K-not,
K-not!
Who’s there?
Ok, it is a set-up for a silly
joke, but the k-nots I see every day in my massage practice have always
fascinated me.
Some seem to have layers, sizzling
through separate muscles, fascias and actions, seeming to head into the center
of the person. Some have hot points like the top of a stove. I swear some have
emotions, usually sad or angry. (I have not seen happy emotions stuck in a
knot, ever.) Cold knots give me the chills. Some knots prompt giggles or
outright laughter. Some knots are “transporters” sending people back in time.
I often see repeat clients, giving
me some opportunities to compare my impressions of the knots with the stories
that emerge with therapeutic time.
These observations are very
empirical, of course, coming from a thumbs-length investigation of knots over
the years. I wonder if other massage therapists have experienced this and have
a different take on these themes.
Thus I propose my k-notastic cannon.
Hot knots:
I associate these with recent injury, such as inflammation in the wake of an
accident or whiplash. The heat seems to emanate from the tissues which have
been overstretched or locked-down.
Cold knots:
These seem to represent really old injuries that have been sitting in the
tissues for a long time, such as whiplashes or other traumas. Sometimes the
cold knots in the hips and lumbar areas are from old back spasms or injuries
that have caused the muscles to have less function or blood flow. Basically these
are “frozen” muscles.
Emotion knots pop up now and then and
give me an impression that comes up through my thumb or olecranon of the
feeling that went with them when they were made. I’m always curious what the
client is feeling, but I have always had a sense that they need to tell me what
they feel without prompting. Usually I feel a negative emotion, such as
frustration or anger. Here and there a giggle or laugh pops up, but these don’t
seem to be actually funny, but nervous.
The “transporter” knot was one I
had heard about occasionally from other therapists but never experienced
personally. I have had clients pop up with spontaneous stories while I am doing
trigger point therapy, but I was never sure about the “transporter” effect.
Then I took
a class in which the instructor showed us a fun way to get to the posterior
scalenes. I was one of the test bodies. At the moment my table partner touched
that spot, I went back in time, not to the events, but to the feelings when I
had been struck by a drunk driver in my brand-new car. My table partner hung in
there while I turned three different shades and went through the time capsule.
I felt all
the anger, disgust and disappointment I felt then.
Yes, all this is pretty k-notty
stuff. These are impressions, of course, not easily explainable to folks
outside the field. On the occasions when I talk with other therapists about
these experiences, it is something we nod about because we know of what we have
felt.
1 comment:
Interesting. I had a similar experience of being transported back in time to a traumatic event from my past when I was on the table during a massage workshop. The experience really brought home the idea of muscle memory to me.
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