T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1484.1 | add'l comments | CGVAX2::PAINTER | Celebrate! | Thu Jun 20 1991 23:16 | 7 |
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It has nothing to do with hypnosis or circumventing the 'born again'
Christian miracle. (;^)
It's a breathing technique.
Cindy
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1484.2 | a possible resource | ATSE::FLAHERTY | A K'in(dred) Spirit | Fri Jun 21 1991 09:52 | 8 |
| Cindy,
I recall Don Reinke mentioning that his brother John (who lives in
the Seattle area) was very involved in *rebirthing* at one time.
You might want to ask him about it.
Ro
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1484.3 | Books to read | GRANPA::SBROOKS | Susan | Fri Jun 21 1991 10:53 | 47 |
| Cindy,
I have read several books on Rebirthing by Sondra Ray. She also
started a program called Loving Relationships Training (LRT), which
continues the Rebirthing process.
Leonard Orr is the gentleman that started the process, and I believe
that he has also written a couple of books too. Bob Mandela? is also
involved, along with his wife in both the Rebirthing and LRT - they
also have written some books.
I need to check on the titles over the weekend, and I will try to post
them for you next week.
I have not had the chance to be "Rebirthed", but it is something I have
on my "to do" list.
I just started reading another book that seems to be similar to
Rebirthing called "BREATHING EXPANDING YOUR POWER & ENERGY" by Michael
Sky.
"This book desribes a breathing practice ("circular breathing") that can
be greatly empowering and that is especially suited for self-healing.
Fifteen years of working with circular breathing - personally and
professionally - has led the author to conclude that for all it's
power, it is an inherently safe practice. Nonetheless, it sometimes
initiatesa process that can be physically and/or emotionally intense
and quite upsetting. Thus, the reader should approach circular
breathing with gentle caution."
published by: Bear & Company, Inc.
ISBN 0-939680-82-3
Michael Sky, author of "Dancing with the Fire", travels widely, leading
workshops in the exploration of breathing, firewalking, bodywork, and
the effective use of ritual.
Susan
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1484.4 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | Thru our bodies we heal the Earth | Fri Jun 21 1991 10:59 | 8 |
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Cindy,
Stan and Christina Grof have developed (I believe) a technique called
'Holotropic Breathwork'. You might find some info about it in their
books (Seven Stars carries them) or you could write to them about it.
Carole
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1484.5 | My experience with it | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Pixillated | Fri Jun 21 1991 12:33 | 62 |
| I did one rebirthing workshop. I re-experienced a recurring incident
from my infancy which was quite formative to my personality. This was
very useful to me; it led me to understand myself much better and to be
more free. I had imposed constraints on myself as an infant, and could
as an adult undo them.
The re-experience is not like dreaming. If you have ever experienced
your inner child, with her emotional needs and her voice, that is more
what it is like. Of course, in re-experiencing infancy, you speak in
your adult voice since you didn't speak as an infant, but the emotions
are the original ones. There is some filtering through the adult mind,
of course, but it would be very hard to tease apart the strands of the
childhood memory and the adult thoughts about it.
It is indeed a very powerful technique which can be very beneficial.
It is also frightening since you relinquish your usual adult self
controls. You reexperience the helplessness, dependency, fears, anger,
pain, etc. of infancy. You also can see decisions you made and later
forgot about, that became part of you, for better or worse.
It is not like hallucinating. You have a sort of dual experience
simultaneously, of the childhood memory which you are reliving, and of
your current self and surroundings.
It is important to do this with someone trustworthy because you are
relying on them to help you through and "bring you back". It is also
important to do this at a time in your life when you can trust yourself
to cope with it. Your companion/therapist is also important in that
he/she can interpret and support further growth.
Their goal is to do this repeatedly until you reexperience your birth,
or "rebirth". Since many births are physically and psychologically
traumatic, this can be very beneficial. It is like peeling an onion,
back through the layers of character formation. I was not comfortable
pursuing it this far.
By the way, as a reality check I went over the details with my mother.
I was amazed that she verified the layout of the room as I described it
(we moved out of that apartment when I was a baby), and the scenario I
described. My parents had never previously told me about either one.
This led me to believe that it was a real memory, and not something I
recreated from stores I was told growing up.
An additional benefit of this process was that I understood my parents
better, could better forgive them, and felt closer to them. It was
like looking through a telescope and seeing the young, frightened,
struggling couple trying to build a life after the war, rather than MY
PARENTS about whom I had lots of upset and judgements. I could have
more sympathy and kindness toward them. I guess that was my adult self
looking out through my infant self's eyes.
I would definitely classify this as a therapy - a strong one - and not
a parlor game or a "feel good" "new-age" technique. Again, in going
into this I would very carefully select the therapist or counsellor.
It is interesting to see how things ripple out over the years, from
generation to generation. My father's war experiences marked him
deeply. My experiences of HIM after the war affected me. If I had not
done the rebirthing, my resultant decisions would have stayed in place,
permanently shaping my personality, and affecting MY children.
Laura
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1484.6 | Appreciated! | CGVAX2::PAINTER | Celebrate! | Sat Jun 22 1991 03:08 | 16 |
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Thanks everybody!
I went through this experience myself a short time ago, and am still
reflecting upon it. It was excellent. When I sort through it all,
I'll try to enter more about my own experience - it is similar to what
Laura wrote in .5. The workshop had 150 people in it, and every person
benefitted a great deal from the experience.
I look forward to checking into the other sources of material.
Circular breathing is the key. Apparently it blocks off the mind
chatter enough to allow the subconscious issues to become conscious,
and subsequently get resolved/integrated. Very powerful, and very
effective. I highly recommend it.
Cindy
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1484.7 | circular breathing? | CSCOA1::CONNER_C | | Sun Jun 23 1991 11:30 | 7 |
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What is circular breathing?
Craig
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1484.8 | def | CGVAX2::PAINTER | Celebrate! | Mon Jun 24 1991 00:14 | 4 |
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It is continuous breathing (inhale, exhale) without any pauses.
Cindy
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1484.9 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | mm-mM-MM!!!! | Mon Jun 24 1991 10:22 | 7 |
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Re: circular breathing
I think that might also be the technique used in holotropic
breathwork. Will have to check that one out.
Carole
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1484.10 | My humble experience | OFFHK::RAYMOND | Jean . MKO2-1/D9 . 264-3193 | Mon Jun 24 1991 11:41 | 29 |
|
Hi again, Cindy!
I was "rebirthed" (by the same yoga teacher I went to Kripalu with!)
and witnessed a few spontaneous rebirthings (one of them mine).
Mine were not particularly deep experiences, but that's par for the
course with me. I did have some insights.
I was interested in the process - the breathing technique. The
circular breathing is exactly as Cindy described - continuous breathing
with NO pause on the exhale. As I was doing it, I realized this is
sort of a controlled hyperventilation - i.e. overoxygenating the blood
without the panic and gasping - the rebirther is there to reassure you
and keep the breathing continuous. It does seem to be a way to
_deliberately_ open the door to the unconscious (or subconscious)
by removing the conscious "blocks" or barricades behind which we hide
the things we don't want to see or be reminded of. What pops out may
be nice or not-so-nice at any given time - I suppose whatever happens
to be at the doorway at the time and how you look at it. (I wonder if the
unconscious is LIFO (last in, first out), FIFO (first in, first out),
or MIFO (MOST in, first out - i.e. what you've repressed the most)???)
And the rebirther is there to facilitate or support as you confront, accept,
acknowledge, or whatever you need to do with what you find.
Anyway, just my experience and thoughts...I appreciated reading the other
replies - thanks!
Jean
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1484.11 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | mm-mM-MM!!!! | Mon Jun 24 1991 12:12 | 6 |
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I would really like to try this circular breathing. I am curious
to see how you *don't* start to hyperventilate (an experience I
have had and one that I don't want to repeat!).
Carole
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1484.12 | Correction to .10 | OFFHK::RAYMOND | Jean . MKO2-1/D9 . 264-3193 | Mon Jun 24 1991 14:34 | 23 |
|
Sorry - my mistake. I somehow had always thought hyperventilation
involved super-oxygenating the blood. I just looked it up and from what
I found I RETRACT my statement in .10 that conjectures that the
circular breathing is like contolled hyperventilation. The dictionary says
for hyperventilation:
"excessive rate and depth of respiration leading to
*abnormal loss of carbon dioxide from the blood*" (asterisks mine)
which is certainly going to change the proportion of CO2 to O2 in the blood,
but not necessarily super-oxygenate it. With the circular breathing, you
breath at a normal rate & depth, but you don't pause at the end of the
exhalation. So you AREN'T hyperventilating. My apologies for not checking
my terms beforehand.
I'm still curious about what does happen physiologically. Whether it is
the extra oxygen that I still imagine is getting into the blood or how
the diaphragm is in constant motion (no "stillpoint" at the end of the
breath) or what that makes those barriers or blocks come "tumbling down"...?
Anybody know?
Jean
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1484.13 | An attempt at an explanation | CGVAX2::PAINTER | Celebrate! | Mon Jun 24 1991 23:41 | 35 |
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My experience was also during my recent trip to Kripalu.
There was a doctor there who had been through the process before, and
assured those who were not quite at ease with the idea, that it was
quite safe. Kripalu is one of those places where if you don't want to
do something, then you don't have to.
I spoke with the doctor later on, and she couldn't really explain *why*
it worked, but she did offer a sort-of explanation based on her own
experience. By breathing in that way, the mind doesn't have a chance
to interrupt the connection between the conscious and the
sub/unconscious, so you can get to the 'feeling' level in the body.
You actually experience the emotions of the unfinished/unresolved
issues, and then the experience is complete/integrated.
[For those interested in techie terms (Joel) (;^), this isn't going to
be exactly letter-perfect, so please, no nits.]
Carole - just as you feel you might hyperventilate, is the point where
I popped into a higher state of awareness and felt this rush of
sensations throughout my body. Parts of my body went into something
called Tetne (not sure if this is the way it's spelled), which is when
you have no conscious/mind control over parts of the body. My hands
contracted and folded over, and resembled the hands of some people who
suffer from one of the diseases where the mind no longer has control over
a portion of the body. The doctor explained that this was what was
happening - when suspending the mind through this kind of breathing,
the body does what it feels like doing. In this state, you become an
observer of your body, within your body, and explore the sensations
(and breathe into them to see what messages you receive). To regulate
the experience - you intensify it by breathing rapidly, and slow it
down by breathing slowly.
Cindy
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1484.14 | Hi 2u2! | CGVAX2::PAINTER | Celebrate! | Mon Jun 24 1991 23:44 | 4 |
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Jean - an interesting experience, wasn't it! (;^)
Cindy
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1484.15 | | TNPUBS::LITTLE | heffalumps and woozles | Wed Jun 26 1991 12:01 | 9 |
| Re: .13
Hi Miss Cindy,
FWIW--the term is spelled tetany. (At least it was back in the Dark Ages
when I took Medic training.) The spontaneous contractions of these
muscles turn manual control into mudra-matic. 8^)
-Art-
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1484.16 | mudra-matic - heehee! | CGVAX2::PAINTER | Celebrate! | Thu Jun 27 1991 19:02 | 4 |
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Thanks Art!
Cindy
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1484.17 | Is this mass-production Primal theray? | FREEBE::TURNER | | Mon Jul 01 1991 17:46 | 9 |
| It sounds too simple! How long do you have to keep it up before
"something' happens?
Kind of reminds me of Janov's Primal Scream therapy. That involved
several weeks of "intensive" for several thousand bucks. The technique
apparently was to scream mommy-mommy until you regressed.
john
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1484.18 | | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Pixillated | Tue Jul 02 1991 11:06 | 17 |
| RE: .17
It takes a few minutes of breathing to get started. It's been a long
time, but I think it was no more than 20 minutes.
I don't know much about Janov's Primal Screen, but I believe there is
some resemblance in the techniques. Did you know one of John Lennon's
songs was based on his expererience with "primaling"? Its the song
with the words "Mother I never left you, but you left me." He even
does a bit of the screaming in the song. I find it very moving.
As for Rebirthing being "mass produced" it depends entirely on the
person who is your companion/guide and their qualifications, along with
your trust in him/her. Regardless of the sponsoring group.
Laura
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1484.19 | Vivation - simple and cheaper than Primal therapy | CGVAX2::PAINTER | Celebrate! | Tue Jul 02 1991 18:28 | 33 |
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Re.17
John,
Yes, it only takes about 10-20 minutes maximum. My partner went first,
so I had the benefit of observing the process. Subsequently, it took
me about 30 inhalations.
The technique was part of the Inner Quest Intensive, which was around
$330.00 for three nights and four days, including everything (meals,
dorm accomodations, etc.). However, I taught the technique to a friend
over the weekend, in 15 minutes, so it isn't something you have to
necessarily pay for. Training on the technique itself only took one
afternoon of the four days.
I just located my Vivation brochure, and the number to call to find
Vivation specialists in your area is 1-800-829-2625. To obtain a copy
of the brochure, send $3.00 to:
Vivation
c/o Linda Jackson
P.O. Box 1065
Stockbridge, MA 01262
Make checks payable to Linda Jackson.
It really is that simple. If I hadn't gone through the experience, I
wouldn't have believed it either. I'm using the technique every night
before going to sleep, and it is working wonders. It's difficult to
describe the experience, because it's different every time.
Cindy
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1484.20 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | CHAOS IS GREAT. | Wed Jul 03 1991 08:11 | 20 |
| Cindy taught me the breathing technique while driving back from a
noter's party. While I haven't experienced all of what she has told me
happened, I have used it and found that not only does it clear my mind
and leave my thinking processes open to anything, it also leaves my
body with a wonderful cleansed feeling internally and my lungs feel
positively air-conditioned by it.
As a person who is not really versed in Yoga techniques, I can only
imagine what happens to anyone who is well practiced in these
disciplines. (If that is the right word) I can vouch that Cindy was
clear headed, really directed in her thoughts, and seemed to be so open
to all Creation and all that it had to offer.
Cindy, if I haven't yet, let me thank you for the technique and thank
you for letting me share just a little of the joy you seemed to be
experiencing that weekend. Oh yeah, Diane Harris says Hi.
Love and light,
PJ
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1484.21 | Tis a gift to be simple | FREEBE::TURNER | | Wed Jul 03 1991 09:57 | 20 |
| Yesterday, I purchased sondra Ray and Leonard Orr's book Rebirthing in
the New Age. I never would have puchased a gee whiz type book like this
if I hadn't become intrigued with the ideas expressed here.
Apparently it is an extremely simple process based on a few basic
principles.
1) Suggestion. They have you do some readings about birth.
2)Protection. The rebirther is to make you feel completely safe.
3)Hyperventilation to break down the defense mechanism.
I suspect that using the technique partially or just to play around
with may result in the modification of the defense mechanisms with the
result that it could become much more difficult to accomplish. birht
trauma apparently is at the foundation of the defense mechanisms so
working through them causes them to not be needed.
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1484.22 | What if there's no trauma? | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Pixillated | Wed Jul 03 1991 14:29 | 34 |
| Have any rebirthers looked into the birth trauma from Caesarean
sections, particularly when the section was planned and went smoothly?
I am wondering because my daughter was born this way. When the uterus
wall was cut, she practically jumped right out. The atmosphere was very
calm in the room. She cried a little while - probably when she was
being wrapped. By the time my husband was holding her (within a few
minutes of her birth), she had her eyes wide open and was staring
intently at everything. He held her for a long time and gave her a
bath. They checked her out in the nursery, but that was quick. I held
her and nursed her not long after she was born. I was too druggy and
tired to hold her long, but my husband held her when I couldn't, and it
wasn't long before we started real nursing.
So her birth didn't seem very traumatic to me, except for a few minutes
while she was wrapped up, and that's pretty mild stuff compared to many
births. Does this mean she won't have a lot of defense mechanisms or
hangups? She's certainly a very happy child who's very open to new
experiences.
My cousin was born this way, also. He is now 28. In spite of having a
rather crazy, domineering Mom, a crazy Dad, and product of a divorce,
he is remarkably healthy. He deals with his parents with a measure of
sarcasm, but has a lot of tenderness and warmth underneath it.
Now I am not advocating C-sections for mental health, but you certainly
could make the case if you follow the logic through. If a natural
birth goes smoothly, and the birth attendants are sensitive to the
baby, then I guess the baby recovers well. But so many births are
difficult in one way or another.
Just a point of curiosity, and taking the logic to its final point.
Laura
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1484.23 | Yes, it is simple | CGVAX2::PAINTER | Celebrate! | Wed Jul 03 1991 18:02 | 11 |
|
Thanks PJ! (;^)
John - I'd be interested in reading of your experience if you choose
to give it a try.
In the Vivation pamphlet, there isn't the focus on your own birth, nor
did we talk about it in the afternoon session. The connection was
mentioned in passing though. Probably a variation on a theme.
Cindy
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1484.24 | | DSSDEV::GRIFFIN | Throw the gnome at it | Mon Jul 22 1991 18:36 | 14 |
| Are the defense mechanisms discussed built only in the birthing
process, or from traumas as you get older as well? In watching my 8
week old, it would seem that he, at times, still considers life a
trauma (he has hit the stage where each night he cries for @15-20
minutes - longer if the day was more "stressfull" for him. This is
hard to listen to without wanting to cry myself, but there is nothing
that will stop his tears of frustration and anger. A day of trying to
do things with a body that can only flail is aggrevating to infants).
The defenses to these emotions as well may have to be broken through???
This sounds like an interesting experience, especially having just
spent a lot of time focusing of the birth event.
Beth
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1484.25 | Do the best you can and chuck the guilt! | KARHU::TURNER | | Tue Jul 23 1991 13:37 | 13 |
| Later traumas are usually added onto the structures started during the
birth process. But don't allow yourself to be traumatized by a crying
child! ;^) Modern psychology has overrated traumas importance. What is
crucial his how people learn to respond to it. In fact, the whole
concept of rebirthing is to confront the traumas and learn to stop
defending against them.
Eight weeks old is a difficult age for the child. His
opportunities for self stimulation are limited as he cannot turn over
or crawl yet. Get a carrier and tote him around as much as you can
stand. YOu must have just started back to work, so the time you have to
spend with him is limited anyway.
john
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1484.26 | Daddy helps him | DSSDEV::GRIFFIN | Throw the gnome at it | Wed Jul 24 1991 11:11 | 12 |
| My husband (Sean) isn't working, so he gets to spend all day with him.
It's my turn when I go home (of course, for the time being, it's just
in time for the evening fussies). But we do carry him around, and
provide him with visual stimulation (last weekend was spent at a live
role play event with dark elves and goblins and such wandering past
him, and last night he and I went for a walk before sunset). He gets
stimulation, but he always wants more (he's been an alert child from
day one).
Thanks (no back to our regularly scheduled topic)
Beth
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