Massage & Bodywork

MARCH | APRIL 2023

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L i s te n to T h e A B M P Po d c a s t a t a b m p.co m /p o d c a s t s o r w h e reve r yo u a cce s s yo u r favo r i te p o d c a s t s 81 "I think I see where this is going," he said. "I'm trying to think of a way we can shut down the sense of touch, but I can't think of one." "Me either," I said. "You can imagine lying in bed with your eyes closed and earplugs in, but if you feel something crawling up your leg, you are likely to jump out of bed in a heartbeat. So, when you think about it, between vision, hearing, and touch, the brain may regard touch as primary. It is probably due to threat detection. You can see something out there, hear something out there, but if it touches you, the threat is immediate." "Gosh, I never thought of that before. What's the connection between that and the Zen experience after a session?" "Remember the spot I found that was sensitive to my pressure, but it was a place you were unaware of?" "Yep. And you know, at some level it was new, and at another level I had the feeling that it was vaguely familiar, like I had felt that discomfort before, but a long time ago," he said. "It's hard to describe, but it felt old." "Exactly," I said. "It isn't like that muscular area is only sensitive when I press on it; it is always there on some level. It would be like me saying I only look older when there is a mirror involved! Alas, it is the reality that the mirror ref lects back to me. In the same way, your hands are like mirrors, ref lecting your nervous system to itself." "That makes sense," he said. "But how come I am not aware of it?" "Have you ever been in an environment where there is a constant low-level background noise, like a generator or air conditioner? When it shuts off, there is a sense of genuine relief at the quietness, even though you weren't aware of the noise. Your brain assigned the sound to the background because it didn't change and was therefore not a threat—not worth the bandwidth it takes to pay attention to the sound. What if the same is true for all those places in our muscular system that are low-level disturbances? Since they don't really change, TAKEAWAY: The ever-present neural background noise most of us experience but are unaware of can contribute to a continual "threat-like" effect; massage can create a relaxing experience that dials down this noise. the brain quite possibly assigns them to the background because they don't pose an immediate threat." "Yes, but it's not like they are silent," he said. "As you said, they are still actively sending a message, albeit at a low level." "I think that's probably the case. Here's the thing: How many places like that do you think exist in your body? Probably a lot of them. Each one of them is sending a low-level input into your nervous system, and the aggregate total of all those low-level inputs is potentially a very big number. Just like a computer, it must be taking up a significant amount of bandwidth to run that many programs in the background." "I get it," he said. "When each of those muscular inputs is lessened one by one through the work you are doing, the brain has more bandwidth for other things." "Exactly. Little things like thinking, emotional regulation, sensory input from the outside world, connections to other people—you know, stuff like that." "The stuff that really matters," he said. Amen to that. Douglas Nelson is the founder and principal instructor for Precision Neuromuscular Therapy Seminars, president of the 20-therapist clinic BodyWork Associates in Champaign, Illinois, and past president of the Massage Therapy Foundation. His clinic, seminars, and research endeavors explore the science behind this work. Visit pnmt.org or email him at doug@pnmt.org.

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