One of the most beneficial
aspects of employing the medium of air with the seriously
ill is the possibility of subtly helping their system regulate
the rhythm of respiration. Breathing always reflects our
state of mind, and certainly all our fears and anxieties.
When we are ill – and especially when we come to the
end of our life - a vicious circle can develop with anxiety
leading to inadequate breathing, and inadequate breathing
increasing anxiety, which in turn affects respiration for
the worse and so on.
Time and again I have found that it is enough to gently accompany
or faithfully mirror a patient’s – often irregular,
and occasionally hardly perceptible - breathing so as to bring
about relief and inner peace.
This can be done very simply by softly pressing an oval
ball on which the person’s legs are comfortably resting:
initially exactly in sync with the breathing rhythm. It’s
important to explore which pattern works best: Pushing with
the person’s out-breath and letting go with the in-breath,
or vice versa. Once the individual’s nervous system
is beginning to respond, one can begin to play with variations
and thereby gently guide the system into finding greater
calm and ease which will immediately be reflected in the
quality of respiration. Here is just one example.
First I was in pain and then the pain had vanished
There was a time when I worked with several cancer patients.
All were undergoing chemotherapy, all were feeling scared
and uncertain about the future; and that was invariably reflected
in the quality of their breathing. Dominique, for instance,
felt thrown back into her childhood asthma after an extensive
abdominal operation and especially during the onslaught of
chemotherapy. We found that the best time for working together
was during treatment-free periods when no poison was seeping
into her body from an implant under the left clavicle, making
her feel very, very ill. The most comfortable position for
her was lying on her back with the legs supported by a big
EGG ball.
This is what Dominique said one day about long-standing protective
patterns and the impact of feeling herself coaxed out of
such alienation:
“I have no peace. Maybe I am running away. It’s
quite typical that I try to escape at certain moments. That
was one of my main problems – especially at school
and later at university. Whenever I was supposed to concentrate
I just switched off. My parents used to say: ‘Dominique
is always on the moon.’...
“What I liked best about our work together was the gentleness – that
did me a lot of good. Also that you really took time and that
we hardly talked at all so that I lost all sense of time. I
managed occasionally to sink into my body. It was so nice for
my belly, all the movements were so round and soft. I found
it really amazing that there was hardly any resistance. Even
now I can still remember the wonderful feeling in my legs.
I can also remember that on one occasion I had a lot of pain
in my abdomen. It rumbled like crazy and hurt incredibly much,
but after the session all that had stopped. First I was in
pain and then the pain had vanished”.
Thanks to those movements I sometimes succeed quite easily
in breathing freely
“Sometimes I felt lost; I seemed to forget to breathe
altogether. I don’t know why. It’s to do with
my head. It gets blocked or something like that, really stupid!
Whenever I notice that I am not breathing any more, I think
I will never get it right again. Sometimes that happens to
me at night or in hospital. Suddenly I notice that and get
frightened so that I begin to breathe as if I suffered from
asthma. At such moments I feel totally helpless; and the
more I tell myself: ‘1,2,3, now breathe in! Don’t
be so stupid!’, the less I feel able to get it going
again. Trying to work it out in my head just leads to utter
confusion. But with your help, thanks to those movements,
I sometimes succeed quite easily”
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