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Prison Plans to Offer Reflexology Service

February 18, 2016 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

MARANG, Malaysia: Released convicts can become Reflexologists as a means of livelihood if plans by the Marang Prison here works.

As a first step, the prison authorities plan to provide a designated area in the prison grounds where motorists feeling tired during the long drive to Kuala Terengganu or Kota Baru along the coastal road can stop for a foot reflexology session.

Marang Prison deputy director Supt Muhamad Jusoff Abd Ghani said the reflexology service would start once the Prisons Department director-general gives his blessings.

“This would be a platform for prisoners to continue their livelihood when they complete their sentence,” he said here yesterday.

He said setting up such a service did not require a huge capital and, therefore, the prisoners could straight away depend on their reflexology skills as a source of income.

Ten prisoners are in a pioneer group taking a 12-day course on foot reflexology, conducted by a professional organisation.

Supt Muhamad Jusoff said the 10 men are expected to be released in six to nine months.

He added that the prison’s reflexology service would later be offered at selected public areas, which will be identified with the help of the Terengganu Government.

$3 Million Research Grant Awarded for Reflexology

January 7, 2016 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

LANSING — A Michigan State University researcher wants to know if a natural healing therapy will help women cope with treatment for late-stage breast cancer.

A $3 million National Institutes of Cancer grant will pay for a five-year study of Michigan breast cancer patients treated with reflexology, a massagelike technique that puts pressure on specific points on the soles of the feet or on the hands. The hope is that it will ease stress, depression, anxiety and side effects of treatment.

Gwen Wyatt, a professor of nursing and the principal investigator for the study, said a pilot five years ago of 100 cancer patients at the Western Michigan Cancer Center in Kalamazoo found that reflexology was the most promising among complementary therapies given in addition to conventional treatments.

The pilot also looked at guided imagery, which uses healing images, and reminiscence therapy, where patients recall times they’ve overcome challenges in their lives.

Wyatt stressed that the therapies aren’t being promoted as alternatives to conventional treatment.

“We’re not curing the cancer,” Wyatt said. “We’re really on the human side of it, trying to help them deal with the emotions and hopefully fewer symptoms or decreased severity of symptoms.”
Wyatt said cancer treatment centers are starting to add amenities, such as massage, to give patients something to look forward to rather than just dreading the next round of chemotherapy.

Gary McMullen, vice president of the American Cancer Society, Great Lakes Division, said his group only recommends medical treatments that are scientifically proven. Reflexology is not proven for medical treatment, he said, adding that more research on its ability to enhance quality of life needs to be conducted. “I think it’s worthwhile that these complementary things be looked at and figured out,” he said.

“…There’s a lot of needs, emotional, spiritual, financial, that are left in the wake of a battle with any serious illness,” he said. “How do we get people back on track?”

The pilot study found that women who received reflexology reported they still had symptoms of anxiety, depression and physical side effects from chemotherapy, but they were lessened, Wyatt said.

The theory behind reflexology is that certain areas of the feet correspond to different areas of the body and by stimulating nerves, symptoms are decreased.

Barbara Brower, an Okemos reflexologist with 25 years’ experience, is helping Wyatt with the research and identifying trained reflexologists.

She said reflexology can reduce stress, improve circulation and release toxins that are built up during chemotherapy. The practice is not regulated in Michigan. It cost $50 to $65 for an hour-long session.

She said her profession, once routinely scoffed at by medical practitioners, has become more mainstream in the last decade. “I have physicians that come to me,” she said.

For the first time this fall, an interdisciplinary class offered by the two MSU medical schools and the nursing school gives an overview of the complementary therapies, Wyatt said.
While insurance doesn’t cover reflexology treatment, pretax dollars can be set aside in medical savings accounts, Wyatt said.  For patients in the study, however, the research grant will pay for four sessions each.

Wyatt is recruiting patients from cancer centers around the state including the West Michigan Cancer Center in Kalamazoo, the Great Lakes Cancer Institute’s clinics at the Bay Regional Medical Center in Bay City and the McLaren Regional Medical Center in Flint, and the Lacks Cancer Center at St. Mary’s in Grand Rapids. Other clinics are in Lansing, Traverse City and Detroit.

Baby Boomers and the “Boom” in Reflexology

October 27, 2015 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

Nearly 100 million Boomers desire wellness, aggressively disregarding authority and conformity.

Boomers do not wish to “grow old gracefully” rather they are seeking ways to hold on to their youth through Reflexology and other forms of complementary medicine.

A new study shows that Baby Boomers Look To Alternative Medicine In Record Numbers. Journal of Health and Social Behavior.

Many boomers demand Reflexology and alternative medicine options because of their frustration with the limitations of mainstream medicine. The most telling evidence of Americans’ dissatisfaction with traditional health care is the more than $27 billion they spend annually on alternative and complementary medicine, according to government estimates.

Boomers realize that a lot of prescription medications cause low libido, depression, skin disorders and a host of other unpleasant side effects including major health risks or even death.

Consider the July 26, 2000, issue of JAMA reported that medical and pharmaceutical errors had become the third leading cause of death in America!

Yet another positive sign that change is on the horizon. Seventy-one percent of people over the age of 50 are opting for alternative and complementary medicine. The U.S. population is finally starting to realize that the conventional medical system is a sinking ship.
Dr. J Mercola ~ www.Mercola.com

Pet Reflexology

October 13, 2012 By Lauren Slade 2 Comments

Your cat has cancer because you have contained anger, says Reflexologist Kiannaa Leighland, who claims that pet health problems have nothing to do with the animals, but are actually a result of pent-up emotional problems of the owners.

She says animals strive to relieve human stress, and they internalize human issues, which manifest in pet health ailments. “They aren’t the animals’ issues,” she said. “They get it from us.”

She believes that through her animal version of reflexology, the human exercise of applying pressure to certain areas on the feet and hands to supposedly repair other parts of the body, she can discover not only what is wrong with the animal, but also exactly what is wrong with the human.

For example, if the animal is having lung problems, she says the owner is having self esteem issues. If the animal is suffering from gallbladder problems, the owner is suffering from bitterness. And if the animal has cancer, the owner is holding onto anger. “You absolutely must heal the human if you want the animal to have a nice life,” she said.

A Washington state native, Leighland began practicing human reflexology in 1969 and traveled around the world, attending and teaching at conferences on the practice. Then at home in 1991, she purchased a very ill dog that doctors said they could not help. So she tested her techniques on the dog and claims the dog began getting healthier.

With experimentation, she said she discovered where each pressure area was on the dog’s leg and also on its spine and logged it onto a chart. Then in 2000, she mass produced her chart and has been selling it worldwide. She says her form of therapy works not just on dogs, but on any animal with a similar leg structure, including cats, rabbits and horses. She believes she is the first person to come up with these ideas on pet reflexology.

She now operates her own pet reflexology clinic, sells books and DVDs and travels around the country, teaching seminars.

Seven women attended, sitting on couches around Azzarella’s living room and taking notes. After the teaching session where the women practiced on stuffed animals, a real dog was brought in.

Barefoot and kneeling, Leighland petted the dog to calm it, then ran her hand slowly down its spine until she got to a spot where the dog started fidgeting and licking. At this spot, the dog supposedly feels irritated because it corresponds to the organ it has having problems with.

“Kidneys,” she said, nodding. The wide-eyed women in the room got to their knees on the carpet to get a closer look.

Leighland then lightly rubbed down the dog’s back leg until she found what she said felt like “grit.” The dog fidgeted.
“Definitely kidneys.”

When conducting an individual session, Leighland says she touches the animal, finds the problem, and then immediately asks the owner what is wrong in his or her own life. She says the owner usually gets very angry because they do not want to admit to having issues. Her typical customers are women who supposedly care more about their pets than themselves.

“It’s harder for us to look at what’s going on in our own lives than just accepting what’s physically wrong with our animal,” she said. However, she says by the end of the session, owners thank her.

Critics of pet reflexology say humans cannot transfer their emotions to animals, and animals can become healthier through regular massage, reflexology or not.

Leighland says reflexology improves lymph and blood circulation, disperses pain in tensed muscles, reduces stress and tension, restores proper mobility and flexibility, aids behavioral problems, builds trust and bonding and restores homeostasis.

“Just by touching an animal, you’re helping them,” she said. “You’re pushing energy into their problem areas.”

Massaging their problem areas for a few minutes a day will make the ailment go away in only a few weeks, she says, but the ailment will return if the human does not heal him or herself.

“Working on a single organ doesn’t fix the problem. People must fix their emotions,” she said. “If you stay healthy, your pet will stay healthy.”

Leighland is ending her countrywide tour and returning home to work on her PhD in Metaphysics before traveling to Scotland in November.

Let that anger go. Your veterinarian will thank you.

Source: Lagniappe, Mobile, Alabama, June 2007

You’ve got to hand it to them, they’re good

October 8, 2012 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

BEING a self confessed shopaholic, Bukit Bintang, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia is certainly one of the spots not to be missed but each time I happen to be in the area, eager promoters from the rows of reflexology centres would appear without fail to coax me into trying it out.

Every time they come to ask me if I need foot reflexology, I would shake my head and walk straight into an adjacent shopping centre, all because I thought it was a “thing’’ more suitable for the elderly. Thinking that my friends would all probably laugh their heads off, I thought I would put a foot massage aside until I really needed it. Like if I ever had to play football and sprained my foot, then it would be appropriate to visit and not get laughed at.

It wasn’t until I was asked recently if I had ever tried getting a foot reflexology treatment that I went around asking my colleagues if they had ever tried it. To my surprise, most of them had and they enjoyed it too.

Last weekend, I tagged along with a colleague to get my feet massaged for the first time at Happy Feet Foot Reflexology centre. The dimly lit room accommodated more than 20 reclining chairs and I took a corner seat next to my colleague.

The foot reflexologist assigned to massage my feet then came with warm towels and a tray of foot powder, lotion and oils.

My feet were cleaned with the warm towels before Fung Tow Lan wrapped my right foot with a towel and began spreading lotion on my left foot.

At first, I felt ticklish when the massaging lotion was evenly spread on my foot. He then began rubbing the sole of my foot and when it came to certain points, it was extremely painful and Fung glanced at me and asked, “You have a sweet tooth, right?” I could only nod in agreement as I thought of my fondness for cakes and pastries. But how did he know?

He explained that there were certain formations on the foot soles, which can be felt when he massaged it that indicated the conditions of one’s health.

“We are not doctors but we are like messengers telling our customers which area of their body that they should pay more attention to,” said the 57-year-old.

He advised me on the dangers of diabetes and how I could prevent it at a young age.  The massage went on to my toes which he said I was a person who had enough sleep which he thought was a good sign.

I also did not tell Fung that I was down with flu but he managed to find out that my nose was giving me some problems and that I should take more fruits.

Besides that, Fung, who is a keen student of Chinese herbs, also gave advice on what herbs I could try. For instance, he recommended a cup of warm water with red dates as an excellent source of vitamin C. Fung moved on to the next foot before ending 30mins later. Both my feet were then brushed with powder to prevent them from being too oily.

I realized most of what Fung said was true. Our feet may have more than 70 points with different indications while most of us do not even know that it could actually foretell our health conditions quite accurately.

Fung, who has been in the industry for eight years, said that a session of foot massage was equivalent to an hour of exercise and it is also good for blood circulation.

He also added that it was not only meant for the elderly or athletes but his customers ranged from school-going children as it helps them to de-stress as well. “Children would often come for a foot reflexology especially during the school examination period as it helps them to relax,” laughs Fung.

After the foot massage, Fung said that it is advisable to drink a cup of lukewarm water to detoxify ones body. At least for now, I know that I would be cutting down on my sugar intake for sure.

Source: thestar.com.my 27 February 2007

Endometriosis

September 19, 2012 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

Each month the UCR newsletter discusses a new disease or condition. These items are reproduced here for reference purposes.

Definition: Sometimes tissue from the endometrium (uterine lining) grows in or on other organs in the pelvic cavity. The tissue responds to the woman’s hormonal cycle, bleeding each month.

Possible causes: The cause is unclear, but it has been linked to selenium deficiency, the use of tampons, excess estrogen production, delayed first pregnancy, early puberty and stress.

General Signs & Symptoms: The woman may experience heavy, painful menstruation, pelvic pain or back pain.

Primary Reflexology Target Areas: Complete Reproductive System on both feet

Reflexology Areas of Assistance: Endocrine System and Pelvic Area

Holistic Advice: Normal hormone balance is encouraged with a healthy high-fibre whole-food diet, including essential fatty acids found in evening primrose oil, linseed, and oily fish. As stress appears to contribute to the hormonal imbalances, techniques to induce relaxation, such as breathing exercises can help to cope with pain.

Extracted from “Conditions & Precautions for Reflexologists” manual part of the Universal College of Reflexology’s Therapeutic Reflexology Diploma Program

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