existence is part of our evolutionary origin. Perhaps this is why immersion in water, especially warm water, is so soothingly familiar. Wild water delights us too, as is so clearly visible in the above photo of a friend and her first beautiful baby.
Recently, some truly astonishing aquatic work with babies and parents has come to my attention. From Russia at the Birthlight Center, from the UK at Aqualight Babies and from France at Blue Vitae. All these websites tell the story in images far more effectively than words ever could. The extract below comes from an article I wrote when I began my own aquatic bodywork practice. I wanted to express how valuable this work can be at every stage of our life cycle. For example, I've always loved seeing how a big grown man may experience his origins when floated in the water!
Continue reading "Floating through pregnancy with aquatic bodywork " »
Aquatic bodywork and trauma healing: After
Pat Ogden, PhD. NICABM Seminar title:Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor
Approach to the Treatment of Trauma
This post is part
of the series New treatments for trauma: a review with special
reference to aquatics.
Trauma is failure of integrative capacity so always work with integration. Pat Ogden Traumatic, attachment and developmental issues are often intertwined in trauma responses. Healing involves making a shift from passivity or dependency to self-empowerment. How can this understanding inform our work in the water?
The body is 'like a big water drop' says movement expert Liz Koch. This reminds me of dancer Emilie Conrad's suggestion that illness (including trauma reactions) may be seen as an interruption of the natural spiraling or pulsing movement patterns of our liquid body in motion. In water, we may be able to sense the freedom of movement that is our birthright.It is not insignificant that many of the movements that arise spontaneously during a free-flow aquatic bodywork session are typical of the early stages in our evolution and infant development. This suggests that when they occur we may be witnessing a revisiting of missed or damaged steps that could, if properly supported, rebalance and heal the body. In view of all this, Pat Ogden's background in yoga and dance and her mention of Continuum movement therapy, developed by Emilie Conrad, immediately attracted me to her work. She began by describing how the 'organization of body experience' is affected by trauma. A person suffering from chronic trauma may lose the ability to respond appropriately to sensory cues.
Continue reading "The body speaks its trauma: nonverbal and preverbal expression in water" »

Aquatic bodywork and trauma healing: After
Robert C. Scaer, MD. NICABM Seminar title: Trauma Wounds, Dissociation
and Sensory Processing Disorder
This post is part
of the series New treatments for trauma: a review with special
reference to aquatics.
Are nervous system responses to trauma especially apparent and accessible in aquatic bodywork? This post gives some personal examples and relates them to insights gained from Robert Scaer's work on what happens in the brain when a person goes into the freeze state associated with trauma, and the significance of early childhood traumas in causing adults to be more vulnerable to later trauma events.
The quiet terror of watching as my left arm began to unravel itself. Sinews, like the strands of a strong rope, twisting and untwisting themselves. Snake in it's death throes. Earlier in the day I had danced, shaking my arms free.... Sickness rising where it always does, in my solar plexus. And suddenly X folds me up there, cramps the pain in until it just has to explode out. Stretched open on the surface of water, no need to wonder any more about the courage it takes to leap. Leap into water. Jumping over the edge into the rush of a steep fall of water. How many times did we repeat that unleashing? From Experiencing aquatic bodywork by Sulis on Diving Deeper.
'False memory, being stuck in the past, any event that replicates a memory and sends person into fight or flight response ... this is trauma', says Robert Scaer. His work with somatic syndromes of trauma stress has indicated that the body retains traumatic memories unless they can be resolved and reintegrated. If this doesn't happen, the symptoms continue to play out in ways that compromise someone's life to a greater or lesser extent.
Continue reading "Fire and water: what happens in the brain during trauma " »
Aquatic bodywork and trauma healing: After Bill O'Hanlon, LMFT. NICABM Seminar title: Trauma as Bad Trance: How to Use Ericksonian Hypnosis in the Treatment of Trauma. This post is part of the series New treatments for trauma: a review with special reference to aquatics. (
Subscribe to follow the series here.)
One of the things that fascinated me from the start about aquatic bodywork was the way in which it can induce a state of trance that involves a merging of mind, body, and medium. An aquatic session is non-verbal and the movements of the body in water often enable a very graphic expression of any trauma that is present. It is not unusual for such trauma to have been locked in the body, remaining hidden or contained on land. The watery medium and a skilled practitioner can make its physical expression possible with safety and support that is much harder to achieve on land. The body tells a secret story if we can only translate it.Bill O'Hanlon described trauma as an event that results in a kind of trance state, which in itself can be seen as a survival skill. He suggested that other ways of entering trance, such as his own work with Ericksonian hypnosis (or aquatic bodywork I suggest), might help with finding ways to transform 'bad' trance into healing trance.
Continue reading "Bad trance to good trance: finding resource in the (aquatic) trance state" »
In this realm you have allies: fluids and the potency within fluids. Yes, you can start to sense potency within the fluids, the ocean. Fluids that pass everywhere, go around any obstacles and patiently try to erode the barriers. ....The fluid may be your ally provided that you learn its language, know how to work with it and know the nature of these forces that move it. Candice Marro
Trauma research based in neurobiology is indicating that the long-practiced approaches of talk therapy often risk re-traumatizing clients. Many of the newer methods being adopted are now body-based. Aquatic bodywork (Watsu and related modalities), the focus of this blog, has unique potential when it comes to trauma healing.However, these are not waters to dive into lightly. As trauma expert Peter Levine's book title Waking the Tiger: Healing Trauma suggests, we may need to be ready to face the wilder - more instinctive and unconsciously expressed - sides of ourselves and those we share the water with. Water seems to be an effective transmitter of these submerged messages of hurt and healing.If you've had a client thrash about in the water, or go strangely floppy in your arms, or go into undulating body waves, you might have witnessed trauma symptoms. If this is so, what you do next matters. If someone thanks you but leaves looking shocked, you may have tapped hidden trauma, and perhaps left them scared or vulnerable. Read on to learn more about working with trauma.
Continue reading "New treatments for trauma: a review with special reference to aquatics" »
Ten years ago if you'd mentioned 'Watsu' to a spa goer or an aquatic physical therapy patient, they might well have said 'What?' That's no longer the case.
In this post I look at what people saying about Watsu. Can we, as practitioners, contribute to the conversation to enhance and safeguard the perception of our work? Could we glean some tips for promoting Watsu by reading blogs about it?
Watsu is listed in spa vocabulary and an increasing number of spas offer it as a signature treatment; it is also a popular training modality offered at most of the National Aquatic Specialty Certificate Conferences organized by the Aquatic Therapy and Rehab Institute.More and more Watsu (and related aquatic bodywork) practitioners have websites to showcase their work. However, only a handful regularly blog about their own work. You will occasionally find receivers blogging about their experiences though.
Reading and commenting on blogs by those who've received aquatic therapy is a great opportunity for practitioners to: 1. learn about receiver's experiences, and 2. share information and insights that might deepen or enhance those experiences.
For the last couple of years I have been intensively trawling the internet for
blogs* about or including aquatic therapy (especially Watsu and its relatives) written by
practitioners, receivers, or others with an interest in the topic
(whether health- or culture-related). In December 2008 and March 2009, I gathered together some of these gleanings in what I called Aquatic Blog Carnivals. You can read those two collections here: The water web - a blog carnival; Aquatic healing arts in the blogosphere. Since then, I've been sharing other examples, as I came across them, with colleagues on the Aquatic Therapist Ning. Here is a compilation of just a few recent ones with extracts and links to the full sources. Tip: I keep abreast of these by setting up Google Alerts.
Read the rest of this post for more on ...
Feeling safe and supported during Watsu
Seeing colors during Watsu
A first Watsu experience
Another Watsu experience
Good publicity for Watsu
What do your clients say about your sessions?Have you been thinking about creating your own aquatic blog?... get some inspiration at the end of the post.
Continue reading "What are people saying about their Watsu sessions?" »
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