Reprinted with permission from MASSAGE Magazine
Issue #106 (Nov/Dec 2003) pp. 102-107 1.800.533.4263
and Vicki Mechner, Bowen practitioner and instructor, Vienna, Virginia, USA
[Note:
To keep this reprint to a manageable size for viewing, three of the four photographs in the article have been omitted. The photos' captions appear at the end of this page. Complete
reprints are available from the office of the U.S. Bowen Registry; write to
them usbr@bowtech.com for
details. Back issues of the entire magazine issue (#106) are available at
www.massagemag.com]
The Bowen
Technique
by Vicki
Mechner
New from
Australia! The Bowen Technique! My chronic
tennis-elbow pain led me to read on. Not like massage, or
chiropractic or acupressure, the brochure continued, or
neuromuscular re-education or fascia release or any of the
other modalities that had failed to give me even temporary relief.
I was skeptical, but also curious enough to try it.
By the end of my first Bowen
Technique session, my elbow was almost pain-free. What had the practitioner
done?
First, as I lay fully clothed face
down on a massage table, he performed four gentle moves on my lower back and
gluteals. He said my nervous system needed time to incorporate that new
information, made sure that I was comfortable, and left the room. When he
returned, he worked on my legs and back, disappearing again after every few
moves. He did a few moves around my neck as I lay face-up, and many on my
shoulders, elbows, forearms and wrists as I stood. Afterward he taught me a
simple arm exercise to do with my better arm first. He told me to drink lots of
water to flush out the toxins my now-relaxed muscles would continue to release.
He advised me to have a follow-up session a week later and not to have other
hands-on work in between.
The elbow was so much better after
the second session that I didn't need a third. Within a few weeks it was as
good as new. I was amazed by this result - especially because it fulfilled the brochure's
claim that most musculoskeletal problems resolve after two or three weekly
Bowen Technique sessions.
Roots of
the technique
Thomas Ambrose Bowen was born in
Australia on April 18, 1916. An ardent sports fan, he spent countless hours
watching the masseurs at local football games in Geelong, Victoria. He began
massaging footballers' injuries, and then studied informally with Ernie
Saunders, a legendary "manipulator" in a suburb of nearby Melbourne. Bowen
studied anatomy texts and developed his distinctive technique through continual
experimentation, mainly by treating the bad backs of his colleagues at the
factory where he worked.
By the early '50s, his wife, Jessie, had been
hospitalized several times with severe asthma. Bowen developed a soft-tissue
manipulation procedure for it. The combination of this procedure and the
restricted diet he developed kept her asthma under control thereafter. In 1957
he began treating people in the evening at the home of friends Stan and Rene
Horwood. Bowen soon gave up his day job, rented office space, with Rene as his
office manager. He called himself an osteopath, a title that was not regulated
in Australia at that time.
Bowen's uncanny assessment skills enabled him to
address the root cause of patients' problems with very few moves. With an
assistant in each treatment room to get patients ready, he worked at a
prodigious rate. By 1973 he had a very large practice.
As his reputation spread, many health
professionals wanted to learn his technique. Only six did so to his
satisfaction. One soft-tissue therapist, four chiropractors and one osteopath
completed two to three years of weekly individual study with Bowen. After
several weeks or months of following him from room to room and watching him
work, each was allowed to work on patients under Bowen's close supervision.
They incorporated his technique into their own practices. Even after Bowen
considered them ready, they continued to visit him regularly to learn his
latest refinements.
Bowen wouldn't accept payment for treating
children, football players, pregnant women and poor or physically disabled
people. When Bowen lost a leg to diabetes in 1980, three of his students ran
his clinic until he resumed work - at his former pace, although from a
wheelchair.
After Bowen's death in 1982, Kevin Ryan (the
osteopath) kept the clinic running for two months. He and Romney Smeeton (one
of the chiropractors) continued the free Saturdays for the handicapped for
another 12 years. They and chiropractor Keith Davis still practice Bowen's
technique in their busy clinics. Of the other chiropractors, Kevin Neave
retired in 1989, and Nigel Love died in 1999. Oswald Rentsch (the massage
therapist) opened a Bowen Technique clinic with his wife, Elaine, in 1976; they
have taught seminars in their interpretation of the technique since 1986. Ryan
teaches occasional workshops to Bowen practitioners and, since 1998, has taught
a 26-contact-hour Bowen course to osteopathy students
at a university in Melbourne. Rene Horwood, who, in addition to running Bowen's
business, helped him develop some of his procedures, passed away at 93 in
September 2001.
Bowtech
Oswald Rentsch ("Ossie" to all who
know him) undertook the study of massage in 1959 with the goal of easing his
wife Elaine's unremitting pain. A childhood neck injury had damaged her spine
severely, and she fully expected to become an invalid. Fifteen years later,
still searching for relief for Elaine's suffering, Ossie began a weekly
commute - two hours each way - to study with Tom Bowen.
Elaine soon became Bowen's patient.
She recalls her first visit: "When he touched my neck, he said, 'It will take
six months to get this right.' But even after the one treatment, I could feel
energy moving in my neck." Elaine's health gradually returned. She continued
accompanying Ossie to the clinic, where she sometimes assisted Bowen's patients
and observed his treatments. In 1976, with Bowen's advice and blessings, Ossie
and Elaine opened a clinic in Hamilton that was modeled after his.
"At Tom's suggestion, we didn't
advertise," recalls Ossie. "By the end of six months we were booked solid. Many
professionals came to watch us work, and they kept asking us to teach, saying,
'If you don't teach this, Bowen's work will disappear.' Finally, a fellow in
Perth got a group together and we went there to teach."
Through the Bowen Therapy Academy of
Australia, the Rentsches have taught "Bowtech," as they call their
interpretation of Tom Bowen's technique, to more than 15,000 practitioners
throughout the world. They began training instructors in 1994; 70 people now
teach Bowtech in 20 countries and in six languages. Professional certification
in Bowtech requires a minimum of 14 days of instruction and assessment; 100
hours of anatomy and physiology; 20 hours of business training; and current CPR
certification.
How Bowen
works
Several mechanisms have been
postulated as to how the Bowen Technique works. The basic Bowen "move" distorts
a muscle or tendon that is not under load and then rolls over it at a precise
location without sliding on the skin. As a result, the spindle cells and Golgi
tendon organs down-regulate the muscle's resting tension level via the central
nervous system. The surrounding fascia becomes less solid and more fluid,
allowing greater movement of blood and lymph through the tissue, and enhancing
nutrition to and waste removal from the site of injury. The lack of distracting
skin stimulation and the limited number of precise moves focus the nervous
system's attention on the essential points. Pausing at certain crucial times in
a sequence of such moves allows time for the nervous system and fascia to
respond and begin the healing process. The body continues to respond for
several days afterward unless interrupted by injury or strong external stimulation,
including trauma, heat and bodywork.
Integrating
Bowen with massage
"As a massage therapist, I hadn't
heard of Bowen before, so I went to the 10-minute demo at [a] health
conference," recalled Alexia Monroe, who lives in Prescott, Arizona. "That little
demo removed a chronic shoulder pain that I'd had since I was a child - and, as
it turned out, removed it permanently.
"At the time, I had been a licensed
massage therapist for eight years," she continued. "I was dedicated and
popular, with a full-tobursting practice. My clients were satisfied, but I was
not. I saw conditions relieved temporarily. I saw overall well-being develop
gradually in long-term clients who learned healthier habits, but I did not see
the dramatic
healing effects that I now see routinely with Bowen."
After Monroe studied Bowtech, she followed Tom
Bowen's example and set up space for multiple clients right away. "When two or
more clients scheduled appointments together, I gave them each $10 off," she
said. "They became even more excited about Bowen when they saw each other's
results, and they told others, too, which multiplied the promotion. Working on
two or even four Bowen clients at a time requires less hands-on effort than a
single massage."
Bay Area massage therapist and Bowtech
instructor Kevin Minney said he cut 25 percent of the physical strain out of
his practice by suggesting that his weekly massage clients have a Bowen
"tune-up" session once a month.
Says Katharine Hunter, director of Applied
Kinesthetic Studies Massage School in Herndon, Virginia, "[Bowen Technique]
protects the therapist from overuse injuries while providing positive effects
for the client."
Client Donna Mittenthal, of Austin, Texas, said
receiving Bowen Technique sessions had an immediate effect on a problem toe:
"My right big toe was immobile, inflexible, swollen and painful. I got more
relief from my first Bowen session than I had from a year-and-a-half of regular
acupuncture and myofascial release work." She added, "In three more sessions,
[my therapist] worked the whole body, with focus on my toe and right knee. I
have no pain in my toe now, and the knee rarely bothers me."
Julia Kreer, a Bowen Technique client in
Leesburg, Virginia, shares her experience with the technique: “I had a bad limp
and muscle pain due to severe osteoarthritis in my left hip, [and] the bone doc
told me that only a hip replacement would help. My physical therapist did
everything she could and then referred me to [a practitioner] for Bowen.
"At first I thought, 'Something this gentle,
this calming, this alternative won't help much,'" she recalled. "But after the
second visit, I noticed a lessening of the severe muscle pains in my leg, and
my limp improved. I get occasional arthritic pains now, but no more muscle
pains."
Massage therapists generally find that clients
seeking pain relief are more willing to try Bowen Technique than are clients
seeking relaxation massage. It is not uncommon to develop separate clienteles
for Bowenand massage. Some
practitioners establish a “first Bowen session free” policy or run specials for
particular complaints.
"As students' understanding of the Bowen
Technique deepens," notes Monroe, now a senior Bowtech instructor, "their
sessions become shorter, more focused and more effective."
Vicki Mechner,
N.C.T.M.B., is a registered instructor of the Bowen Therapy Academy of
Australia with a private practice in northern Virginia. She is an advisor to
the Tom Bowen Legacy Trust Fund, an Australian charity that benefits children
with disabilities.
[SIDEBARS ]
Learning the Bowen Technique
I took my first Bowtech seminar in
North Carolina in November 1995. It was a typical class - mostly massage
therapists plus a few physicians and physical therapists. I was the only
non-bodyworker in my class.
All the students vied to be chosen
as the volunteer "demo client" for each procedure that was taught. Lower back
pain and headaches vanished in minutes. Frozen shoulders unfroze, knees stopped
aching, tight hamstrings softened, uneven pelvises leveled out, jaws stopped
clicking and opened freely, unstable ankles stabilized, and hammertoes touched
the floor for the first time in years. The class coordinator told me how, after
her first Bowen session the year before, her post-mastectomy lymphedema had
drained away within two hours - and stayed away for two months.
The seminar included enough practice
and feedback that we all learned the anatomical landmarks and hand positions.
The Bowen instructors I interviewed for this article, who have taught the
technique to more than 1,600 students, observe that massage therapists are
often more comfortable using touch than some of their more medically trained
classmates. Massage therapists have a good head start on developing the
palpation skills that Bowen requires for assessing tissue tension and for
varying the pressure appropriately for infants, trained athletes and the frail.
The rolling motion of the basic
Bowtech move is different from any massage stroke or other manipulation.
Learning it requires the letting go of skills and expectations learned
elsewhere. Also, the muscles may take a day or two to respond to the signals.
"In Bowen classes," notes Sandra
Gustafson, a senior Bowtech instructor from Santa Rosa, California, "massage
therapists often use too much pressure and expect the instant gratification of
feeling the muscles relax under their hands. Accustomed to remaining in
constant contact with the client, they often find it difficult to step away and
disengage themselves during the mandatory delays."
It is obvious that no one can learn
in a few weekends everything that took Tom Bowen's students years of weekly
one-on-one practicum to learn. Bowtech provides a sound foundation upon which
to build. Students acquire competence through practice and attention to detail.
The more they practice, the better their results and the more confidence they
gain in the technique.
- Vicki Mechner
To Learn More ...
For information about Bowtech practitioners,
instructors and/or courses in 30 countries, including the United States and
Canada, visit the official Web site of the Bowen Therapy Academy of Australia
(BTAA) at www.bowtech.com.
Information may also be
obtained from the BTAA’s U.S. Bowen Registry in Prescott, Arizona. Call
1-866-862-6936, or email usbr@bowtech.com, or write to 337 North Rush St.,
Prescott, AZ 86301.
The chapter titled
"Bowen Technique," by Patrik Rousselot, in Mosby's
Clinician's Complete Reference to Complementary & Alternative Medicine,
provides an overview of both the technique and research conducted into it
(Mosby, 2000).
"Accelerated Healing Response" by Dan Amato,
in Advance for Physical Therapists &
PT Assistants (Oct. 22, 2001, pp. 35-37) describes the effects of the Bowen
Technique on post-injury rehabilitation, and discusses several proposed
mechanisms of action.
Hummel, E.F. and Eaton,
B. "Bowen Therapy: An innovative modality that completes our holistic
practice." Townsend Letter for Doctors
& Patients, July 2003, pp. 106-108.
Rowen, R.J. "The gentlest,
most effective pain therapy ever!" Second
Opinion, July 2003, XIII: 7, pp. 1-5.
Stiles, KG. "An
Introduction to Bowtech." Massage Therapy
Journal, Summer 2003, 42:2, pp. 92-104.
[CAPTIONS OF THE PHOTOS IN THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE AND REPRINT]
Tom Bowen,
shown above working on a young client in 1979, provided free bodywork to
children, football players, pregnant women, and poor or physically disabled
people. After Bowen lost a leg to diabetes, he continued his work from a
wheelchair.
Part of
the upper back procedure. Seminar demonstrations and practice are done on bare
skin for instructional purposes even though the work itself is often done
through light, non-restricting clothing.
Part of
the ankle procedure.
Clients
and therapists alike describe the Bowen Technique as gentle and calming; the
technique can be used on infants, as shown here, as well as adults. [Senior
Instructor Sandra Gustafson performing the procedure used for infant colic.]
Bowendirectory.com is not affiliated with any therapeutic or teaching organization. Neither do we specifically endorse the trainings or teaching of any organization. We do not endorse any practitioner. We only provide a directory where Bowen practitioners can be located. You take full responsibility for the practitioner you choose, and or training you participate in. The Bowen Directory can not be held responsible in any way for this historical information.
|