RAIN Reflexology

One step to better health & wellness

The Reflexology Blog

Reflexology Offer: A Presentation & Demonstration

Posted on October 3, 2011 at 6:15 AM

Here we are, in the throws of one of Norway's wettest Summers and Falls.  What to do?  Work calls us to walk and walk and walk, rain or shine.  In addition, many elderly do not get enough exercise.  For many, our feet ache, and our backs feel challenged just to get through the darkening days.  Of course, having a healthy exercise routine is part of the solution, but having an alternative treatment regime is, I suggest, another part of the solution.

I am preparing a presentation and demonstration that I would like to share with clubs and groups in the area.  Just call to arrange a time and place!

Back to our ills:  Try massage or reflexology, or both, the next time the cold winds blow.  You may not be skipping to the office, but you'll be feeling better, overall.

Yet, what if the problem is that your spirits are low.  New research suggests that many Norwegians feel that their routines depress them, and that they would benefit from psychological counseling.  Unfortunately, here in Norway, it is rather difficult to get a counseling arrangement, due to the lack of psychologists with available time.  Combining social activities with physical fitness training, as well as alternative therapies, can help.  Even simply being touched by another person can help many people feel more well.  This should not be a surprise to us.  It is common sense:  we are social creatures, and need the biological benefits of social activity, which, in the homo sapien, includes touching.

Self-treatment is also possible with reflexology.  I am happy to provide guidance in this area to those who are interested.  I cover aspects of this in my new presentation and demonstration.  It is also possible to lift up one's level of overall health while sitting at the desk during an office break, using simple techniques.

Contact me if you would like to meet at your company, office, social or senior center.  I am happy to visit , showing my Powerpoint presentation about this interesting technique, and taking volunteers for a hands-on demo.  I can present in English and can answer inquiries and chat in Norwegian.  Velkommen!

Chronic Pain Management & Reflexology

Posted on June 30, 2011 at 5:22 AM

Keywords: Pain, Chronic Pain, Lasting Pain, Pain Management, Pain Removal, Getting Rid of Pain

 

News date: June 29, 2011. Headline: “Report: More than 100 Million Suffer Lasting Pain,” by Lauran Neergaard AP Medical Writer. As reported in the Patriot Ledger of Quincy, Maine, as well as other papers carrying the Associated Press wire.

 

Here is an interesting article that should have been written a century ago and resulted in the sort of pain research and pain management, education and treatment that is only now coming more to the forefront as an issue, in particular in the United States.

 

To quote Dr. Philip Pizzo, Dean of Medicine at Stanford University, “For too long, doctors and society alike have viewed pain with some prejudice, a lot of judgment and unfortunately not a lot of informed fact.”

 

The report resulting from several months of research was the work of several academic institutions’ cooperation. To summarize the situation:

· Too many individuals suffer with chronic pain, pain that could be better managed.

· Pain can be subjective, but this does not mean it does not have a significant cost to the U.S. economy.

· Chronic pain has increased possibly due in part to persons surviving from serious illnesses and diseases, after which lasting side effects compromise their quality of life, including pain.

· There is too little pain education for doctors and other health professionals, and too little research into the area of pain management.

· There has been too little systematic treatment of pain among sufferers.

 

My favorite of the findings, as noted in the news article:

"Serious pain that isn't properly treated sometimes can hijack the nervous system and essentially rewire it for pain - leaving misery after the condition that caused the initial pain is resolved."

 

Thank you, renowned physicians. This is something most reflexologists have known for, well, centuries, to be honest.

 

Now, I’ll attach my little ‘spiel,’ in Norwegian, ‘spill,’ or game: With so much pain around, is it surprising that more and more people are seeking out reflexology as a treatment, and finding real relief from pain? Reflexology works in a precise way that allows the bodily systems to: (1) recognize pain-generating complexes, (2) awaken by reflex those systems and organs, and (3) send new messages to them to encourage normalizing functionality. In a body of systems as complex as that of the human body, these ‘messages’ are, when ignored or mismanaged, masked and undelivered, covered by nerve pathways whose Job Number 1 is to remember where the pain ‘is.’ When this happens, the pain won’t budge: the nervous system won’t let it. One solution is to take what I consider a really quite heavy drug such as Lyrica. With only two doses, a repeat sufferer of shingles can say good-bye to the pain memories with which their nervous system continually reminded them day and night, and rest comfortably - asleep and awake.

 

The normal bodily SOP (standard operating procedure) is that the nerve endings – miles of them in each of our bodies, simply refuse to let go of memories of pain. They (nerve endings) could literally be considered to have thoroughly studied those precise locations, sworn never to forget them, and never to let you forget them, either.

 

Of course, one solution is reflexology. I’m from Chicago, and my own version of this is something like the garbage service one expects from the ‘City That Works.’ Frankly, reflexology helps take out the pain garbage. Okay, Ole, you live in Chicago. Your garbage is not taken away? It starts to pile up. Who’s to blame? The city, of course. But did you give a contribution to your Alderman? I thought not.

 

Comparatively, you don’t clean out the body systems - of toxins and pain memories? (As reflexology does.) They start to malfunction, bile piles up and is not removed, the nervous system does its job of remembering precisely where it hurts, and the memories of pain get etched into the body’s new chronic and recognizable pain picture in ways that truly discourage both addressing and ridding the body of pain. Who’s to blame? The medical establishment? If you paid to try to get your pain removed, you’ve paid the Alderman.

 

Pain still there? If you’re not trying to rid yourself of pain, the list includes you, the pain sufferer. So go see a reflexologist, please. Or a physical therapist, or a Feldenkraus specialist. Or a yoga class. Or Pilates. Add in a nutritionist. And go to several of these. And you will see a difference in your pain. It will start to, um, disappear, which is what pain does . . . sometimes.

 

This new report suggests that the entire health care establishment in the U.S. is implicated also, from medical schools to treatment options, a lack of sufficient medical research, and a breakdown of public and private reimbursement packages in helping to pay for real pain solutions.

 

Still, I can’t help but think that the best solutions include precisely those I just noted, with reflexology among them.

 

-June Edvenson

 

This article is copyrighted. Please inquire for permission to reprint.


To feel better or?

How do we feel better? What encourages 'feeling better'?  Especially in case of illness or age-related condition, reflexology is a great combination therapy to accompany standard medical approaches.  Many continue treatment - because they feel better - because of reflexology. 

On a musical note

"How beautiful are the feet of them:  that preach the gospel of peace, and bring glad tidings of good things."

-The Bible, Romans 10: 15, Soprano solo, part 38, The Messiah, G.F. Handel.

A quiet thought

"Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing there is a field.  I'll meet you there."  -Rumi