The
Science Behind Reiki
Tamisha Sabrina - UK Reiki Federation
What Happens in a Treatment?
Independent research by Dr. Robert Becker and Dr. John Zimmerman during
the 1980's investigated what happens whilst people practice therapies
like Reiki.
They found that not only do the brain wave patterns of practitioner and
receiver become synchronized in the alpha state, characteristic of deep
relaxation and meditation, but also they pulse in unison with the earth's
magnetic field, known as the Schuman Resonance. During these moments,
the bio-magnetic field of the practitioners' hands is at least 1000 times
greater than normal and not as a result of internal body current.
Toni Bunnell (1997) suggests that the linking of energy fields between
practitioner and earth allows the practitioner to draw on the 'infinite
energy source' or 'universal energy field' via the Schuman Resonance.
Prof. Paul Davies and Dr. John Gribben in The Matter Myth (1991), discuss
the quantum physics view of a 'living universe' in which everything is
connected in a 'living web of interdependence'. All of this supports the
subjective experience of 'oneness' and 'expanded consciousness' related
by those who regularly receive or self-treat with
Reiki.
Zimmerman (1990) in the USA and Seto (1992) in Japan further investigated
the large
pulsating bio-magnetic field that is emitted from the hands of energy
practitioners whilst they work. They discovered that the pulses are in
the same frequencies as brain waves, and sweep up and down from 0.3 –
30 Hz, focusing mostly in 7 - 8 Hz, alpha state.
Independent medical research has shown that this range of frequencies
will stimulate healing in the body, with specific frequencies being suitable
for different tissues.
For example, 2 Hz encourages nerve regeneration,
7 Hz bone growth,
10 Hz ligament mending,
and 15 Hz capillary formation.
Physiotherapy equipment based on these principles has been designed to
aid soft tissue regeneration, and ultra sound technology is commonly used
to clear clogged arteries and disintegrate kidney stones.
In addition, it has been known for many years that placing an electrical
coil around a fracture that refuses to mend will stimulate bone growth
and repair.
Becker explains that 'brain waves' are not confined to the brain but travel
throughout the body via the perineural system, the sheaths of connective
tissue surrounding all nerves. During treatment, these waves begin as
relatively weak pulses in the thalamus of the practitioner's brain and
gather cumulative strength as they flow to the peripheral nerves of the
body including the hands. The same effect is mirrored in the person receiving
treatment, and Becker suggests that it is this system more than any other,
that regulates injury repair and system rebalance.
This highlights one of the special features of Reiki (and similar therapies)
- that both practitioner and client receive the benefits of a treatment,
which makes it very efficient.
It is interesting to note that Dr. Becker carried out his study on worldwide
array of crosscultural subjects, and no matter what their belief systems
or customs, or how opposed to each other their customs were, all tested
the same.
Part of Reiki's growing
popularity is that it does not impose a set of beliefs, and can therefore
be used by people of any background and faith, or none at all. This neutrality
makes it particularly appropriate to a medical or prison setting.
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