Natural Healing With Reflexology
Natural Healing With Reflexology
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Dedication
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Copyright © Ann Leighton
A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British
Library.
www.austinmacauley.com
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INTRODUCTION
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But it wasn’t only the eastern hemisphere investigating a
connection between health and feet. In Europe a form of reflexology
was practised as early as the fourteenth century. In fact a book about
zone therapy was published in 1582 by Dr A’tatis and Dr Adamus
enlightening readers about its effect on health. Earlier in Florence the
sculptor Benvento Cellini professed to using pressures on his hands
and feet to relieve pain. The word had definitely spread – or maybe
this new revelation was talked about in drinking houses or over dinner
because (without the media we have today) interest kept growing. In
America William Crump (a steward) used a form of remedial pressure
on President Garfield to reduce the extreme agony he suffered before
his death in 1881. Then in London in1893 Sir James Head published a
paper suggesting that stimulation on the soles of feet had an effect on
the bladder. He worked closely with his colleague Sir James
McKenzie to study the reaction of skin stimulation and the effect it
had on different parts of the body.
So in the nineteenth century physicians were still exploring the
findings of the ancient Egyptians, none more than doctor William H.
Fitzgerald who was an ear, nose and throat specialist at the Boston
City Hospital in America. Indeed, it was he who brought a form of
reflexology to the fore in the twentieth century. In 1902 he practised
in Boston for two years but then accepted a post at the London Nose
and Throat Hospital, where he stayed for almost three years. Then he
made an impressive move to Vienna where he assisted two eminent
physicians – Professors Politzer and Chiari. They too specialised in
ear, nose and throat conditions and had both written books on these
problems.
However, during Dr Fitzgerald’s stay in Vienna another
practitioner with theories about zone therapy hit the headlines. His
name was Dr d’Arsonval who practised a form of physiotherapy using
reflexes. And his work caught the attention of Dr W.D. Chesney.
These views were really making headlines and Chesney wrote a book
called Zone Therapy is Scientific. It’s more than a possibility it made
an impact on Dr Fitzgerald; and yet again while he was in London the
papers written by Sir James Head could have influenced him. Perhaps
a combination of both of these things inspired him to look more
closely at zone therapy. And this he did when he returned to the
United States where he became the head of the Nose and Throat
department at St Francis Hospital at Harford, Connecticut where he
relentlessly continued his research, maintaining the concept that
pressure could induce an anaesthetic state that removed pain; and that
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applying pressure on one area could also directly affect another part of
the body.
Anyone studying reflexology today can appreciate that concept.
And for that to be authentic he divided the body into ten longitudinal
channels which he called zones, and that same template is still used
today. However, although pressure, reflexes and zones are an integral
part of reflexology Dr Fitzgerald must be acknowledged as the
linchpin for its formulation, even though his early techniques were
quite extraordinary. At first he worked mainly on hands and attached
various devices to fingers. These consisted of all manner of things
such as elastic bands, clamps and metal objects secured to the middle
and tips of fingers. From this he was able to anaesthetise areas of the
hand, face and jaw. This was the initiation of zone therapy, later to
become reflexology. His research then turned to the feet, using similar
pressures to anaesthetise different parts of the body. But he claimed
that his initial discovery of numbness was an accident in a small
medical procedure using a probe on mucous membrane in the nose,
which gave an anaesthetic result similar to applying cocaine solution.
Certainly interest on this new health technique was spreading. In
1915 Everybody’s Magazine published an article – ‘To stop that
toothache squeeze your toe’ (and incidentally this does work) – but
imagine how controversial it must have been at that time. This article
was written by Dr Edwin Bowers who completely endorsed Dr
Fitzgerald’s theories. In fact in 1917 they wrote a book together
entitled Zone Therapy for Relieving Pain at Home and later wrote a
revised version.
These publications explaining this new ‘science’ were accepted by
some doctors and dentists but did not get the approval of the medical
hierarchy as a whole. Only one physician appeared enthusiastic: a
doctor called Joe Selby Riley, who latterly played an important part in
promoting reflexology.
In spite of many dubious criticisms Fitzgerald maintained his own
conviction that zonal pressure was a decisive step to good health. In
an unexpected drama he gained publicity after meeting a well-known
diva at a dinner party. She told him of her anxiety that suddenly
reaching high notes had become impossible – for a soprano this was
catastrophic. Dr Fitzgerald took her aside, but he did not examine her
throat, instead he inspected her fingers and toes. On the large right toe
he found a callous. He put pressure on this for a few minutes and after
release it became pain-free. Then he suggested she should attempt a
high note: she did, and amazingly elevated her pitch significantly
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higher! What a story. It was highlighted in the press in April 1934.
There is no doubt the callous was above the toenail on the throat
reflex, compressing her vocal cords.
This was reflexology in its embryo form waiting to grow and
develop; something envisaged by the enthusiastic doctor Joe Selby
Riley. His practice was at St Petersberg, Florida where Eunice
Ingham, a physiotherapist, also worked. Together they discussed
Fitzgerald’s theories and Eunice became obsessed.
She immediately began probing feet and carefully mapped the
zones, reflexes, and glands of the body according to anatomy. She
disregarded Fitzgerald’s method of attaching objects to fingers and
toes but instead applied pressure by using her fingers and thumbs.
Soon she succeeded in getting good results from her treatments and
lectured all over the United States. One clinic headed by Dr Charles
Epstein acknowledged reflexology treatments were successful, but
lamented they were too time-consuming to be profitable!
Eunice Ingham devoted forty years of her life to reflexology and
worked until she was eighty. In that time she wrote two books, Stories
The Feet Can Tell and Stories Feet Have Told. She died in 1974, aged
eighty-five. But her legacy still goes on improving health and well-
being. In the 1950s she trained her nephew Dwight C. Byers and
together they formed the International Institute of Reflexology. Her
specialised training became known as the Ingham method of
reflexology, which is what all present-day treatments are based on.
International Institute of Reflexology courses are taught all over the
world; and for many years Dwight Byers attended seminars organised
in the United Kingdom. In his book Better Health with Foot
Reflexology, he says: ‘Reflexology is constantly changing so always
be prepared to accept new ideas and continue further education and
practise’.
What a wise comment that was, because today we have a brilliant
new concept called VRT (vertical reflex therapy) devised by Lynne
Booth. Early in the 1990s Lynne held a clinic at a residential home for
the elderly in Bristol. Many patients were chair-bound which changed
the treatment process since it was not feasible for a patient to be
propped up on a couch in a comfortable position. So Lynne adapted
and knelt, pressing reflexes for wheelchair patients with their feet
resting on the foot rest. This meant she was treating reflexes on the
dorsal (front) of the foot, whereas with the Ingham method reflexes
are treated on the plantar aspect (sole). In the same manner she treated
those who could stand. VRT takes only 3–5 minutes to perform which
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makes it viable for elderly patients. The residents at the home
responded exceptionally well to treatment, with improved mobility
and reduced pain, and some were even able to discard their walking
frames. Therefore VRT was born – almost by diversity because a
reflexologist tried to adapt to facilitate wheelchair patients and this
gave an enormous boost to painful conditions.
This is a marvellous treatment for anyone, and usually precedes
the orthodox reflexology treatment. Perhaps VRT echoes the footsteps
of Dr. Fitzgerald who used a probe and then realised the pressure had
unintentionally caused numbness. This confirmed his belief that
pressure was crucial in zone therapy.
With VRT pressure is felt more acutely due to weight bearing
because the patient is standing. So these treatments feel much stronger
than when a foot is treated on a patient who is lying down, because
then the feet are weightless. Initially VRT was programmed to benefit
skeletal problems such as neck, shoulder, hip, back and knee, but now
Lynne has devised techniques that treat the body as a whole. She also
introduced a synergy technique which involves patient participation to
enhance recovery. It requires the patient to press the significant reflex
on the hand while at the same time the reflexologist presses the
corresponding reflex on the foot. The result is really worthwhile.
VRT workshops are available not only in the UK but also
worldwide. The qualification gives a wider scope for treatment
performance. This was my experience after training with Lynne in
1998. The first client of mine to have VRT had painful hips and
understood she would feel the pressures on her feet more acutely
because she was standing. However when the hip reflex was pressed
she gasped loudly. Very loudly. It clearly demonstrated that future
sessions incorporating VRT would be taboo. But when treatment
ended she asked to re-book, adding she particularly wanted VRT
because her hip already felt better. What a great relief! As she left she
smiled, saying, ‘There’s no gain without pain’. So when another
patient, Jane telephoned to say she’d hurt her back and couldn’t stand
up straight, recommending VRT was crucial. She arrived totally bent
over. What followed was sensational: as the treatment progressed Jane
slowly unfurled – and left walking upright! There is no doubt that
combined treatments of reflexology with VRT are excellent.
This has brought the history of reflexology up to date and
following its progress through the centuries one vital thread emerges:
that all the investigative research was done by eminent physicians.
Knowing how it was structured and developed by a medical fraternity
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