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Ela Pękalska's avatar

I appreciate the distinction you made. It is clever.

You are right, the gap exists, and unfortunately, many therapists are unskilled, despite the best intentions or training, to help a person transform. Sometimes, they are also dogmatic, thinking that their only framework, whatever it is, is everything there is.

It is great if they recognise their limits and understand that a single framework may not be enough to solve problems.

I discovered that myself, as a practitioner of Chinese medicine. Chinese medicine is vast (it works with emotions, trauma, and identity crises too) and can help a lot, also with identity. But for myself, to grasp the potential, I had to do many deep dives into research, psychology, neuroscience and western medicine. Only then was I able to provide the right framework by integrating multiple views.

My clients come to me either with physical pain or chronic illness, or fertility, or emotional pain, or mental disturbance (anxiety, panic attacks, mental instability, self-harm, suicidal thoughts etc). Yet, the reason they tell me is pain, frozen shoulder, and IBS, or PCOS, or sciatice. Usually, very physical. This is, however, seldom the real case. Not that I insist to dig deeper, but that we find they re-create the problem again, after it has been solved.

Everything is connected, certainly in Chinese medicine. Your emotions are related to strain, imbalance, and poor communication in the biological body. Also identity. Simply because the bracing, the breathing pattern, and the posture are external aspects of who you are.

So, even if you are a manual therapist, you can see a real meltdown in a person when muscle knots are released. Who you are is both internally and externally expressed, and identity change and guidance may be carried by a gentle work through the physical and connecting that to awareness, self-introspection.

I personally experienced that on myself when I released my traumas through acupuncture, self-administered. It took me years to reach this point and understand what needs to be done. It is not easy, I agree, to reach this point. But , like you, I have taken time to observe where people "store" their emotions, traumas, emotional burden, how it is reflected in the voice, posture, being, what they say and how, and how to release that. I extensively discuss with every person who needs to know how they can work on themselves.

It is not difficult, but you need to know what needs to be done and in what order.

So, it is interesting that we may have arrived to a similar point. I have arrived from the physical body and Chinese medicine.

Congratulations on your path!

I hope you are helping many practitioners. You have clearly found the right approaches.

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