SET TALK
By Don McCann, MA, LMT, LMHC
MA3267 MH705 MM3717
BREATHING and SOFT TISSUE
Just moments ago I overheard a phone conversation where a
mother was talking to a daughter who was stressed out and not feeling well. The
advice she gave her was "just breathe, relax and things will be
better." This is the simplest and best advice that the mother could give
her daughter on this occasion.
Breathing is the charge and discharge of our life energy.
Whether you believe energy is breathed in like the yoga concept of Prana, or
that energy is from the burning of fuel in our bodies, breathing is an absolute
necessity. We all seem to agree that the exhalation releases used up gasses and
waste products from the energetic process of the body, and inhalation fills the
body with oxygen and renewed energy.
As massage therapists we work with our clients’ breathing
all the time. We all know how difficult it is to do a massage when a client is
not breathing and relaxing. However, since we communicate both verbally and
non-verbally with our clients, we need to be conscious of our own breathing as
well – if we stop breathing, often our clients will not breathe either.
Some of our clients will have difficulty being able to
maintain steady relaxed breathing. This is indicative of any number of potential
problems. Beyond our non-verbal communications to our clients about breathing,
we need to be sure that we have the tools to assist the expansion of their
breathing process when we observe shortened or restrictive breathing.
Let us first examine some of the problems associated with our
client’s restricted breathing. Clients who are under crisis stresses in their
lives, whether they be from job, family, relationship, illness, loss, or even
natural disasters, will tighten up the musculature of the chest and abdomen and
restrict their breathing. In cases like these, just encouraging them to breathe
or become aware of their limited breathing is usually not very effective, and
consequently, the stress does not release and discharge from their bodies. When
this happens they can’t relax even under normal situations. Often they will
experience spasming in the muscles of the chest which can be misunderstood as a
heart attack, and sometimes they can actually precipitate a heart attack. These
clients need help in releasing this build up of physical stress, and a massage
therapist who understands the breath mechanism with the contractions in the soft
tissue involved is probably the best professional for them to see.
Surgery, especially those that cut into the tissue and bone
in the thoracic region, often result in a tightening and restriction of the
breathing process that can go on for years. When either the abdomen or thoracic
area is surgically cut, the fascia and scar tissue become adhered and tightened
creating a splinting in the area to reduce movement of the damaged tissues
during the healing process. After the healing has taken place, the tightened
fascia with its adhesions and scar tissue in the soft tissue now acts like a
band continuing to restrict the breathing process even though here is no longer
a need for splinting. Patients who undergo open heart surgery often experience
an extended period of time of feeling a marked decrease in their life force and
energy. Many doctors say this is normal for open heart surgery patients.
However, my focus with these clients is to open the breathing process, and in a
very short period of time they report feeling re-energized with a sense of
vitality and even exuberance returning in their lives. This is in sharp contrast
to the ongoing limitations experienced by those who do not have this soft tissue
treatment.
Injuries to the ribs often receive minimal medical attention
even though they are quite painful and sometimes have long lasting effects. Rib
injuries, breaks, or sprains can cause considerable pain over a fairly extensive
period of time. If you have ever had a client with a broken rib, you are aware
that they can have difficulty lying a certain position or moving their whole
body and torso in certain movements even a year after the injury. Provided the
rib doesn’t puncture the body cavity, the normal medical treatment is usually
just immobilizing the area to restrict movement. Unfortunately, this also
immobilizes and restricts the breathing process. The body will splint and
eventually the fascia will adhere and shorten so that movement becomes nearly
impossible past a certain point. This point of restriction is usually far short
of deep, free, easy breathing. The other complication with rib injuries is that
they are allowed to heal in whatever distortion the break has created without
being set or straightened. This is often true with a rib sprain where a rib can
be pulled dramatically out of place and never be brought back into its normal
alignment. Often just the misalignment after a break or sprain will also add to
a continued restriction of the breathing process.
Clients will also see massage therapists for a number of pain
producing conditions in the thoracic region. These include thoracic outlet
syndrome, costochondritis, muscle pulls and strains, and in chiropractic terms
ribs and rib heads being out of alignment. These all produce pain and involve
the ribs, the vertebrae and/or the sternum. They also make breathing deeply a
painful process resulting in restricted breathing for our clients. In addition,
they also often produce nerve entrapments creating additional pain, restriction,
and immobility. Again, they have come to massage therapy for relief, and it is
our challenge to be able to assist them in their recovery.
It is impossible for me not to include some of the
psychological aspects of breathing when discussing the breathing process for
clients. If you observe a person who is depressed you will note they will do
very little breathing, and are very restrictive in their breathing process to
the point that both shoulders are internally rotated and the chest is
compressed. One of the aspects of depression is lack of energy. The physical
manifestation of depression is restricted breathing which makes recovery and
transition to normalcy extremely difficult. There are no pills that open the
breathing process.
Anxiety attacks usually have some form of hyperventilation
associated with them. You would think that when someone is hyperventilating the
breathing process is open and full. However, if you observe someone who has
anxiety attacks you will note that when they are not hyperventilating they are
extremely restricted in their breathing, partially from fear of hyperventilating
and partially from the stress that builds up and triggers the anxiety attacks.
When observing the physical manifestation of anxiety in the body we see
contraction in the soft tissue that contains energy and restricts breathing.
Many clients who have had anxiety problems show marked and almost immediate
relief when the tension that restricts the breathing process is released. Pills
that suppress the anxiety do little if anything to open and normalize the
breathing process.
Loss and mourning are something every healthy person will
have to deal with. These emotions are often intense, overwhelming, and scary.
Unfortunately, we live in a culture that gives people very little time to mourn.
Usually, after two to three days everybody is pushing them to get back into
their normal life routines forcing them to bury these intense emotions during
the time when they are normally still in shock. People who are experiencing
these emotions will tighten and restrict their breathing as they try to regain
control over the intensity of the emotions and return to normal function in
their day to day lives. As we all know from experience, if we cut off the
energetic charge of breathing then the energy for emotions and the intensity of
emotions is reduced, and it is easier to keep them at bay or under control. When
these emotions have been held and shut down by restricting the breathing process
over a period of time it becomes more and more difficult to breathe deeply due
to the adhesion of the soft tissue that becomes chronically tightened to hold
back the intensity and expression of these emotions.
Now let’s look at the areas that we need to treat to expand
our clients breathing process using our massage techniques. Those of you who are
familiar with the Three-Step Approach will know how to treat and expand these
tissues while staying within the sensation threshold of your clients. I begin by
treating the muscles associated with the thorax. I have found that working from
the sternum outward produces the best results in facilitating the ability of the
thorax to expand. It is very important to release the pectoralis muscles,
especially when the shoulders are rotated internally, so they are usually the
first muscles I will treat. I follow this with the attachments of the pectoralis
at the sternum and the shoulder along with the fascial connections directly
under the clavicle. I then address the serratus anterior and subscapularis which
will further expand the thoracic area and allow the shoulder to move out of
internal rotation and back into balance. Then I’ll move to the other side and
work in the same sequence.
I will then address the diaphragmatic arch working through
the rectus abdominis and obliques, and release the restrictions and tensions
found in the diaphragm. By working the anterior muscles of the breathing process
first, I am also releasing the body into structural balance. Then, when I apply
normal massage techniques on the posterior muscles paying special attention to
the trapezius, rhomboids, and latissimus dorsi, the client’s ability to
breathe will increase substantially. In future sessions I will work deeper and
more specifically working with adhesions, scar tissue, and shortened fibers that
would not have responded well in the initial treatment.
By taking your time and working in this supportive manner,
you will see almost miraculous changes in the ability of your clients to breathe
and experience their lives. They will be able to relax, have more energy, and be
free of the acute and chronic painful symptoms they have been experiencing. They
will also be in a healthier psychological state of being. Specific psychological
problems will often improve substantially due to the body’s increased ability
to charge and discharge energetically and emotionally.
Keep on breathing and supporting your clients using massage
therapy. I look forward to sharing with you again in the next installment of SET
TALK.
(Publications)
(Contact Us)