The Flapping of Butterfly Wings
Quantum Physics and Bodywork
By Lonnie Howard, M.A.
Originally
published in Massage
& Bodywork magazine, June/July 2001.
Copyright 2003. Associated Bodywork and Massage Professionals. All rights
reserved.
What do the latest theories in quantum physics have to do with massage and
bodywork? Plenty, according to medical and Ayurvedic herbalist, Kevin Spelman.
Spelman, who teaches Energetic Physiology at the Scherer Institute of Natural
Healing in Santa Fe, N.M., works to help students "burst their paradigms
-- burst the bubble that protects them from the unknown."1 One of the most pervasive paradigms
continuing to influence our thinking is the mechanistic model of classical
physics. Even though many of us have heard of the new physics, and even though
our high-speed information age is based on this new science, we still tend to
view the universe through mechanistic and reductionist eyes and to live our
lives utilizing the old paradigms of cause and effect and separation. It seems
to be a powerful hypnotic spell of consensual reality our culture just can't
shake. Even the concept of mind-body, as useful and revolutionary as it has
been, can almost now be considered an outworn paradigm. In no way does it
reflect the complexity and depth of the quantum theories that open the way for
the recognition of the inexplicable interconnectedness of all things.
Those of us in the bodywork field have a unique opportunity to move beyond the
old paradigms and experience firsthand the interconnectedness of all life each
time we lay hands upon another human being. "Ask yourself -- who would you
want to be touched by? Wouldn't you want to be touched by someone who believes
the make-up of the universe is essentially energy?" That is Spelman's
underlying question to his students, permeating all investigations in his
class.
Spelman wants to encourage students to become aware of their perceptions, to
open their minds so they may begin to see possibilities, techniques and options
they had not thought possible. If one increases awareness, an increase in
options will follow. Spelman does this, in part, through introducing them to
nonlinearity, fractal and chaos theories, as well as some of the newest
information in biophysics, including the seminal work of Dr. James L. Oschman.
Oschman has been researching the human body as an energetic system for more
than 15 years and is the author of Energy Medicine: The Scientific Basis,
and co-author, with his wife Nora, of Readings on the Scientific Basis of
Bodywork, Energetic and Movement Therapies. Also inspiring to Spelman is
the "universal living memory" theory of Dr. Gary Schwartz and Dr.
Linda Russek, scientists and professors of medicine at the University of
Arizona. Schwartz and Russek propose that not only is everything in the
universe alive, eternal and evolving, but also that everything has memory.
Science used to define physiological responses in relation to linear models of
how the universe works. Spelman believes the latest quantum physics theories
offer a more realistic view of the human system and the way we move through
nature. He expresses it poetically when he says, "There is original energy
and it manifests in a pattern that is constantly expressed through nature,
whether a cloud, a microorganism or a mood shift. The body is a web of
continuous and dynamic energy and molecules. There is no place in the body out
of the boundaries of this energetic influence. The mind is as much a part of this
energy-rich web as the body. And just as dropping a pebble into a pond will
ripple throughout the entire pond, a touch, a glance, even a thought can ripple
throughout this interdependent, interconnected web. Equally, the intentions of
a therapist, which give rise to electromagnetic patterns of influence upon his
or her own system, will influence the client."
Energetic models of medicine, such as Ayurvedic and Oriental systems, as well
as polarity therapy and many others, have always recognized and worked with the
flow of energy in its patterns and cycles as it expresses in our physiology and
in the larger electromagnetic field. Current medical research shows that
electromagnetic fields recognize no boundaries and project outward at the speed
of light. Mathematically it can be shown it doesn't stop -- it goes on forever.
Schwartz has applied this to research on the heart's electromagnetic field.
According to Spelman, "We have gone from absolute denial of the existence
of an energy field around the body to indisputable evidence that an
electro-magnetic field exists within and around the body. Current medical
research demonstrates that devices pulsing magnetic fields of specific
frequencies can stimulate the healing process of a variety of tissues. Current
biophysics documents the release from healers' hands of similar frequencies and
intensities."
Two of Spelman's goals are to help students become more energy sensitive, and
to help them realize they are literally changing the electromagnetic field of
the body when they work with a client. Many of us have heard of the Butterfly
Effect, a hypothesis by meteorologist Edward Lorenz in the 1960s, which led to
the development of chaos theory and is now a fundamental principle of quantum
physics. This theory suggests that even a minute action in a remote part of a
system can have a dynamic impact on the entire system. It is most well-known as
the elegant question: Can a butterfly flapping its wings in Brazil eventually
cause a hurricane on the coast of Australia? The answer is yes.
And why is that? It's all about complex communication systems throughout the
entire coherent whole of nature. For our purposes here, the Oschmans relate it
to the body in scientific terms: "One whole-system property is that the
body is highly non-linear. Among other things, a con-sequence of non-linearity
is that a small amount of energy applied at a specific point at a specific time
can give rise to a sudden and dramatic shift…"2 As body-workers, we know intuitively and through practice
that a touch (whether it be light or deep, on or off the body), an intention,
heat or light from the hands or from the heart -- any of these can initiate a
profound change in the person we are privileged to call our client. Who is to
say what ripple-like effects it may have on that person's life and future, and
the lives they, in turn, touch?
Many of us in the bodywork field can easily see how this applies in terms of
energy work when we recognize how molecules vibrate and produce sound, heat and
light that can be utilized in healing. In addition to energetic models of
bodywork, such as Polarity, Reiki and others, we can also see how this applies
when we work more deeply with the tissue in a wide variety of therapeutic
approaches. First we need to look briefly at cell biology, in which scientists
now recognize a cellular matrix or cytoskeleton which is connected within the
cell and across the cell surface to the extra-cellular matrix -- the connective
tissue system -- by trans-membrane linking molecules or integrins. Oschman
says, "As a hands-on therapist…you contact a continuous interconnected
webwork that extends throughout the body."3 This highly sophisticated and interconnected energetic
continuum has been called the tissue-tensegrity matrix, the connective
tissue/cytoskeleton or simply the living matrix, and the essential nutrient for
this living matrix is information.4
One not only affects the soft tissue and structure of the body, one also
affects the electromagnetic field and core belief systems that are the glue
which bind the structure, based on the past experiences and perception. In the
sacred relationship that is forged in a bodywork session, it is essential the
therapist join the client in the present moment, especially since our energy
flow is often representative of the past and reflected in blockages, congestion
or stagnation. Spelman always encourages his students to "embrace the
energy field of the moment. It is a new entity, not yours, not mine -- it's
ours. That is why it is a sacred relationship."
How very subtle and lovely the flapping of a butterfly's wings, and how amazing
that we are beginning to recognize just how intimately we are all connected.
Perhaps bodyworkers can recognize this more readily because the nature of touch
is intimacy. In a deeply relaxing session, the client may suspend the conscious
mind and sink into levels of awareness in which complex intelligence is at work
and myriad possibilities for change may unfold on all levels of the living
matrix system. To be able to work with another human being on such a deep level
is indeed a privilege. According to Spelman, "When you affect energy, you
are affecting the core 'stuff' the universe is made of."
Bodyworkers are in a unique position in their ability to explore this living
matrix and the connection that exists between self and other in the hands-on
context of their daily practice -- a "laboratory" like no other. What
most sensitive bodyworkers recognize though an intuitive and experiential
understanding, science is beginning to confirm. Spelman believes the
recognition of this inter-connectedness and of some of these subtler patterns
and energy flows will bring Western medicine fully into the 21st century. He is
certainly not alone. The Oschmans feel strongly that the bodyworker's practice
is a fertile ground for new discoveries: "Because of your choice of
vocation, you are daily and quietly and deeply immersed in every aspect of the
system we are describing, and it is here that many of your most profound and
thrilling experiences take place. We believe that sometime in the future, our
present age will be regarded as a time of great discovery, with bodyworkers
taking their respected places next to the scientists and researchers and the
explorers of the day. Alongside the physicist's theories of everything and
grand unification theories will go the great organizing discoveries of biology
and bodywork."5
When Albert Einstein was asked what he felt was the most important question of
all time, he replied "Is the universe a safe place?" That question
necessitates an individual investigation into one's own belief system. Bear
Sahlfeld, massage therapist, psychotherapist and also an instructor at Scherer,
always tells her students the world is a safer place because of massage therapy.
We know that to be true. And it will be an even safer place as therapists begin
to believe the universe is essentially energy and, like the flapping of a
butterfly's wings, the most minute touch to a "living matrix" can
have far-reaching and often profound effects.
Clearly a therapist need not know or understand the latest developments in
physics to be effective with his or her clients. But as Spelman suggests, if
one's typical way of perceiving is stretched and challenged, one can open to
many more possibilities and even to miracles. Responding to his own question --
who do you want to be touched by? -- Spelman emphatically states, "I want
to be touched by someone who believes miracles are common occurrences."
And as Einstein reminds us, "There are only two ways to live your life.
One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a
miracle."
Lonnie Howard is a writer and poet living is Santa Fe, N.M. Her background
is in massage and psychology, and she is the director of The Scherer Institute
of Natural Healing. You may contact her at tsi@rt66.com or c/o Scherer
Institute, P.O. Box 5737, Santa Fe, NM 87502-5737.
References
1. All quotations from Kevin Spelman were taken from an interview with
the author in November 2000, Albuquerque, N.M.
2. Oschman, James L. and Oschman, Nora H., "Approaching the Toes
(Theories of Everything)," excerpted from Readings on the Scientific Basis
of Bodywork, Energetic, and Movement Therapies, 2000.
3. Oschman, James, Energy Medicine: The Scientific Basis, (London:
Churchill Livingstone, 2000) 47.
4. Oschman.
5. Oschman and Oschman.
6. Pearsall, Paul, Ph.D., The Heart's Code, ( New York: Broadway, 1998).