This morning I had my cast removed. This was an exciting
moment! After five and a half weeks,
Seeing my bare arm, protected only by dry, flaky skin and
weak, unused muscles, I felt the visceral sense of fear that has nothing to do
with my cognitive understanding that I am safe. The little one in me emerged.
As we drove home from the hospital, we passed a sign, which I read as something
like “Terrors ahead!” I don’t remember what it actually said, but I was
impressed by how the little one feelings in me interpreted what I saw.
As soon as we arrived home, I poured a hot bath with healing
arnica oil and embarked on the dive I had been dreaming of since having broken
my wrist. Ahhh!
My first impulse was to stroke and massage the skin I had
been unable to reach for so long. It felt like touching a newborn baby for the
first time. Like a newborn, the skin was sensitive, not accustomed to this kind
of contact. It needed slow, gentle touch to give it time to integrate and
accommodate to the new interaction. Again, the feeling of vulnerability arose.
Being with that sensation in a mindful way, I became aware
of layers of my early history arising and releasing. The terror related to the
violence of that early time, when being vulnerable was dangerous. Listening to and
reassuring my arm and my inner little one, I could almost feel my nervous system changing, knowing that the brain was rewiring itself with each stroke. Where the amygdala had been screaming “Danger! Danger!” my consistent, accepting awareness enabled the middle prefrontal region to slow down and evaluate the process, integrating other aspects of my history and experience (see Being a Brain-Wise Therapist by Bonnie
Badenoch). Instead of fear, I began to feel gratitude for the opportunity I now
perceived to heal more layers of my history as they were stimulated into action
by my current feeling of getting to know my naked arm.
Shedding
As I touched my arm where the cast had been, the old skin
gathered over five and a half weeks flaked off. I suddenly realized I was
shedding a skin! The cast, itself, was like an old skin, now removed. Beneath
it were revealed layers no longer needed. Like a snake shedding its skin, I,
too, was letting go of my past, preparing for the unknown ahead.
This concept of shedding skin is frequently discussed in
relation to Continuum Movement. Emilie Conrad, founder of Continuum, noted that
true fluidity involves letting go, dying to the past, like shedding a skin.
Where we are holding on, we are more rigid, less flexible and less resilient in
meeting what arises next.
Of course, Continuum is not the only way to shed old skins,
to die and be reborn. Therapies of many types offer this possibility, perhaps
without using the same metaphor. As we bring old issues and memories to
consciousness in a mindful way, our brains reorganize, engendering new neural
pathways, liberating us from unconscious patterns and habits, and enabling us
to more readily engage in what presents in present time.
Being submerged in warm water supported this shedding. I let
the tears and fears flow out as I enjoyed the feeling of support and holding
from the watery womb-like bath.
I had been given exercises to practice to increase the
strength and range of motion of my wrist and
hand, but I was fascinated by how
these exercises occurred spontaneously as soon as I began some Continuum
sounds. While I had been instructed to practice repetitions, I noticed the
Continuum working as it does, in spirals, rather than repetitions. Emilie
Conrad taught that repetition creates density in the tissues, producing a less
flexible and resilient kind of strength. My wrist, as well as my inner little
one, seem to appreciate the more fluid, spiraling path I choose.
With each spiral through my arm, I could feel the tissues
expanding, reaching out to their full capacity. My mind and heart, too,
expanded in the process, holding the pain, the vulnerability and fear, the
little one, the curiosity that had been squelched by fear when I was little,
and the commitment now to embody fully my original potential.
As I write these words, using both hands to type (!!!), my
heart offers the intention and the hope that they will support you, too, in
embracing whatever challenges may present for you as portals to access that
potential. May we live our fullest potential, knowing the fluid potency every
embryo carries, living more completely who we truly are.
(Photo Credit for neuron photo: By Wei-Chung Allen Lee, Hayden Huang, Guoping Feng, Joshua R. Sanes, Emery N. Brown, Peter T. So, Elly Nedivi [CC BY 2.5 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5)], via Wikimedia Commons)
(Photo Credit for neuron photo: By Wei-Chung Allen Lee, Hayden Huang, Guoping Feng, Joshua R. Sanes, Emery N. Brown, Peter T. So, Elly Nedivi [CC BY 2.5 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5)], via Wikimedia Commons)