Floatation, Holistic Therapies & Holistic Practitioner Training
Category: Polarity Therapy
http://www.crystallineawakenedu.com/
Receiving polarity therapy is amazing, imagine doing this work so that others can also have this experience. A process of unfolding, evolution, that supports the awakening process.
Men have been conditioned to believe “real men do not cry” they have learned to minimize pain. Messages received as boys is; “tough it out,” never allow others to see you might be in pain, physically or emotionally. Learning to override the signals of the body as a little boy continues into adult life. “Men are as likely to seek medical assistance, particularly pertaining to emotional health, as they are to stop and ask directions.” They have learned that they can fix problems, they are not the problem.
The basis of many health problems whether they are men or women is lack of education around self nurturance and caring for self. In general most people fail to recognize the true gift of giving is from a fullness of self, otherwise giving is a reaction to a place of emptiness within.
Men and women complain of lack of time and then they feel guilty for taking the time when they do something for themselves. Poor nutrition, and lack of proper exercise are a couple of areas that lead to health issues, these areas however appear to be related to stress as a result of too much to do in a society that values productivity. “Stress has been defined when circumstances place people in situations where there are not enough resources.” (Brannon, 2007) Heart disease is the leading cause of death in both men and women, only recently medical professionals are acknowledging this fact pertains to women as well.
Both men and women struggle, we are all on the same battle field and for reasons beyond our understanding we think we are fighting a different battle. Men and women hold high expectations of each other and self resulting in tremendous amounts of stress. Learning to ask for help from others is a sign of strength that many perceive as weakness. “The biggest problem that men have is not so much a specific disease, says Bonhomme, but the diseases are the result of lack of health care monitoring earlier in life.” (Zamora, n.d.) Monitoring health care is a sign of self-care and self-nurturance, something that both men and women fail to do well.
Women’s Health versus Men’s Health
Major areas of concern in the area of male health are:
Mental Health Issues
Depression
Anxiety
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
Physical Health Issues
References
Brannon, L. (2007). Genders: Psychological Perspectives (5th ed.). : Pearson.
Zamora, D. (n.d.). Mens Top Five Health Concerns. Retrieved from http://men.webmd.com
Visit our website for some non-invasive and non-disclosing self-care options.
As a practitioner of polarity therapy for over fifteen years I have witnessed the results of profound healing in these areas and more. This article touches on some of the areas where polarity is pivotal to creating change. The combination of deeper energy clearing, nutritional support, hypnosis, and floatation, enhance the ability to move to even higher levels of wellness.
Written or reviewed by a board-certified physician. See About.com’s Medical Review Board.
Polarity therapy is an alternative therapy that involves balancing the flow of energy in the body to improve or maintain health. Developed in the late 19th century by Randolph Stone (a chiropractor and osteopath), polarity therapy is also known as polarity balancing and polarity energy balancing.
Polarity therapy is somewhat influenced by concepts of energy flow used in ayurvedic medicine and traditional Chinese medicine.
However, polarity therapy differs from those systems of medicine given its theory that positive and negative energy charges in the body’s electromagnetic energy field govern the flow of energy.
Practitioners of polarity therapy use a number of techniques (including bodywork and stretching exercises) to balance energy flow and restore health to the body.
How Does Polarity Therapy Work?
According to practitioners of polarity therapy, illness is caused by disruptions in the body’s energy flow and the resulting stress and trauma. Polarity therapy is based on the idea that there are three types of energy fields in the body: long-line currents that run north to south in the body, transverse currents that run east-west in the body, and spiral currents that start at the navel and expand outward.
To find the sources of energy blockages, practitioners of polarity therapy scan the body for symptoms like pain, discomfort, muscle spasms, and muscle tension (especially in the shoulders and back). Once blockages are identified, the practitioner uses a variety of techniques to clear the paths of energy fields, including spinal realignment and movement exercises.
In some cases, practices like deep-breathing, yoga, and hydrotherapy may also be incorporated into polarity therapy.
Uses for Polarity Therapy
In alternative medicine, polarity therapy is said to help with the following health problems:
allergies
anxiety
arthritis
back pain
chronic fatigue syndrome
depression
headaches
irritable bowel syndrome
migraine
In addition, proponents claim that polarity can improve range of motion, increase energy, alleviate pain, relieve stress, and reduce swelling. Some proponents also suggest that polarity therapy can stimulate the immune system and fend off disease, including cancer.
Health Benefits of Polarity Therapy
Although there is currently a lack of scientific support for claims that polarity therapy can treat specific health problems or conditions, some studies suggest that polarity therapy may offer certain health benefits. Here’s a look at some key findings from the available research on polarity therapy:
1) Cancer
Preliminary research indicates that polarity therapy may help offset some of the adverse effects associated with certain cancer treatments. In a pilot study published in Integrative Cancer Therapies in 2005, for instance, researchers found that polarity therapy may help alleviate fatigue and improve quality of life among women undergoing radiation therapy for breast cancer.
For the study, 15 women receiving radiation therapy for breast cancer were assigned to one, two, or no polarity therapy sessions. Results revealed that those assigned to polarity therapy experienced a significantly greater improvement in fatigue and quality of life compared to members of the control group.
In a 2011 study published in the same journal, researchers assigned 45 women undergoing radiation therapy for breast cancer to receive standard clinical care, massage, or polarity therapy over the course of three weeks. At the study’s end, members of the massage and polarity therapy groups reported greater improvements in fatigue and quality of life than members of the group assigned to standard care.
2) Stress
Polarity therapy may help reduce stress, according to a 2009 study published in The Gerontologist. The study involved 42 caregivers of people with dementia. One group received eight sessions of polarity therapy, while a second group had a short-term relief of their caregiving duties. After assessing each participant, the study’s authors determined that those given polarity therapy experienced a significantly greater reduction in stress levels. In addition, members of the polarity therapy group showed greater improvements in depression, pain, vitality, and general health.
Disclaimer: The information contained on this site is intended for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for advice, diagnosis or treatment by a licensed physician. It is not meant to cover all possible precautions, drug interactions, circumstances or adverse effects. You should seek prompt medical care for any health issues and consult your doctor before using alternative medicine or making a change to your regimen.
“For depression, flotation was equal to counseling at near 70%, with relaxation training at 53% and physical therapy and medication at 20%.”
Flotation REST in Applied Psychophysiology Thomas H. Fine, M.A. and Roderick Borrie, Ph.D.
Thomas H. Fine is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry of the Medical College of Ohio. He began his research and clinical work with Biofeedback in 1975, and, with John Turner, initiated the Restricted Environmental Stimulation Therapy research program at MCO in 1978.
Roderick A Borrie, Ph.D. is a Clinical Psychologist at South Oaks Hospital, Amityville, New York. He began his exploration of therapeutic uses of Restricted Environmental Stimulation Therapy at the University of British Columbia with Dr. Peter Suedfeld, and continues to use it in current work with patients suffering chronic pain and illness.
Introduction
Restricted Environmental Stimulation Therapy (REST) has fascinated many researchers, clinicians, and explorers of consciousness, promising something special - a powerful transformation, a mystical peak experience, an intense change in biochemicals, improved performance, or a healing of our ills. Beyond the fascination, Flotation REST has established itself as a unique method in the field of applied psychophysiology. Flotation REST has proven to be a technique with predictable psychophysiological effects and powerful clinical and performance applications. This article will provide the reader with an introduction to the basic research into Flotation REST’s psychophysiological effects, and a brief overview of the clinical and performance applications currently in use by REST clinicians and researchers. The article will examine in greater detail the use of Flotation REST as an intervention for chronic pain.
REST is an acronym for Restricted Environmental Stimulation Technique, a name developed in the late 1970s by Peter Suedfeld and Roderick Borrie for a technique that had previously been called Sensory Deprivation (SD) or Sensory Isolation. Since much of the early SD research had been misinterpreted, especially by writers of introductory psychology texts, a widely accepted myth developed that SD environments were highly stressful, even models for producing psychotic like experiences. This led to difficulties with the Sensory Deprivation concept. Ultimately Suedfeld and Borrie proposed that, since the process involves restricting the environmental stimulation that the patient or subject experiences, REST would be a more accurate and less provocative acronym.
Flotation REST is a special type of REST popularized by John C. Lilly, M.D. Lilly developed an immersion system in the late 1950s at that was used in early SD experiments. In the 1960s he developed a flotation system in which a person floats in a light free, sound reduced chamber in a highly concentrated solution of Epsom Salt and water maintained at a constant temperature of 9,4.5 F (Lilly, 1977, p. 118).
Both Wet and Dry REST systems have been utilized in research and practice. Wet-REST systems utilize flotation in salt water, and Dry-REST systems utilize a modified REST environment in which a pliable 15 mm. polymer membrane separated the floater from the fluid (Turner, Gerard, Hyland, Neilands, & Fine, 1993).
At the Medical College of Ohio, John Turner and I conducted a series of studies investigating the psychophysiological effects of brief sessions of Flotation REST. The REST environment used in all of these studies was a plastic or fiberglass chamber, approximately 1.1 m. x 1.3 m. x 2.5 m. filled to a 25 cm. depth with saturated epsom salts (Mg SO) solution having a specific gravity of 1.28 and temperature maintained at 34.5 C. The chamber was light-free and the sound level was less than 10 decibels, with further attenuation due to submersion of the ears in the solution. The general protocol consisted of 30-40 minute sessions repeated approximately every third day with a total number ranging from 4 to 20 sessions per study.
The first parameter we addressed was the subjective report of the REST experience. We utilized several indices of subjective reports including the Spielberger state anxiety scale, Zuckerman multiple affect adjective checklist (Turner & Fine, 1990a), profile of mood states (POMS) (Turner, Fine, Ewy, Sershon, & Frelich, 1989), and subjective rating scales of emotion and relaxation. All of the initial studies found marked pre-post and across-session changes indicating relaxation, an increase in positive emotion and a decrease in negative emotions. In addition, an analysis of well over 1,000 descriptions of the REST experience indicated that more than 90% of subjects found REST deeply relaxing.
Psychophysiological Effects of Flotation Rest
In choosing physiological parameters of the REST effect on relaxation, we examined the basic physiological and biochemical hormonal changes associated with stress responding. Physiological parameters measured included blood pressure (BP), muscle tension (EMG), and heart rate (HR). Hormonal parameters included both adrenal axis hormones such as ACTH, epinephrine, norepinephrine, cortisol and aldosterone, and hormones not mediating stress responding (luteinizing hormone and testosterone). Both within and across-session decreases have been observed in various hormones. Hormones directly associated with the stress response. Cortisol, ACTH and epinephrine showed decreases during REST sessions, whereas luteinizing hormone, which is not associated with the stress response, showed no change (Turner & Fine 1983). Likewise, across-session decreases were observed in adrenal-associated hormones (cortisol, aldosterone, renin activity), while a hormone unrelated to stress response (testosterone) did not shown across-session changes (Turner & Fine, 1990a). In a separate study, we examined the across-session effect on both mean cortisol values and their variability, observing a decrease in both parameters (Turner and Fine, 1991). This suggests the possibility of a resetting of the regulatory mechanism of cortisol across sessions. Furthermore, cortisol, which has received more attention than the other hormones, and Blood Pressure, have been shown to maintain the REST effect after cessation of repeated REST sessions (Turner & Fine, 1983). This phenomenon suggests that the REST effect may be more than a simple, immediately reversible response.
Interestingly, in comparing hormonal and BP changes in REST with these changes in another relaxation condition (biofeedback), REST consistently showed greater hormonal effects but similar BP effects to biofeedback assisted relaxation (McGrady, Turner, Fine, & Higgins. 1987). These results led us to consider that REST affects different mechanisms than the biofeedback (since it affected cortisol levels when other methods did not) or was simply more powerful (i.e. REST reached the threshold for cortisol change but biofeedback did not).
Clinical Applications of Flotation REST
These results provide strong support for the hypothesis that Flotation REST serves as a powerful relaxation inducer and has clinical potential in working with patients who have stress-related disorders. There have been several clinical studies that have employed REST as a treatment. The disorders treated include essential hypertension, muscle tension headache, anxiety disorders, chronic pain, psychophysiological insomnia, PMS, and rheumatoid arthritis (Fine and Turner, 1985; Rzewnicki, Alistair, Wallbaum, Steel, Suedfeld, 1990; Fine and Tumer, 1985; Goldstein and Jessen, 1990; Turner, DeLeon, Gibson, & Fine, 1993). The treatment paradigms used in these studies were similar, with REST serving as the primary method of relaxation induction and training. All of these studies demonstrated positive results from the use of REST. One of the unique effects of REST demonstrated in these studies was that chronic pain patients frequently experienced an absence of all pain during flotation, and that this spontaneous anesthesia could remain for up to several hours after the session. Unfortunately, as with many bio-behavioral treatment approaches, the large scale controlled trials have yet to be undertaken.
Flotation REST and Performance Enhancement
A separate, exciting area is the use of Flotation REST in the enhancement of human performance. Several studies, carried out primarily in the research programs of Peter Suedfeld at the University of British Columbia and Arreed Barabasz at Washington State University, have demonstrated enhancement of scientific creativity, instrument flight performance, and piano performance. Several studies of sports performance have had positive results including studies of basketball, tennis, skiing, rifle marksmanship, and dart throwing. In several of the studies the Flotation REST condition was varied with relaxation, or imagery training and always had a more powerful effect. Often, Flotation REST was used with imagery or without imagery, and no difference was, found. Flotation REST, either wet or dry, was sufficiently powerful to affect a change in performance. Barabasz suggests that because REST potentiates imagery while disrupting over learned psychological processes, the technique is especially suited not only for the acquisition of new im- proved skills but the unlearning of less adaptive ones.
Flotation Rest and Pain Management
An in depth examination of the role of Flotation REST in the management of pain can provide us with a clear picture of the psychophysiological nature of the treatment. Pain programs are generally used as a last referral resort for patients whose intractable pain has not responded to the traditional medical treatments. Biobehaviorally based pain management utilizes counseling and behavioral medicine techniques such as relaxation training, meditation. biofeedback, guided imagery, and self-hypnosis. The goals of such treatment are the development of pain avoidance skills, the establishment of routines for optimal fitness within the limitations of a disability, the reduction or elimination of pain, when possible, and/or the patients acceptance of some level of pain.
Flotation REST can have an important role at several stages of the pain management process. By reducing both muscle tension and pain in a relatively short time and without effort on the part of the patient, flotation provides a dramatic demonstration of the benefits of relaxation. Relief is immediate and, although temporary, offers promise of further relief from REST and other relaxation-based strategies. Symptom reduction gained from flotation can increase a patient’s motivation and interest in the remainder of the therapy plan. Pain patients generally come into treatment feeling suspicious and skeptical, requiring a clear demonstration that they can be helped. Flotation can be the vehicle for that demonstration.
Cara floating for peace
The relaxation following flotation can be used to facilitate relaxation training. In the treatment reported here, training in relaxation and other psychological pain control strategies occurred during the flotation REST sessions as well as in counseling sessions. Specially prepared audio programs introduced patients to breathing techniques, progressive muscle relaxation, autogenic training, guided imagery and hypnotic suggestions for pain reduction while they floated. Training and practice in those same techniques followed in counseling sessions and at home.
The most common etiologies of pain in this group of patients were from motor vehicle accidents, work accidents, or chronic illness. Most had endured their pain for longer than six months and had also suffered various levels of anxiety, anger, and depression. These emotional problems must be considered in the treatment of chronic pain patients.The first data are pre-post pain ratings from 16 patients who floated from one to 16 flotation sessions. Each patient reported on up to four body areas, providing a total of 253 pre-post , measures. The average percentage of relief, as measured in decrease from the pre-session value, was 31.3% for all sessions and all measures. To determine whether flotation REST provides more pain relief to some parts of the body as opposed to others, these measurements were examined by body area. Pain reduction in most body areas was close to the overall mean of 31%, except the upper back, which showed a 63.6% pain reduction, the arms which showed a 48.2% reduction, and the legs, which showed a 15.3% pain reduction. The duration of relief varied from two hours to seven days.
A second set of data came from a survey mailed to patients who had completed the program. The questionnaire asked patients to assess how much pain relief they received from the various components of the pain program (Flotation, relaxation training, and counseling) and from other treatments they had received medication (pills and shots), physical therapy, chiropractic, and surgery. Short-term pain relief, long-term pain relief, relief from anxiety or stress, and relief from depression were indicated separately. Additionally, they were asked whether each treatment improved their outlook and/or helped them cope with their pain.
All 27 respondents had received treatments other than those from this pain program: 81% had used pain medications; 56% had had some form of pain injections; 70% had received physical therapy; 59% had received chiropractic treatment; 22% had undergone surgery. These patients reported more short-term and long-term pain relief from flotation than from the other therapeutic modalities.
For non-pain symptoms, the comparisons were even more striking. Patients reported far more relief from anxiety and stress from flotation than any other modality. For depression, flotation was equal to counseling at near 70%, with relaxation training at 53% and physical therapy and medication at 20%.
Enjoy your unique experience.
Patients also claimed to have reaped a variety of other benefits from flotation, reporting improvements in sleep (65%), mental concentration (77%), energy (46%), interpersonal relationships (54%), ability to work (35%), ability to cope with pain (88%), ability to cope with stress (92%), and feelings of well-being (65%) resulting from flotation REST.
In answering the question, “Did this treatment improve your outlook toward your pain?” 96% responded positively for flotation, 100% for counseling, 100% for relaxation training, 50% for physical therapy, 24% for pain pills, 17% for pain shots, 15% for chiropractic. To the question, “Did this treatment help you cope effectively with your pain?” 96% responded positively for flotation, 92% for both relaxation training and counseling, 50% for pain shots, 44% for pain injections, 38% for physical therapy, and 17% for chiropractic. It is clear that flotation was rated on average as more effective than other treatments with respect to pain, anxiety and depression relief.
Flotation REST and Chronic Illness
Summing up thus far, the data are supportive of flotation REST being useful in pain reduction, stress and tension abatement, and mood enhancement. Besides chronic pain, other patients treated at our facility were those with chronic physical illnesses, those with cancer, those with trauma to the nervous system, those with depression or bipolar mood disorder. anxiety disorders, and those suffering overwhelming stress.
Uniquely, Flotation REST provides an effortless introduction to deep mental and physical relaxation. The majority of our chronic illness patients suffered from autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, scleroderma, and Reiters syndrome. For these patients, discovering relaxation meant a dramatic reduction in symptoms, such as joint pain, headache, fatigue and depression. Several patients with lupus reported that regular flotation permitted them to reduce their dosage of prednisone while experiencing less frequency and severity of symptoms. Two patients with scleroderma reported relief from flotation. One reported relief from pain and stiffness that lasted almost a week after her third flotation session. As this patient continued she also experienced relief from her depression about the illness, a dramatic reduction in her use of steroids and other medications, a reduction in joint pain and swelling, and less frequent heartburn and headaches. After a three month course of treatment with flotation and counseling she was able to return to her job.
Flotation REST and Depression
When depression is in reaction to the circumstances of a physical injury or illness, Flotation REST can produce an immediate elevation in mood, probably due to the mood enhancing effects of deep relaxation as well as the optimism that occurs with the experience of physical relief. When depression is the primary diagnosis, flotation is best used as an adjunct to counseling and then only after the patient has gained a modicum of feeling in control. Caution is necessary in administering REST with depressed patients due to the often obsessive nature of negative thinking that will continue during the REST session. Once these patients have developed a better understanding of their disorder, flotation REST can be a mood elevator that speeds the course of therapy, especially when combined with positive guided imagery during the sessions.
REST and Applied Psychophysiology
The REST environment can be viewed, from a biofeedback perspective, as a system that enhances the connection between consciousness and physiology by reducing external information rather than amplifying internal information. We describe biofeedback as a process of amplifying and displaying information about processes that we normally do not attend to or are unable to discriminate from the wealth of informational noise always present. REST reduces environmental noise, and in a flotation environment one is able to be aware of all sorts of physiological information, (i.e. muscle tension, heart rate, etc.) that we are often not aware of in normal quiet environments.
REST is an ideal environment for the acquisition of biofeedback based learning. Many years ago Lloyd and Shurley published a paper demonstrating its effect on the acquisition of single motor unit control. Acquisition of single motor unit control was superior in the REST chamber (Lloyd & Shurley, 1976). Our investigations found the same advantage with heart rate control. Similarly Dry-REST environments might be exceptional environments for neurofeedback training. While we have learned much about REST in the last twenty years, its potential in applied psychophysiology has barely been exploited. In this age of cyberspeak, we might begin to think of expanding the clinical bandwidth of applied psychophysiology by taking another look at REST. References
Fine, T.H., & Turner, J.W., Jr. (1983). The Use of Restricted Environmental Stimulation Therapy (REST) in the Treatment of Essential Hypertension, First International Conference on REST and Self-Regulation, 136-143.
Fine, T.H. & Turner, J.W., Jr. (1985). Rest-assisted relaxation and chronic pain. Health and Clinical Psychology, 4, 511-518.
Goldstein, D.D. & Jessen, W.E. (1987). Flotation Effect on Premenstrual Syndrome. Restricted Environmenntal Stimulation: Research and Commentary, 260-273.
Lilly, J.C. (1977). The deep self. New York: Simon & Schuster.
McGrady, A.V. Turner, J.W. Jr. Fine, T.H. & Higgins, J.T. (1987). Effects of biobehaviorally-assisted relaxation training on blood pressure, plasma renin, cortisol, and aldosterone levels in borderline essential hypertension. Clinical Biofeedback & Health, 10(1), 16-25.
Rzewnicki, R. Alistair, B.C. Wallbaum, Steel, H. & Suedfeld, P, (1990). REST for muscle contraction headaches: A comparison of two REST environments combined with progressive muscle relaxation training. Restricted Environmental Stimulation: Research and Commentary, 245-254.
Turner, J.W. Jr. DeLeon, A. Gibson, C. & Fine, T. (1993). Effects of Flotation REST on range of motion, grip strength and pain in rheumatoid arthritics. In A. Barabasz & M, Barabasz (Ed.),Clinical and experimental restricted environmental stimulation (pp. 297- 336). New York: Springer-Verlag.
Turner, J.W. Jr. Fine, T.H. (1983). Effects of relaxation associated with brief restricted environmental stimulation therapy (REST) on plasma cortisol, ACTH, and LH. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 9, 115-126.
Turner, J.W. Jr. & Fine, T.H. (1990a). Hormonal changes associated with restricted environmental stimulation therapy. In P. Suedfeld, J. Turner, & T. Fine (Eds.), Restricted environmental stimulation theoretical and empirical development in flotation REST (pp. 71-92). New York, NY: Springer-Verlag.
Turner, J.W. Jr. & Fine, T.H. (1991). Restricting environmental stimulation influences variability and levels of plasma cortisol. Journal of Applied Physiology, 70(5), 2010-2013.
Turner, J.W. Jr. Fine, T. Ewy, G. Sershon, P. & Frelich, T. (1989). The presence or absence of light during flotation restricted environmental stimulation: Effects on plasma cortisol, blood pressure and mood. Biofeedback and Self-Regulation, 14, 291-300.
Turner, J.W. Jr. Gerard, W. Hyland, J. Neilands, P. & Fine, T.H. (1993). Effects of wet and dry flotation REST on blood pressure and plasma cortisol, In A. Barabasz & M. Barabasz (Ed,),Clinical and experimental restricted environmental stimulation (pp. 239-248). New York: Springer-Verlag.
Author’s address for information:
Thomas H. Fine, M.A.
Department of Psychiatry
Medical College of Ohio
Richard D. Ruppert Health Center
3120 Glendale Ave.
Toledo, OH 43614-5809 [email protected]
Schedule your REST session in combination with any other therapeutic service to maximize results. Hypnosis, Energy Work, Polarity, Massage, Coaching, Meditation, you design your experience.
The reason we began offering floatation was not really the idea of offering spa services but more that it was in alignment with experiencing higher consciousness.
As Polarity Therapists we understand the connection to a deeper knowing, the limitations of the attachment to the physical body through the three principles of motion as taught in Ayurvedic philosophy; rajas, tamas, and sattva. Polarity and floatation therapies go hand in hand, an integration of these therapies is surely a path to enlightenment.
Intelligence
There is a mass mind awakening to higher level of consciousness. Our center is focused on providing the many paths to higher levels of consciousness through energy based therapies; polarity, floatation, also known as deprivation or isolation tank, energy systems clearing and aligning, as well as guided imagery through hypnosis. Anyone on this path of enlightenment to higher levels of consciousness will appreciate the combination of therapies to deepen this experience.
Why it’s important to view this documentary; ” AWAKE The Life of Yogananda.”
In my early 20’s, I was blessed to have a friend who was somewhat older and going through an awakening of her own. We lived quite a distance apart from one another yet kept in contact with the ups and downs of each other’s lives.
Circumstances of having children at an early age, two babies and a full-time job. Many of us know what this is all about, it’s a lot of work. We are talking about the early eighties when marriage was about the woman working outside the home and doing everything inside the home. I am pretty sure this was called the Peter Pan Syndrome. Needless to say, it was exhausting.
Getting back to this friend of mine, Donna. Donna recommended strongly that I read Autobiography of a Yogi, so I did. Reading this book led me to the next thing learning more about meditation through Yoganandas’ teachings. Fortunately for us he started the Self-Realization Fellowship in California years before he passed. I scraped my pennies together at that time, two babies and just starting out money was tight. I ordered the lessons and began to practice the energy exercises and meditation every chance I got. Every nap time and early morning before the babies woke up I would sit in silence. Dedication and practice led to one of the most amazing blissful experiences of my life. One amazing meditation keeps me going back for more.
I have been practicing and studying since. Yes, there are times I had wandered away from the lessons and the practice yet life always returns me to what I know. In 2007 I began to teach meditation and went on to study metaphysical science to earn my degree in Metaphysical Science, not your academic degree, yet it earned me the right to practice as a minister.
My catholic upbringing taught me discipline in prayer meditation is something that resembles prayer. There are two styles that I practice, the first is Kriya Yoga as taught by Paramahansa Yogananda and the other is more the metaphysical way or believing that something is already and holding the universe accountable for manifesting. Both are powerful yet the teachings of Kriya are more in alignment with what I have learned from my studies in Polarity Therapy.
It’s important to realize that Dr. Stone, founder of Polarity, had studied the bible to learn English, traveled to the Orient, studied medicine, and went on to live his life out with his Guru in India. This makes perfect sense when we recognize that Polarity Therapy is a tool to help navigate this human existence by balancing the three principles of motion; Rajas, Tamas, and Sattva. According the the ancient scriptures, these three principles of energies bind us to the physical body, our mission in life is to find our way back to our creator, GOD.
Yogananda a spiritual being living in a human body was self-realized, his work through his humanness was to teach millions of people how to navigate this earth plane with a focus on opening the energy centers. The energy centers, according to ancient scriptures are the very centers in which the spirit comes into the physical body and the place in which the spirit leaves the physical body. It is here that we understand the Guna’s and the elements, the importance of balance, and the impact each has on our navigation here on earth. The documentary will be eye opening, an opportunity to understand deeply the process of life is to witness a being as realized as Yogananda was.
It is with honor that I invite you to share in this documentary with me. I will be viewing this along with you on the 21st of August for the first time and I can’t tell you how exciting it is.
I hope that in my sharing with you a little bit about one of the great beings that came to this planet to educate us that you too can find your peace in knowing.
The foundation of all my work is polarity therapy. It really doesn’t matter what path a client decides to take when they are faced with a challenge in life. Some come in wanting to try hypnosis, another conscious coaching, another enzyme therapy, and sometimes massage therapy.
Polarity Therapy is one modality that stands powerfully on it’s own. Addressing so many challenges from anxiety, depression, back pain, neck pain, structural alignment, sciatic pain, headaches, to empty nest syndrome and life changes such as divorce, grief, to job changes.
For those of you who took the time to respond to the survey, a huge thank you! The percentage of people who responded was great and gives me some great information. The surveys are still coming in, at the moment these are the results.
Cara floating peacefully.
Here is what you had to say:
How interested are you in using the floatation tank for health benefits?
Very Interested 78.4%
Interested 17.0%
Somewhat Interested 1.9%
Not Interested 1.9%
Please rate the following based on importance to you: (This was a scale of 1 least important and 5 most important)
Flexibility of schedule 4.0
Price 4.0
Professional Environment 3.8
Member Options 3.4
Would you float more frequently if there was a yearly membership fee with unlimited float sessions?
You answered:
Definitely Yes 35.4%
Possibly 58.3%
No 6.2%
If you were to purchase a yearly float membership for unlimited floats; how often would you float?
Daily 0%
Weekly 34%
Monthly 46.8%
Bi-weekly 14.8%
Bi-Monthly 17.0%
How likely are you to combine services of polarity, hypnosis, or other bodywork sessions to your float session?
You answered:
Highly Likely 33.3%
Less Likely 64.5%
Additional feedback from you and my answers:
What you are looking for?
No light coming in
Please know that you can request all exterior lights off while floating. There are no windows in the new space which support the darkness.
Shower & bathroom in same room
In the new space you will have the shower in the same room, the bathroom is right next to the tank room.
No chlorine smell
I don’t blame you on this one. We now sanitize the tank with commercial grade hydrogen peroxide. This is safer and better for the everyone.
More than one tank
I hear you on this and appreciate your request. For the past thirteen years of providing floating the number of times people bring a friend still does not justify the expense in doing this. I will keep my eye on it and when timing is right will work to provide the second tank.
Reward for cancelling early
I believe that everyone needs to honor and value the time of other people. The reward for cancelling in advance is that you will not be charged. This also allows another person to schedule that time slot.
Free first float
Sorry on this one. I can’t provide this as I need to pay people to supervise floats and do orientations. The first floats will continue to remain the same full price as they are more time consuming. You may however stop in to see the tank and ask questions, please let me know when you would like to come by and I will meet you.
Discounts for bringing a friend
We currently provide a monthly membership where you can float once a month for the cost of $40. per month, if you choose to share your membership with a friend, they too can float for $40. If you float more than once a month, you still get that same price, your second float in the same month is an additional $40.. This a a monthly auto bill to your credit card when you sign up.
Member Yearly Discounts
There seem to be quite a few floaters who would float weekly or bi-weekly if the yearly membership was available.
*****Yearly Float ONLY Member: Cost $ 650 (If you float 26 times in a year this package will save you $910.) For the committed floater, you cannot beat this deal.
Terms: Must be paid in full, upfront and non-refundable. May bring a friend for an additional $30 for 50 minute float. May upgrade to an 80 minute float for an additional $10.
*****Yearly ALL Services Member: Cost $1200. (This membership provides you with one monthly bodywork session of polarity, massage, hypnosis, unlimited floats, free yoga, qigong, meditation, and 50% off workshops & certification courses.) Your savings will depend on how many services you use and what certification or workshops you attend. If you are highly motivated, the savings is HUGE.
MORE MEMBERSHIP OPTIONS ARE NOW AVAILABLE TO PURCHASE. YOU HAVE THE OPTION OF USING PAYPAL’S NO INTEREST SIX MONTH PAYMENT PLAN IF YOU QUALIFY. Personally, I use it when I make larger purchases, beats credit card interest and I get my product right away.
Just yesterday I received word from the Architectural Access Board that I have their permission to go ahead and put the tank at the new center where everything else is happening. Yeah!
Moving there without the tank has felt like leaving one of your kids at home. Floatation has become such a huge part of the business that having it stay behind in the old location just feels wrong. Now that I have permission to move the tank I face the next challenge. Strategically planning the cost associated with the final phase of the build out. Stretching, imagining, and possible bartering, I am determined to bring the tank home to it’s new location to complete the center.
It’s exciting to bring the tank over to West Boylston! For those of you who are not aware; when I started my polarity practice in 1999 I was across the street from this new location. Something keeps bringing me back to this town, not sure what it is but West Boylston is an awesome little town and central to so many major routes and highways. It makes perfect sense to be there.
As I anticipate the tank up and running in West Boylston I see the need to eventually hire someone who can manage the front of the space as well as support the floaters. This is very exciting time for Crystalline Awaken, it is the next stage of expansion, one that became very necessary in order to get the idea of floating in front of so many more people. I am looking forward to seeing a big expansion with the opening with the floatation tank room. It’s exciting to look at the plans; shower directly in front of the tank, an ideal situation, space for hanging the clothes, towel storage, bathrooms right next to the tank room, it really doesn’t get any better than this.
For the next few weeks I will carefully plan this move out to bring it to completion as quickly as possible. At the present time I am surveying all the current floaters and future floaters to determine which factors are most important to people. As I see it right now, it appears this location will be inviting, hours will be expanded to offer evening appointments during the week. There is a meditation space right outside of the float room for anyone wishing to arrive early or waiting for someone. And there is plenty to do in West Boylston for the person waiting, trails, water, scenery, it’s just a beautiful little town to visit.
From many major highways our location intersects with 140, traveling from Leominster, Lancaster, Princeton, Holden, Marlboro, Northboro, Westboro, Worcester, Boston, Springfield, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, or local residents, it’s an easy and pleasant travel.
I would like to highly encourage floaters to book their appointments in advance, take advantage of the specials that I will be sending out. Check emails, these are how the specials are delivered. I look forward to a waiting list to float, and you should to. Book ahead and pay ahead for the discounts, make sure you get yourself in now.
It’s happening… finally!!!! I hope you are as excited as I am to see this happening later than I anticipated but happening still.
See you soon! Remember that you can always add bodywork to the float session or simply sit in the meditation space and maximize your visit. We offer organic teas, water, and comfort for your wait time. You may want to read a little, we have a shop copy of the Book of Floating for those who want to know more about what they are doing in the tank.
This is the ultimate combination for awakening! I see a lot of people doing one or the other and not mixing it up. The idea when I brought floatation into the business was to support clients to a deeper level who were already in the awakening process. I am surprised at the number of people not taking advantage of the power of this combined therapy.
The difference between floating and polarity therapy is this:
Polarity Therapy is amazingly powerful and effective in moving the blockages of energy that exist in everyone. Floatation as does polarity provides an opportunity to experience a deep relaxed state where the recipient is renewed as a result of each service. Floatation is clearing on many levels as the mind empties of the repetitious thoughts that simply take up space. Polarity supports this process as well through the cranial sacral techniques that are applied in each session. Floatation does not provide this, however it provides letting go of tension. The benefit to Polarity is the energy systems are balanced which deepens the ability to experience deeper connection to our awareness of who we are.
Personally, the combination of the two therapies is simply amazing for the awakening process. Many floaters come for the experience of floating and many utilize the tank as a tool for awakening on a much deeper level. Each experience is different in every session depending upon the individual goals and readiness to the next levels of awareness. I am passionate in providing both of these services to clients and would love to see more people experiencing the combination, at least for the experience.
Breath in and say the number 3, next breath, say the number 2, next breath say the number 1 and close your eyes. Affirm to yourself; “I am calm, I am relaxed, I am in control.”
With your eyes closed, begin to move your eyes from right to left in the shape of the number 8. You are strengthening your 3rd eye, the center of intuition and vision.
Body Movement
Stand with your feet approximately shoulder width apart
Move your hips in the shape of an 8, maintain focus on the ease of the movement of your hips, do not move your whole body, keep the movement limited to your hips.
Focus
Sit with your eyes closed
Using the same method of counting as above and the affirmation “I am calm, I am relaxed, I am in control.” Do this for 3 minutes each day.
Dance
Turn on music that your body resonates with and allow yourself to move, stay fully aware of the movement of each muscle, allow yourself to let go completely. Move easily and effortlessly with the rhythm.
Sound
Using the sound of your own voice, use vowel sounds and feel the vibration, locate where the vibration is, which chakra, what do you notice, how do you feel?