How to get started Treating Babies

How to get started Treating Babies

In this free 60 minute webinar, Dr. Jonathan Evans (Osteopath) and Kate White (baby bodyworker) will explain why babies can benefit greatly from gentle manual therapy and how you too can start working in this field and helping babies. It’s very common for babies to have difficulty with feeding and sleeping or to be in discomfort and unsettled. So to have the skills to help is of great value to those babies but also to yourself because you get to work hands on with these incredible little bundles of energy and to experience the magic of helping them through their early life struggles.

In this webinar you will be shown video footage of babies being treated so you can see for yourself what is involved and then know if this is something you’d like to learn. For those that are interested in moving forward with this work Jonathan and Kate will outline the options for learning these skills including a short course that will enable you to get going straight away treating babies.

See more at Getting Started Treating Babies: https://prenatal-and-perinatal-healing-online-learning.teachable.com/p/getting-started-treating-babies

This lecture is part of Prenatal and Perinatal Professional Lectures 2022: https://prenatal-and-perinatal-healing-online-learning.teachable.com/p/prenatal-and-perinatal-professional-lectures-with-experts, a free lectures series

How to Work with Birth Trauma

How to Work with Birth Trauma

This is a 20 mintue excerpt from our Day 2 of the Foundations in Prenatal and Perinatal Dynamics course. It is the introductory course that is a prerequisite to our 6 module course: Integrated Prenatal and Perinatal Dynamics, a course for professionals who work with birthing and postpartum families. The course is mainly experiential and online and in person settings are offered. These lectures contain information on:

Rubric of Skills: Practitioners and Mother-Baby Dyad
Birth Trauma
Infant/Maternal Morbidity and Mortality
Healing Approaches
Autonomic Nervous System and Trauma Healing
Working Especially with the Freeze Response
Understanding the Leading Edge, a Special Trauma Resolution Skill
Listening Lectures from professionals

What is distant craniosacral therapy and how can it heal you remotely?

What is distant craniosacral therapy and how can it heal you remotely?

For many, craniosacral therapy is still a rarefied, face-to-face encounter outside the normal rhythms of the world, a time in which cell phones are turned off, and we’re uninterrupted by an ever-replenishing email inbox or demands from our life obligations. Finding time to seek healing is becoming increasingly difficult. Finding alternative, holistic healing options are even more difficult because a reputable practitioner may not be near where you live.

Many occupations no longer require a clearly defined workplace or a physical presence. Many employees never see their boss in person. Increasingly, surgeons are slicing patients open from hundreds or even thousands of miles away. Why should craniosacral therapy be any different? More and more clinicians today are adapting to meet the demands of the digital world and fit into the schedules and lifestyles of clients no longer willing to follow the traditional pattern of once-a-week sessions in a therapist’s office. In a consumer-driven mental health marketplace, individuals with anxiety disorders want services from the comfort of their homes. For veterans living in rural areas, remote group and individual psychotherapy for trauma offers treatment possibilities that weren’t available even a few years ago. But although telehealth has been around for decades, many clinicians are still unsure about the clinical, ethical, and legal issues that emerge as distance therapy becomes a more accepted practice.

So, let me explain more of the science behind remote healing sessions. Science has long been functioning in the quantum realm, and the world is becoming smaller and smaller through the use of cyberspace. The principles of quantum physics apply to craniosacral therapy in a profound way. This type of therapy is about settling in our nervous systems. A practitioner can “tap” into a client’s energetic field through intention and attunement to the field of energy within them and around them. Slowing the pace in their own nervous system allows them to become attuned to the energy moving all around us.

During a distance session, I have a client either lie down or sit in a comfortable chair so they can settle in their bodies. By slowing the pace in my own body and becoming a neutral field, I can now sense what’s happening in my client’s body. I can feel if they are stressed or in pain, or how a muscle or joint is moving. I can even sense the movement of fluids and the magnetic field this movement creates. By being neutral with myself, the two of us enter a resonant field of energy. It’s called coherence. The client’s body can enter a parasympathetic state and start to reorganize and release the energy it’s using to manage trauma. This freed energy can now integrate back into their whole system, and the person can become more regulated in their nervous system.

Distance sessions can really help mothers and newborn babies, because leaving the home for yet another doctor’s appointment presents a myriad of challenges, especially if baby and mama have already experienced challenges. A client of any age can utilize trauma resolution therapy such as somatic experiencing and inner child healing through distance therapy. I highly recommend giving it a try. Virtual online therapy has opened many doors for me and my husband. We are now able to see some of the best holistic and craniosacral practitioners who live hundreds or even thousands of miles away from us.

The Blueprint in Two Minutes

The Blueprint In Two Minutes” with Ray Castellino and Kate White! What’s the difference between an Imprint and The Blueprint? How can Imprints be both positive and negative experiences? How is The Blueprint a reference point for returning to wellness/wholeness?
Watch the full interview on APPPAH’s YouTube Channel here

Benefits of Infant Massage

Benefits of Infant Massage

Benefits of Infant Massage after a Hospital Birth

Natural Birth is a Sphincter Process

Infant Message is often overlooked as a necessity to encourage growth and development in children. At its premise, massage is about touch—rubbing and manipulation of soft tissues in the body. The baby is massaged by the movement of fluids in the womb and movement of the mother’s organs, muscles, and bones. Every anatomical aspect of a developing child is initiated through stimulation. Neuropsychologist Donald Hebb coined the phrase in 1949, “Neurons that fire together, wire together.” The most intense and crucial somatic stimulation initiates during natural child labor when uterine contractions stimulate the central nervous system and principal organ systems of the fetus. These processes are reduced or eliminated entirely when birth interventions such as Caesarian section, induction, or forceps/vacuum delivery occur. The baby’s autonomic nervous system is not activated or efficiently stimulated after C-section. With an induced birth using the popular drug Pitocin, the uterus contracts more forcefully and often inhibits the natural sphincteral process of “two steps forward, one step back”, mechanics that include both contraction and relaxation of the muscles. The sphincteral process is present in every hemisphere of the body with swallowing, digestion, breathing, and elimination. With birth driven by Pitocin, contractions drastically increase the periods of strain on the baby’s body, while disallowing sufficient periods for recovery or natural turns necessary for baby to navigate the pelvic bowl and pubic bone for exiting. Thus, a baby is massaged out of the womb and any interruptions to this naturally induced massage requires more massage outside of the womb, a message that show be relayed by the American Pediatrics Association to any birthing parent.

Birth Interventions Cause Armoring of the Fascia

Babies who undergo birth interventions, prolonged, or precipitous labors must cope with continuous strain in their connective tissues. The fascia undergoes a process known as “armoring.” Imagine an athlete, like a football player, having to brace their body for impact for hours on end. This tension is stored in the tissues and must be released postpartum through tissue manipulation. The importance of touch for infants was recorded at the turn of the 20th century when infant mortality in American institutions approached 100%. The behavioral scientist, Henry Dwight Chapin, employed statistical procedures to study this phenomenon of social development in infants who were placed in orphanages. He discovered the children under the age of 2 died due to failure to thrive when denied touch and affection (Chapin 1892). Humans are prewired to be able to interpret the touch of others. Studies showed hundreds of participants, between the ages of 18 and 36, were able to communicate 8 distinct emotions via touch—anger, fear, happiness, sadness, disgust, love, gratitude, and sympathy—with accuracy as high as 78% (Herenstein et al 2009). 

Therapeutic touch can be healing, reassuring, supportive, comforting, and in regard to the nervous system, touch can be down-regulating from arousal. The International Infant Massage Association teaches parents and therapists on how to use massage on infants. The benefits for babies can be grouped into four categories: interaction, stimulation, relief, and relaxation. Babies who experience any of these types of massage benefit from:

  • Deeper sleep
  • Improved sleep patterns,
  • More flexibility and relaxed muscle tone
  • Regulation of behavioral states
  • Being calm and better able to self-soothe
  • Reduction in stress hormones
  • Increase in the release of oxytocin

Hospitals are Stressful Environments 

Once you enter a hospital, the clock is on you and when your baby is born. Hospitals are businesses and have incentive to progress labor efficiently and timely. They use forceps, vacuums, Pitocin, fetal monitoring, C-section tactics, all to assist babies and mothers through the birth process. These interventions have consequences for the babies ability to breast crawl, fortify their immune system, bond with their mothers, and ultimately rest and integrate the magnanimous transition they just experienced by exiting intra-uterine life to enter the world. Babies can suffer shoulder dystocia, broken clavicles and trauma that is never seen, fascia and nervous system damage. Symptoms from hidden trauma are subtle at first but lead to significant issues throughout development. Sadly, most medical doctors coming out of residency have ever witnessed a truly natural birth during which a mother is more relaxed, and in the parasympathetic state so they can access the autonomic reflexes built into their bodies to birth babies. Rather, doctors are trained that moms who stall in labor need to be induced. Sphincteral processes like birth are highly responsive to stress; the anxiety moms feel in abdicating agency over the tempo and method of the birth usually results in labor stalls. Women often come into a hospital dilated and regress 2cm or more in the face of hospital stressors, such as lack of privacy, invasive procedures, clinical setting, tempo and pace set by staff, and lack of an enjoyable environment that instills a sense of safety and comfort. When faced with any kind of stress, animals in the wild will stop their own labor and remove themselves from the immediate environment. Modern hospital settings have direct consequences on natural birth intentions. Mainly, this armoring process that infants experience in their fascia and muscles, continues post birth. The majority of infants are separated from their mothers for cleaning and inspection. The accumulation of tension directly impacts their ability to breastfeed. 

Effects of a traumatic birth

As mentioned earlier, the prolonged armoring in utero trains the fascia to take on unnatural tension and shape. The most common known results of this armoring is Torticollis, occipital compression and tongue-tie. Compression in the fascia causes tension in the head, neck, jaw, and negatively impacts breathing, breastfeeding, sleeping, and pooping.

Tongue-tie’s impact on feeding

In modern hospital settings, the baby’s first natural reflex (out of the womb) is to crawl on their mom’s tummy up to the breast where they latch via the rooting reflex. The baby should do this breast crawl with the umbilical cord still intact. (Watch: Baby’s First Crawl.) Mom gets to hold her infant skin-to-skin against her chest, which allows baby to down-regulate from the trauma of birth and mom and baby both release oxytocin, which stimulates the production of breast milk! Research shows that medicines and inductions blunt the baby’s ability to have this experience, which is fundamental to healthy nursing. Often, hospital procedure dictates that even babies who are physically capable are not allowed to make their first crawl and latch.

Tongue-tied babies must face all this, and more. Even when they are allowed to successfully crawl to the breast, the latch may not be comfortable or effective. This abnormal latch may even be painful for the mother, baby, or both. Tension in the body, especially in the head and neck, then limit the baby’s ability to open for wide latch. In addition, the tensions, torsions, and effects of the birth can directly affect cranial nerve function. This, in turn, affects the baby’s innervation and use of muscles associated with breathing and feeding. Restricted fasciae impede normal functionality of the muscles needed to latch and feed, so even if there is no pain, it can be difficult for babies to transfer milk from their mother’s breast.

Insufficient transfers can then disrupt mom’s milk supply, preventing its release and stunting its ability to replenish. Sadly, most mothers are not told this information, and frequently think something is wrong with them when their milk supply does not match their baby’s needs.

Bodywork is imperative for infants born today

Throughout history, childbirth has been viewed as a mysterious, miraculous event beyond the full scope of human reckoning. In times previous to World War II, midwives were women in the community who were employed to “be with” a woman with child. She facilitated the natural birthing process, letting the mother’s body take the lead. Today, we have the benefit of multiple medical disciplines, research and development to produce the most sophisticated body of knowledge on human physiology. With this vast repertoire of knowledge and technology, medicine still has not moved towards a holistic paradigm in managing this incredible complexity. In order to employ more natural tactics, a person has to seek out alternative care on the fringe of societal allowances. The past five decades have shown a resurgence in holistic healthcare. 

Fortunately, this resurgence in holistic care is becoming more evident in our handling of childbirth. As mothers unite across social media platforms to seek answers for their challenges outside of the pediatrician’s office, they are learning of how to care better for their babes. Baby friendly hospital initiatives, Ban the Bag campaigns, Back to Sleep, Midwifery Model of Care, Home Births, Kangaroo Care, Craniosacral therapy, infant massage, chiropractic care, holistic dentists, all combine to ignite the revolution that must take place in our society. Babies are conscious, sentient beings. Their bodies store every experience prior to conception. We lead stressful lives, and our children are reaping the harmful consequences. The current state of affairs of our children’s health illustrates the need for humility to admit that our understanding of pregnancy and birth is inadequate in the medical area, and to serve as the basis for developing a more nuanced, holistic approach.

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Understanding Tongue-Tie: Birth Onwards. (https://kidstowndentist.com/understanding-tongue-tie-birth-onwards/)