Bodywork
as Meditation Bodywork as a meditative discipline may at first seem rather peculiar.
Certainly, many seasoned bodyworkers meditate, rightly believing that
regular practice of any of a wealth of meditative modalities will promote
an increased sense of mental clarity and calmness and may potentially
enhance the experience of everyday life, as well as the quality and
depth of their work. However, accepting the idea that the act of doing
integrative bodywork can be both the source of meditative insight and
an ideal milieu through which we move toward higher levels of consciousness
will, for most, require a shift in paradigm of a fairly high order.
This perceptual difficulty will be further magnified when applied to
those therapists engaged in disciplines that are thought of as intense
and whose work is generally described as deep-tissue manipulation —
work such as the style of structural integration called Rolfing. That
such a modality offers a gateway to “the meditative” will
at first seem contradictory in the extreme, owing to a number of fundamental
misapprehensions about the nature and intent of this and related integrative
modalities. Furthermore, the idea that those who do bodywork may choose
to do so in part as a selfish desire to attain an altered mental state
may seem curiously at odds with the altruism that we associate with
those drawn to healing touch modalities. Yet, we will argue for the
virtues of this type of selfishness (Ayn Rand, notwithstanding).
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