Chronic Pain Release Through
Yoga
by Christopher Ken Baxter
zone3
A man
came to me a few months ago whose physician is a Yoga student of
mine. James, the 31-year-old man, came at her suggestion because he
was in chronic pain. He was an athlete, and within the past 15 years
had suffered an eye injury, Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (CTS), and spinal
injuries. He was also in several traffic accidents, the last one in
August 1997. As a result of these injuries he underwent two spinal
surgeries, the last of which left him in a neck-to-hip body cast for
six months afterward.
Dr.
Ann Mick, James' physician (and my Yoga student), reported that
James was unable to stay in any position for more than a few minutes
without experiencing discomfort. He had limited range of motion in
his neck, chronic left shoulder and neck pain, and an extensive
myofascial pain syndrome.
Ann
is also a certified massage and Trager therapist and she wanted him
to receive both traditional and complementary medical care.
James
received acupuncture, training in Yoga and meditation, physical
therapy, and massage therapy in addition to CTS release surgery.
After a year, however, he still had chronic pain in his neck,
shoulders, and wrists.
James
had done some Yoga prior to our meeting. He found that in trying to
follow the instructions and stay up with the class, he only
irritated his injuries. My goal with him was Yoga education: how to
heighten awareness of himself in order to develop internal guidance,
inner strength, and softness in his body. Patanjali in his classic
scripture the Yoga Sutras (sutra 2.46 sthira-sukham asanam)
describes this as a balance of steadiness, or sthira, and comfort,
or sukha.
During the first session I was able to help James access
sthira and sukha through the release of some of the chronic tension
in the foundation of his body. He learned to find, feel, and relax
his pelvic floor, buttocks, belly, anal, and genital areas. He next
learned to isolate and lift the center of his pelvic floor, the
perineum, while relaxing the surrounding muscles. With patient
coaching he was even able to continue the lift through the center of
his body, connecting the perineal lift to a subtle lift in his
abdomen, sternum, and the crown of his head. This "core lift" gave
him an internal strength that his body could relax into.
To
further enhance the benefits, this practice of core lift was always
coordinated with dirgha and ujjayi pranayama-deep, three-part
sounding breaths. Finally he practiced how to breathe into the pain,
experience it as sensation, and release some of the emotional
armoring that added stress to his mind and body. This practice was
enhanced by learning to "talk" and "listen" to his body. This helped
him discover underlying negative attitudes, which he was able to
transform into compassionate intentions for healing.
After
the first session he practiced at home. He was able to go deeper
into the hurt without clenching, and became familiar enough with his
body to find and sustain the core lift without my assistance. James
experienced an increase in awareness, confidence, and muscle tone in
the core of his body.
Midway through his second session we combined a review of
core lift with pelvic mobility. Learning to level his pelvis, at the
same time as he brought both muscular and energetic lift through the
center of his body gave him the power to find and maintain his own
axis of alignment while standing, sitting, and walking.
Finally this was combined with spontaneous, prana-directed
movements. This allowed his body, now supported by an inner
strength, to intuitively unwind some of its chronic tensions and
holding patterns. After a time he was able to move his head from
left to right, up and down, and ear to shoulder.
By
the end of the session James could sit on a meditation pillow on the
floor for a short time without fatigue. After years of limited,
painful movement, these dramatic developments lifted his spirits and
gave him inspiration to continue practicing.
At
the heart of James' improvements was his willingness to create a new
relationship with his painful body. The key I gave him was a method
of awareness that allowed his body to be so steady, so comfortable,
and so safe that it could release its old, painful holding patterns.
By practicing the core lift he learned to hold himself from a stable
and mobile center, rather than chronically clench from fear and
weakness.
When
you are injured the muscles and tissue that protect the moving parts
of your body-the joints-try to stabilize you by tightening in spasm.
Most treatments focus on releasing the spasm, but if there's no core
strength to rest on, the spasm may return. As James learned to
develop core strength, parts of his body that were chronically
contracted could finally relax into an internal support. For the
first time he was able to breathe into his pain as sensation and
release some of the emotional armor he was wearing.
It is
clear that Yoga can effectively release chronic pain. But like James
one must have a willingness to be in a new relationship with the
body and its pain, hold a compassionate and supportive intention,
and develop core strength. The following exercise is based on the
flow of work that James and I did together.
Preparing the body with conscious breathing
(Note: The following was prepared for Yoga teachers
working with students with chronic pain.)
The
first step is to establish full, deep breathing. Use ujjayi (the sounding breath) and dirgha (the three-part breath) pranayama in
combination.
When
you have chronic pain breathing tends to be shallow and you
frequently hold your breath. With restricted breathing you're not
exhaling fully and can't remove from the lungs stale air and the
residual buildup of toxins. With chronic pain the muscles are cold
and contracted from poor circulation, so even less oxygen comes in
and fewer toxins are removed. When you breathe fully and deeply, the
lungs work more, the diaphragm moves, the intercostal, back, and
abdominal muscles work. This generates heat into the core of the
body
Another positive result of conscious breathing is its calming
effect on the emotions, reducing fear and anxiety in the nervous
system. You feel safer emotionally as well as more at ease and
relaxed physically. Conscious breathing also helps diminish tension
before it accumulates around the areas where chronic pain exists.
Establishing a supportive mental attitude
The
next step in releasing chronic pain involves changing the person's
attitude toward the part of the body in pain. Invite the person you
are working with (the student) to observe not only what the pain
feels like, but how they feel about the pain. The intention is for
your student to feel the emotions connected with the part of the
body that hurts. This important step connects emotional pain with
physical pain, and enables your student to recognize the continuity
between his or her body, mind, and feelings.
There
are many attitudes associated with chronic pain: suffering, anger,
despair, depression, loss, and helplessness, to name a few. These
attitudes exist when we hate, fear, or deny parts of our body that
hurt. Because we cannot remove the hurt, we shield ourselves from
it, denying it the very attention and love it needs to heal. This of
course adds to the stress because of the negative self-directed
energy required to deny parts of ourselves.
The
first step in changing the negative attitude is to create a feeling
of comfort and safety. Have your student come into a comfortable,
relaxed position, lying on the floor in the relaxation pose, or
perhaps in a restorative posture. Direct the student to communicate
with the pain by placing a hand on the part of the body that hurts.
Depending on what is appropriate, either the student can put his or
her hands on, or the teacher can, or both.
Putting hands on the painful part of the body is soothing. It
opens a relationship to this part and brings a message of affection
to it: "I'm willing to make a different choice in my relationship
with you." It starts to send energy, heat, and fluid to this part of
the body, creating an overall feeling of well-being and nurturance.
It invites the traumatized part of the body to rejoin the rest of
the organism and helps move the student from denial to interest.
Then
ask the student to breathe into the part of the body being touched,
feel what is going on, and ask if it has a voice. If so ask the body
to speak. I had asked this of James. He felt anger, despair, and
judged what was going on negatively. His whole self was in denial
physically, mentally, and emotionally. Negative statements leaked
through in his language: "My body betrayed me; I'm angry with it",
"I don't know why this happened to me ," and "I feel like a failure
because I cant figure it out and fix it."
At
this point in the process, there's often a release: the student
comes out of denial. There is a wide range of emotional releases,
from full expression to silence. Now is the time to use affirmations
because the student's habitual critical language keeps the pain
intact longer. I asked James to restate how he felt after the
release: "I am getting to know this part of my body", "I feel safer
in this part of the body", "I feel more loving toward this part of
the body,"etc., were the responses, indicating a shift in
relationship between mind and body.
Increasing Intimacy and Awareness of the Body Once
the student has released some of the emotional armor and moved
beyond denial, the next step is to release chronic tension
substantially using specific Yoga movements combined with breath.
Our
culture tends to strengthen on top of unrecognized vulnerability and
helplessness; we go in quickly, name the pain, and get out. But true
strength runs deep and can only take root in the center of
vulnerability -- it is crucial that the student go to the center of
what is inside if he or she is truly going to heal. To do this you
need to help the student create a balance of steadiness and comfort
with core stability and strength.
To
build core strength a strong and mobile pelvic floor, a softly
engaged abdomen, an open, lifted heart, and an aligned spine are
essential. Pelvic floor work provides the foundation anatomically,
neurologically, structurally, and energetically.
The
pelvic floor relates to the muladhara or root chakra where basic
issues of survival and safety reside. If this part of the body is
frozen then the foundation of safety is locked and movement is based
in fear. When the student begins to stretch open the pelvic floor,
energy can move through and up this chakra, and she or he can
consciously act on issues of survival and fear, thus building a
strong foundation for living.
Stretching open, moving, and strengthening the pelvic floor
is followed by a unique movement, which I call the core lift, by
which the center of the pelvic floor, the perineum, is subtly lifted
up into the core of the body. In various yogic texts this is termed
mulabandha. (There are different schools of thought as to what does
and does not constitute mulabandha. For the purposes of this study,
mulabandha does not include the lifting and contraction of the
genitals, vajroli mudra, or the lifting and contracting of the anus,
ashvini mudra. It also is not the form of mulabandha that is only
practiced in a meditative sitting posture, such as siddhasana, with
retention of the breath, kumbhaka, and application of the throat
lock, jalandhara bandha. I refer to the variation of mulabandha I
use in this approach as core lift to avoid confusion.)
It is
important to note that the pelvic floor is not an easy part of the
body to access because our culture associates it with pain, shame,
inappropriateness, and sin. And for some of us there is trauma in
this area from surgery and/or sexual abuse. These issues make it
more difficult to bring to this part of the body an unfettered
curiosity. Most Yoga teachers are not experienced or trained to
relate in depth with this type of trauma, so as a Yoga teacher you
have to know your limits and be capable and confident, because once
you go there you'd better be prepared to stay with it and bring in a
professional or suggest professional therapy if appropriate.
The
core lift is accomplished by a subtle lifting or arching of the
pelvic floor into the core of the body. This is done by contracting
the muscles surrounding the perineum, the area between the genitals
and the anus. It's not difficult to do, yet because the lift is
subtle it requires as much attention and focus as any technique in
Yoga. The ability to focus, however, is of great benefit because
when our mind is strongly focused, we can begin to relax and feel
safe.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Christopher Ken Baxter is a
founding member of Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health and is one of
the original developers of Kripalu Yoga. Out of his 30 years of
experience with Yoga, he has developed AtmaYoga, a form of Yoga that
has its origin in core strength of body and spirit. For more
information on AtmaYoga and the many offerings of AtmaYoga
Educational Services, visit http://www.atmayoga.com/, call
413-528-6408, or E-mailatmaytt@aol.com.
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Chronic Pain Release Through Yoga
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