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Greetings!
Welcome to the June issue of the Caring Palms newsletter. This month, Caring Palms again announces its new continuing education class and schedule. We have a Reiki class schedule with a Reiki 2 class and a Reiki 3 class scheduled and other information for you.
I hope you like what we have here. |
Caring Palms Announced Online Registration
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In an effort to make things easier for its clients, Caring
Palms has just added Online Registration for all its classes. Previously, students needed to mail a check
or call in a credit card number. These options
are still available, but now all classes can be paid for and registration
information entered online with a credit card.
Considering that classes are filling up because of changes
in massage education requirements, having online registration makes sense. Once someone has registered online, a place
in the class has been immediately reserved.
It is the quickest way to reserve a place in a class. And this way, classes will not be over
booked.
For anyone wishing to register for any class online, go to
the website and choose either the Reiki side of the site or the Continuing
Education side. Once there, go to 'Schedule
of Classes' and find the class you want.
Select the 'Register Now' option to sign up. It's that easy. |
Commentary
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by Brian Dean
I meet some interesting people doing what I
do. For instance, I have worked on Chuck Yeager, John Corbett, Linda
Williams, Jimmy Olson, Nancy Walker, and Linda Hamilton.
Unfortunately, the Chuck Yeager I worked on
was not the one who was the first pilot to break the sound barrier, nor was
the John Corbett the one that starred in "My Big Fat Greek Wedding". The
Nancy Walker is not the one that starred in "Rhoda" and "McMillan and
Wife". The Linda Williams is not the one that was in "Something the Lord
Made" and Jimmy Olson certainly isn't Superman's pal. And of course, Linda
Hamilton is not the one that starred in "Terminator".
Yet I do get interesting people.
One time I worked on a guy from Ireland that
was part of the ground crew for the Fuji blimp. His job is driving a
certain distance and then waiting for the blimp to catch up, and then
repeating the same thing over and over. (The blimp only goes 35mph.)
But today was really neat. I worked on the
head chef to the Cirque du Soleil (Circus of the Sun). The Cirque de Soleil
is acrobats and animals and a host of other things that travels from city to
city. My client travels in a truck which is his kitchen. He feeds 120
people twice a day with an international menu with no repeats. Since
these people are effectively athletes, he can not use butter or cream
(nothing with high fat content). He has to come up with all the menus, buy
the food locally in each city, and direct his team of five chefs to prepare
the meals. Better him than me.
But I like meeting these interesting people
and learning about them. And they seem to really like my work. I just wish
they would find me before they are on their last day here.
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| Caring Palms Announces New Class |
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Caring Palms is pleased to announce Body Mechanics for Massage Therapists, a new class in its continuing education series. This class is 12 CEUs (continuing education credits) for Florida Massage Therapists. Body Mechanics for Massage Therapists was created to reconnect the massage therapist with proper body mechanics and techniques showing how to work without hurting oneself and how to apply deep pressure with little effort. The class being part lecture, part hands-on practice takes stances, centering, and the proper use of body strength from martial arts and applies them to the art of massage. The student will learn how to focus their energies and use their body to do deep work and not get hurt. This class will help anyone to work deeply with less effort no matter if one is 90 pounds or 250 pounds. This class is for the seasoned therapist or the new therapist. It will show moves everyone does, but in a new light as well as moves many people may not have seen before. The idea is not to dictate how to practice, but to show better body mechanics which the therapist can adapt to what they do. This is true whether they adapt all of it or just part of it. For more information, see the website under Continuing Education. Also see the current class schedule below. |
| Body Mechanics for Massage Therspists Class Schedule |
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The following is a list of currently scheduled classes. This class is a two-day class worth 12 CE hours. Each class (unless otherwise marked) currently has a status of 'Scheduled'. This means that a date has been set, but no one has signed up for it yet. Once a deposit has been received for a class, the status will be 'Confirmed'. The current schedule is as follows:
- June 27th - June 28th (Saturday 9:00am - 5:00pm and Sunday 10:00am - 4:00pm) Confirmed
At the Hampton Inn at Jacksonville Beach, FL Hotel Details
- August 15th - August 16th (Saturday 9:00am - 5:00pm and Sunday 10:00am - 4:00pm)
At the Hampton Inn at Jacksonville Beach, FL Hotel Details
This is a comprehensive course that is presented in a friendly, easy to follow manner with the student gaining hands-on experience before the conclusion. Part of the class is lecture with basic exercises that the class will participate in. Part of the class is hands-on practice where movements are shown that the student will perform. Some of the movements will be basic (Effleurage, Pétrissage, etc) with the focus being on better mechanics and deeper pressure. Other movements will be more advanced showing new ways to get deeply into certain areas. Florida Board of Massage Approved for twelve (12) Continuing Education Hours (CEUs) Class Cost: $300 Early Registration (at least 19 days before the class date) $350 within 19 days of the class date |
| Reiki Class Schedule |
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The following is a list of currently scheduled Reiki
Classes. Each class (unless otherwise marked) currently has a status of
'Scheduled'. This means that a date has been set, but no one has signed
up for it yet. Once a deposit has been received for a class, the status
will be 'Confirmed'. Any class marked as 'Closed' has basically filled up. The current schedule is as follows:
Reiki 1
- June 13 (Saturday) 11am - 5pm Closed
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July 25 (Saturday) 11am - 5pm Confirmed
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August 1 (Saturday) 11am - 5pm Confirmed
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September 12 (Saturday) 11am - 5pm -
October 10 (Saturday) 11am - 5pm November 14 (Saturday) 11am - 5pm
Reiki 2
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May 2 (Saturday) 11am - 5pm Confirmed
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August 8 (Saturday) 11am - 5pm Confirmed
Reiki 3
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June 6 (Saturday) 11am - 5pm
Confirmed
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August 29 (Saturday) 11am - 5pm
All classes are open to anyone wanting to learn this unique
method of hands-on healing. The cost for each class is $100 no matter
what level of Reiki the class is for. A 50% deposit ($50) is required a
minimum of seven (7) days prior to the class date (or permission of the
instructor) to reserve a space in the class. Classes with no deposits
received by the deposit date will be cancelled. All class statuses may be
viewed on the Reiki side of the web site under 'Class Scheduling and Schedule
of Classes'. |
| Modality of the Month |
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Myofascial Release
Myofascial Release (MFR) is a style
of massage / physical therapy that takes a whole body "hands-on"
approach to the evaluation and treatment of the human structure. The
goal is to help return the body's capacity to adapt, by restoring
three-dimensional balance. What this means is that it works on
realigning the body to its proper shape through manipulation of
connective tissue (fascia).
Every part in the body is connected
by fascia. The organs don't just hang there in open apace. There
is connective tissue surrounding everything holding them in place.
Throughout life, one's body takes a lot of punishment, or trauma.
We fall down. We get in accidents. We have surgery. All these
things affect the fascia. You see, the fascia is normally a nice,
soft, rubbery substance that gives when we move. But through
trauma, this pliable substance can become hard and constricting.
When this happens, the body's alignment changes. We feel pain, and
a host of other problems crop up. (A good example of constricted
fascia is carpal tunnel syndrome. This is where the fascia in the
wrist becomes hard and painful. The normal response is to have
surgery which cuts out the constricted fascia, but it also leaves
scar tissue which later causes more constricted fascia.) read more
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Disclosure
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The following article by William Lee Rand was sent to Caring Palms as a link. The original article resides on his website, www.Reiki.org, the site of the International Center for Reiki Training. It is being published here without permission, but it was felt that it would be better to show the whole article here where people could read it immediately, rather than link to it.
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A Response to the Bishops' Statement on Reiki
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by William Lee Rand
On March 25, 2009, U.S. Catholic bishops issued a statement
advising Catholic hospitals, health care facilities, and Catholic chaplains not
to support the use of Reiki sessions. The statement was issued by The Committee
on Doctrine, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and titled: "Guidelines for Evaluating Reiki as Alternative Therapy."
The statement was based on research the committee had done over a
period of several months involving information found on the Internet and in
Reiki books. Based on these sources, they concluded that Reiki came from
Buddhist texts and has a religious basis; that Reiki healing energy is directed
by human thought and will; that Reiki is not validated by scientific studies and
has no scientific explanation, and that Reiki is not accepted by the medical
community.
When considering the value of the bishops' statement, it's
important to note the sources they accessed. Much of their research came from
information published on Internet Web sites. Overall, the Internet isn't a good
source of factual information because there is no requirement that information
published there be checked or approved for accuracy. Anyone can set up a Web
site and publish anything they wish. What often happens is that authors of sites
copy from each other, so if inaccurate information is published on one site, it
can easily spread to many sites across the Internet. If one makes use of the
Internet for research, one must use a developed set of selection criteria that
limits one to only the most respected and reputable Web sites. Otherwise, one
runs the risk of accepting rumor and misinformation as fact.
This is especially true for Reiki Web sites. Reiki information has
been riddled with inaccurate ideas from the beginning of its practice in the
West. Many Reiki practitioners, teachers and authors fail to check the accuracy
of the information they base their teaching and writing on, and this has had a
detrimental effect on the quality of information published both on the Internet
and in Reiki books.
The best information on Reiki comes from those who have researched
the history and practice of Reiki professionally by conducting research in
Japan, reading original documents, and interviewing members of the founding
Reiki organization in Japan. If the bishops who wrote the statement on Reiki had
interviewed several of these experts, they would have realized that much of the
published information on Reiki is inaccurate, and they would have had accurate,
verifiable information on which to base their conclusions.
Origin of Reiki One of the stories told by Mrs. Takata
about the origin of Reiki indicates that the founder, Mikao Usui discovered the
secret of Reiki n Buddhist texts.1 This story has been
repeated over and over in Reiki classes, on Internet Web sites and in many Reiki
books. Yet we know this isn't true. For many years, Mrs. Takata was the only
source of information about Reiki for those in the West, and most practitioners
accepted her statements without question. Language, cultural, and organizational
barriers in Japan made research difficult for those who wanted to learn more
about the origins and practice of Reiki. It wasn't until the end of the 90's
that a few researchers were able to make breakthroughs.
Researchers, including Toshitaka Mochizuki, Hiroshi Doi and Frank
Arjava Petter, made contact with the original Reiki organization, discovered
Mikao Usui's grave, translated the story of Reiki inscribed on his memorial
stone, and uncovered an original document written by Mikao Usui about the nature
of Reiki. These sources indicate that Mikao Usui wasn't seeking to discover a
method of healing, but that the ability to heal came to him spontaneously during
a spiritual experience on a sacred mountain. Furthermore, in his Reiki Ryoho
Hikkei (Reiki Healing Art Handbook), Mikao Usui states: "My Usui Reiki Ryoho
(healing art) is original, never before explored, and incomparable in the
world." These facts indicate that Reiki couldn't have come from Buddhist texts,
nor could it be connected to any religion or belief system. In addition,
Japanese Reiki Masters who have knowledge of Buddhism have indicated that they
can find nothing from Buddhism in the practice of Reiki and that Reiki is
religiously neutral.2
The Nature of Reiki Healing One of the first things I
noticed after I took my first Reiki class and began to practice Reiki is that
Reiki healing energy directs itself. I was unable to direct it with my mind or
will and realized this wasn't necessary as Reiki had its own form of guidance
that was superior to my own. This experience has been verified by other
professional Reiki practitioners and forms the basis of one of the important
keys to using Reiki: If you want Reiki to provide the best healing experience,
it's necessary for the practitioner to set their own desire, will and ego aside,
and allow the Reiki energy to guide itself.
Scientific Explanation for Reiki There is a
scientific explanation for Reiki that is based on scientific studies and factual
information. This explanation has been presented as a testable hypothesis by
James Oschman, Ph.D.
Dr. Oschman is a scientist with a conventional background who
became interested in the practice of energy medicine. Through research, he
discovered a number of important scientific studies that point to a scientific
basis for energy medicine based on the laws of physics and biology. These
findings are discussed in an interview, "Science
and the Human Energy Field," published in the Winter 2002 issue of Reiki
News Magazine.
The electrical currents that run through every part of the human
body provide the basis for Dr. Oschman's hypothesis. These currents are present
in the nervous system, organs, and cells of the body. For instance, the
electrical signals that trigger the heartbeat travel throughout all the tissues
of the body and can be detected anywhere on the body.
Ampere's law indicates that when an electrical current flows
through a conductor, an electromagnetic field is produced that reflects the
nature of the current that created it. Tests with scientific instruments
indicate that electromagnetic fields exist around the body and around each of
the organs of the body, including the brain, heart, kidneys, liver, stomach,
etc. The heart has the strongest field, which has been measured at a distance of
15 feet from the body.
The fields around each of the organs pulse at different
frequencies and stay within a specific frequency range when they are healthy,
but move out of this range when they are unhealthy. The hands of healers produce
pulsing electromagnetic fields when they are in the process of healing, whereas
the hands of non-healer do not produce these fields. When a healer places his or
her hands on or near a person in need of healing, the electromagnetic field of
the healer's hands sweeps through a range of frequencies based on the needs of
the part of the body being treated. Faraday's law indicates that one
electromagnetic field can induce currents into a nearby conductor and through
this process, induce a similar field around it. In this way, a healer induces a
healthy electromagnetic field around an unhealthy organ, thus inducing a healthy
state in the organ. A detailed explanation of this hypothesis, including
descriptions of the scientific studies, diagrams, and references is presented in
the interview mentioned above.
Acceptance by the Medical Community Although Reiki is
not universally accepted within the medical community, many medical
professionals, hospitals, and healthcare facilities recognize its benefits and
accept it as an adjunct therapy. In Holistic Nursing, A Handbook for
Practice, Chapter 2 "Scope and Standards of Practice," the American Holistic
Nursing Association (AHNA) lists Reiki as an accepted form of treatment.3 In addition, according to the American Hospital Association,
in 2007 Reiki was offered as a standard part of patient care in 15% or over 800
hospitals across the US.4 Doctors have recommended Reiki to
their patients for amelioration of various health-related conditions. Surgeons
make use of Reiki practitioners prior to, during, and following surgery. As an
example, Dr. Mehmet Oz, one of the most respected cardiovascular surgeons in the
US, uses Reiki during open-heart surgeries and heart transplants. According to
Dr. Oz, "Reiki has become a sought-after healing art among patients and
mainstream medical professionals."5
Ethical Implications To refuse Reiki treatment to
patients that request it creates an ethical issue. According to the AHNA statement in response to the bishops' statement, the
practice of holistic nursing is not subject to regulation by the Catholic church
and it would be an ethical violation for a member of the AHNA to withhold Reiki
treatment from a patient who requests it; this includes those working in
Catholic hospitals.
Scientific Studies There are a number of reputable
scientific studies that provide evidence that Reiki is therapeutic. These
studies can be found by using one of the professional medical databases such as
PubMed or Cochrane Collection.6 Studies meeting medical and
scientific standards are usually published in peer-reviewed journals. There are
over 20 such studies on the therapeutic value of Reiki. A review of some of
these studies, "An Integrative Review of Reiki Touch Therapy Research" by Anne
Vitale, Ph. D., can be found at http://www.nursingcenter.com/pdf.asp?AID=732068. While the
Reiki studies conducted to date are preliminary in nature, they do provide
support for additional studies.
One well-designed Reiki study is "Autonomic Nervous-System-Changes
During Reiki Treatment: A Preliminary Study."7 Forty-five
subjects were assigned randomly to three groups. One group received no
treatment, another received Reiki treatment by experienced Reiki practitioners,
and the third group received sham treatment by a person with no Reiki training
who used the same hand positions as those receiving real Reiki.
Measurements were made of heart rate, cardiac vagal tone, blood
pressure, cardiac sensitivity to baroreflex, and breathing. Heart rate and
diastolic blood pressure decreased significantly for those receiving Reiki, but
not for those receiving sham Reiki, or no treatment. This study indicates that
the body does respond to Reiki energy and that this response isn't purely
psychological. It also indicates a potential therapeutic effect for Reiki.
"Reiki Improves Heart Rate Homeostasis in Laboratory Rats"8 is another valuable study. The value of using animals in this
type of study is that they are not affected by belief or skepticism regarding
Reiki. In addition, highly accurate telemetric implants were used to transmit
the biometric data. White noise was used to increase the heart rate of three
implanted laboratory rats. The rats were treated by a Reiki practitioner and by
a sham Reiki practitioner prior to being exposed to white noise and after
exposure. The procedure involved the practitioner directing their hands toward
the caged rat at a distance of four feet. The rats that received Reiki
experienced a significant reduction in heart rate, both before having their
heart rates elevated by white noise and after, whereas those treated with sham
Reiki did not. This is one of the most rigorous Reiki studies to date and
demonstrates that Reiki reduces the heart rate in both stressed and unstressed
animals and promotes homeostasis, both of which promote healthy heart function.
Reiki is practiced by followers of many religious traditions.
Although some practitioners integrate Reiki into their existing religious
beliefs, Reiki is not a religion, doctrine, or dogma. Reiki is grounded in the
principle of compassionate action, which is common to all religious traditions.
While each religion has the right to create its own rules, it's within the
nature of human dignity and free will for each person to decide which path to
follow and what activities are appropriate for them.
1 Paul David Mitchell,
The Blue Book, revised edition for The Reiki Alliance (Coeur d'Alene,
Idaho: 1985), page 13.
2 Personal
communication with Japanese Reiki practitioners Hiroshi Doi and Hyakuten
Inamoto.
3 page
56.
4 http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2008-09-14-alternative-therapies_N.htm
and www.reikiinhospitals.org
5 http://healthcare-research.suite101.com/article.cfm/reiki_in_hospitals
6 http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/ PubMed is the U.S. National
Institutes of Health (NIH) free digital archive of biomedical and life sciences
journal literature. http://www.lib.umb.edu/node/1353 The Cochrane Collection
provides access to a collection of databases, which focus on the effects of
health care and evidence based medical practice.
7 Nicole Makay,
M.Sc., Stig Hansen, Ph.D., and Oona McFarlane, M.A., The Journal of
Alternative and Complementary Medicine, Volume 10, Number 6, 2004, pp.
1077-1081. This study is also discussed in "The Science of Reiki" by Nicole Mackay, Reiki News
Magazine (Summer 2005).
8 Ann Linda
Baldwin, Ph.D, Christina Wagers, and Gary E. Schwartz, Ph.D., The Journal of
Alternative and Complementary Medicine, Volume 14, Number 4, 2008, pp.
417-422.
William Lee Rand is president of the International Center for
Reiki Training and executive editor of the Reiki News Magazine. He has studied
with five Reiki teachers, including two from Japan, and has made three trips to
Japan to research the history and nature of Reiki. Rand has practiced Reiki
since 1981 and has taught full time for 20 years.
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| Can We Answer Your Questions? |
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You have Questions? Maybe we have answers.
Each month, we write articles on a variety of subjects. Is there something that you would like to see us write about? Do you have questions that you 'd like answered? Do you have questions on massage? On Reiki? On energy work in general? Submit your questions or requests to Brian@CaringPalms.com and we will try to see if we can answer them for you. | |
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