Lyanna
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- Aug 19, 2009
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I had a client recently come to me with an injury she had sustained almost a year ago, she did not do anything about it right away, she waited six months.
The way she injured herself was by falling on her right arm, she hit her wrist, rolled over her elbow and her scapula took most of the momentum and pushed it into her back. She has lots of spastic, hypercontracted muscle tissue in her bicep and anterior deltoid, and her shoulder is medially rotated, so her pecs are also hypercontracted and she has very limited ROM in her right shoulder.
I had worked on her once, using lots of positional release and deep specific friction to start releasing her deltoid, and I showed her stretches for her pec MM. Since I had done such deep work with her, I advised her to ice her bicep and deltoid to prevent any soreness or inflammation to the injury site. She said she felt fantastic when we were done and she already had gotten some ROM back.
After that one treatment, she went to try accupuncture, and wanted to get both therapies at the same time and I supported the idea, until I tried to massage her again. I started doing more deep tissue techniques and she pulled her arm away from me and told me that her accupuncturist had said that deep tissue would interfere with her healing, and not to let me do anything more than very light strokes. I asked her if she had been icing her shoulder and she said she had been using hot packs instead, because that was what the accupuncturist had advised her to do, because cold would "keep her energy meridians closed". She also told me she did not feel better after the accupuncture, but she was sure it was working and did not want me to continue her deep tissue therapy.
Can anybody give me some advice on how to work with a client who is also receiving accupuncture? While I believe in energy work and even practice Reiki II, I do not see how I could not help this client with both techniques. Do they contradict each other or is this just a difficult client?
The way she injured herself was by falling on her right arm, she hit her wrist, rolled over her elbow and her scapula took most of the momentum and pushed it into her back. She has lots of spastic, hypercontracted muscle tissue in her bicep and anterior deltoid, and her shoulder is medially rotated, so her pecs are also hypercontracted and she has very limited ROM in her right shoulder.
I had worked on her once, using lots of positional release and deep specific friction to start releasing her deltoid, and I showed her stretches for her pec MM. Since I had done such deep work with her, I advised her to ice her bicep and deltoid to prevent any soreness or inflammation to the injury site. She said she felt fantastic when we were done and she already had gotten some ROM back.
After that one treatment, she went to try accupuncture, and wanted to get both therapies at the same time and I supported the idea, until I tried to massage her again. I started doing more deep tissue techniques and she pulled her arm away from me and told me that her accupuncturist had said that deep tissue would interfere with her healing, and not to let me do anything more than very light strokes. I asked her if she had been icing her shoulder and she said she had been using hot packs instead, because that was what the accupuncturist had advised her to do, because cold would "keep her energy meridians closed". She also told me she did not feel better after the accupuncture, but she was sure it was working and did not want me to continue her deep tissue therapy.
Can anybody give me some advice on how to work with a client who is also receiving accupuncture? While I believe in energy work and even practice Reiki II, I do not see how I could not help this client with both techniques. Do they contradict each other or is this just a difficult client?