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ESALEN® MASSAGE

Share the experience and discover the pleasures of giving and receiving ESALEN MASSAGE . . . with the award-winning Esalen Massage Video and DVD. This program, used by over 50 massage schools, offers up-close footage of 19 members of the acclaimed Esalen Massage crew.

Esalen ProductsSpecials What You'll LearnReviews

About Esalen
• Interview with Esalen Massage Crew Director
• Bodywork with a Place in History
• How to Bring the Esalen Approach into Your Practice
• The Esalen Institute




"Esalen is a sacred space where we come not to rework our practical life, but to discover an inner life, to respond to a vocation, to find a calling."
–Joseph Campbell

"If feeling good is a religion, its cathedral is Esalen."
-TIME Magazine

"Esalen has evolved into an institution. It is the Emerald City of massage and bodywork."
-VOGUE Magazine





Since l962, Esalen® has offered an idyllic Big Sur, CA setting and a commitment to the exploration of "human potential", attracting world renowned philosophers, psychologists, artists, musicians and religious thinkers including Buckminster Fuller, Alan Watts, George Harrison, Ravi Shankar, Judy Collins and Joan Baez. Even today, 40 years after its founding, Esalen is still a beacon for the awakening of our "reservoir of untapped capabilities." Now you can bring the Esalen massage experience into your life or bodywork practice with the Esalen Massage Video, the Esalen Massage DVD, the acoustic instrumental CD soundtrack to the Esalen Massage program and additional natural, nurturing products produced by At Peace Media.  

A portion of the proceeds of the sale of every Esalen Massage Video and DVD is donated by At Peace Media LLC to the Esalen Institute. Contributions to Esalen are alsotax-deductible. Are you a massage therapist or bodywork professional? The expenses of attending Esalen, including travel, are deductible for federal income tax purposes as an educational expense if incurred to maintain or improve professional or work skills.

Visit the Esalen website at www.esalen.org and become a Friend of Esalen today.




Photo courtesy of
Esalen Institute archive









Quotes from Esalen Massage Crew Members

The quality of touch in Esalen Massage is one of the foundations on which our work is built. Without that no amount of skill and technique will be as effective as the quality of touch.
-Ellen

When I first started working, I remember being so fascinated and interested in the work. It was really nourishing to me. I remember mostly coming away feeling so energized by the work.
-Dean

What I feel on myself, I try to feel on that person. I try to feel myself on that table. . . what it is that I would need. I try to visualize for myself and do my own healing through that.
-CC

When I give somebody a massage, I don’t always use the same sequence. Even if it’s somebody I’m working with over and over again like my partner. I’ll start in a different place some of the time. It depends on the situation. It depends on where they feel they’re tense.
-Brita

Each massage is going to be entirely unique and different because every person has a different set of circumstances. A different mood, from moment to moment they change. How can you predetermine how to do that? We have to let go and have to trust that our hands are going to be much smarter and intelligent than we are.
-David


An Interview with Peggy Horan
Esalen Massage Crew
Representative, Practitioner and
Teacher at the Esalen Institute,
Big Sur, CA.

Q: What is the origin of Esalen Massage?
P.H. The origin of Esalen Massage is in Swedish massage combined with the influence of early Esalen leaders, Charlotte Selver and Bernie Gunther who taught sensory reawakening.

Q: What is unique about Esalen Massage?
P.H. What sets Esalen Massage apart from other types of massage is the philosophical approach. For the massage  therapist, the work is a meditation, a time to quiet the mind, and attend to his or her intuition, and to be fully  present in the moment with the client. The magnificent setting of Esalen with the hot baths perched on the cliff  above the ocean, and the rhythmic sound of the surf, creates a very special ambiance that enhances this process. The Esalen Massage video was filmed entirely in this spectacular, outdoor setting and it features firsthand interviews and photography of massage work with many of our massage practitioners or therapists.

Q: Lets delve more deeply into the philosophical approach that is central to Esalen Massage and bodywork.
P.H. The most important thing philosophically is the presence of the practitioner and the complete focus on the client and on the session. When we teach, we really encourage people to learn how to clear themselves, clear  their own energy, and to be centered in themselves so that when they go to touch another person they're bringing  a quality of touch that is right. The massage really begins with the practitioner and their ability to be both  centered in their own body and to be present for their client.

Q: What is the most important aspect of the Esalen style?
P.H. The most important aspect style wise or technique wise is not technique at all, but the quality of  the touch. We`re referring to the presence of the practitioner and the ability of this person to tune into the client, to be sensitive, and to pick up messages. Of course, we talk to all clients before we work on them, but  it`s just as important to be able to sense in, and to be present enough to hear the messages that come through  the body.

Q: Peggy, tell us more about what you mean by the quality of touch.
P.H. Here at Esalen, we teach people how to touch. What I mean by that is how to touch with sensitivity and in a non-intrusive and nurturing way. We teach people to enter the energy field of another person with sensitivity  and respect. Its important to move through that energy field gently and with awareness before making physical contact. The first touch is held for a moment before the movement starts.The client begins to relax and trust in the practitioners hands. At this crucial moment, clients will often take a deep breath and begin to relax as their internal voices say, I feel trusting and comfortable. This intuitive connection between the massage therapist and the client is  thus established.

Q: Peggy, that ties in with something you said during the shooting of the Esalen Massage Video about intention being a big piece of the work; do you want to talk about intention too?
P.H. Yes, in the beginning and all through an Esalen massage session we keep intention in the foreground  of our mind. If a person is here for a particular type of healing, we keep that in mind; if a person comes in and  says they're exhausted, they need some rejuvenation, or they need to replenish themselves, we hold that thought  and try to give from the place in ourselves that allows the energy to pass through to and to refill them.

Q: So, massage is a form of nurture at Esalen. Would you say Esalen massage helps to foster a sense of well  being and connectedness?
P.H. Our Esalen massage practitioners do get positive feedback about this. Many clients, particularly those  who may be sad or may be experiencing profound life changes often need a lot of kindness and loving understanding.  We consciously but gently try to ease this heaviness of spirit with the massage. If a person wants a lot of nurturing,  whatever it is that they ask for, we keep that in our thoughts. Even if nothing is specifically requested, the  intention from my point of view is still to maintain a clear channel, so that I can tune into the client and give them whatever is needed.

Q: Some people, unfamiliar with massage, may have the expectation that there is a sort of generic, say, 45 minute massage. What you're conveying is that it is really much more interactive. . .
P.H. Yes, it is an interactive experience and a lot of it is interactive on an energetic level. I mean we  do of course converse and ask our clients, Are you comfortable on the table? Is the pressure all right? But a lot of it is energetic.

Q: Ellen, another Esalen massage therapist, speaks about engaging all the senses and letting the mind relax. In her words, healing takes place in the space created by relaxation. How does this work?
P.H. We work with clients on a physical level, teaching them about breath if they don't know how to do it  effectively. For many people, positive suggestions about how to relax and how to breathe can definitely enhance a healing experience through massage.

Q: So as far as the philosophical approach, the real hallmarks of Esalen Massage are?
P.H. The presence of the practitioner, the quality of touch, and meeting a client where they are. In other  words, were not starting with a predesigned judgment about how we can fix this person or how we can make their  posture better, or how we can fix anything. Were there to work with them and what happens, happens; so its not  a goal oriented session. For example, I wont say, I'm going to completely release the tension in your back and  you're going to feel great. No, nothing like that. We meet the client where they are physically, spiritually, mentally.  We work with people from that point and accept where they are. Were not trying to fix anything, but trying instead  to balance their energy, fill them in a way that they need, and help them to of course, relax. Its not a goal oriented  massage.

Q: That's an important distinguishing feature. You've talked about intention, the quality of touch, the interactive approach. How does Esalen massage incorporate different types of bodywork?
P.H. Although Esalen has its origin in Swedish massage, over the years our massage therapists have studied  all kinds of different massage work, such as Polarity, Traeger work, Reflexology, Acupressure, Shiatsu and many,  many different types of massage. All of us have taken different aspects of other disciplines and incorporated them  into our own style with the result that all of us work in a slightly different way. Each massage therapist puts  their personal imprint into their work, synthesizing their knowledge, experience and personal preferences. My style  is more old school, classical, Esalen massage. Another therapist, C. C., for example, has a most amazing style that's really his own.

Q: What aspects of style do you all share?
P.H. We all share the philosophical approach that we talked about earlier, and we all work slowly, in a rhythmic way using long, flowing strokes to integrate the work and give a feeling of wholeness to the client.

Q: You talked about the origins in the 60s, is there anything else that you'd like to add about the evolution of Esalen massage?
P.H. It has evolved and changed in many ways over the years and Yet his process is ongoing. I think that's  the bottom line, that Esalen massage will continue to evolve and change as long as there are new practitioners  who bring different techniques with them. Philosophically, it hasn't changed a lot over the years but technique  wise, style wise, it has changed.

Q: So the consistent philosophical approach characterizes Esalen Massage, but encourages collaboration and  is open to a continuing evolution of technique?
P.H. It does evolve. We all learn from each other; we watch each other; we pick up moves from each other.

Q: Peggy, you were very involved in putting together the Esalen Massage Video. It must have been challenging  to incorporate all the elements of Esalen Massage into one, 85 minute video. Is the video an introduction to Esalen  Massage, or is it a highlights, how would you ... ?
P.H. How would I describe the video? I would say it is an introduction and a guide for people who have never  experienced Esalen or Esalen Massage. For people who have studied it, it can be used as a teaching tool. It touches  on a lot of the philosophical principles of our work . It gives you an outline of the type of massage that we do  without too much detail.

Q: So it can be of benefit to both beginners and professionals?
P.H. Yes, I have had many professionals comment that they're very, very interested in the video because  they've heard about Esalen Massage. We have professionals, who are interested in our approach attending our massage  training classes all the time here at Esalen. For professionals who haven't been exposed to Esalen Massage, its a wonderful teaching tool.

Q: So what would you say is the most important benefit of the Esalen Massage Video?
P.H. Its spreading the gospel of nurturing touch in a touch deprived world. As C. C. says at the end of  the video, Everybody wants to be touched. There are a lot of people out there who aren't getting touched and aren't  touching. So hopefully, it will help to bring touch back into our culture.

Q: Could we provide suggestions for viewers on how best to use the video? Should they follow it sequentially?  Describe the easiest way for someone to use the video?
P.H. Watch it through from start to finish, and get a sense of what it is. Then set up a table. If you don't  have one, you can work on the floor or a bed, but the floor is difficult because you can't move around. Begin to try to follow along with the practitioner. If the detail work is too much, then begin with the long strokes and  see if you can just get the feeling of the Esalen Massage. Its all about feeling and quality of touch. If you can  begin to sense the rhythm, in the long strokes and begin to feel the flow of the massage, then you can come back  later and pick up the detail work. That would be for the beginner. For a professional, I recommend doing the massage on a partner or colleague, following along with the video right from the beginning.

Q: What does the video offer to massage therapists who have already trained in Esalen Massage?
P.H. We highly recommend the video for students who have experienced massage instruction here at Esalen. Its instructional and it provides a wonderful visual reminder of the movement, the touch and the spectacular physical  beauty of Big Sur. Its great for people who have participated in Esalen bodywork classes because it reinforces  the essence of our massage training.

Q: Tell us about the new Esalen Massage and Bodywork Association (EMBA).
P.H. It is a professional association that we recently started. It's membership will consist of our
graduate  students and teachers. The organization will send out newsletters, referrals and
information on training worldwide. So its set up as a professional association as well as a
governing body for worldwide training.

Q: Will you certify massage practitioners so that they can legitimately claim training in Esalen Massage?
P.H. Esalen, the name, is now trademarked, so anybody practicing Esalen massage will have to back it up with a certificate. The EMBA will also be instrumental in protecting the use of the name and the quality of the  work throughout the world.

Q: Peggy, tell us more about you, and how you got involved with Esalen Massage.
P.H. I had a massage when I first came here in the 60s and loved it, and I wanted to learn to do it. For  me it was one of those very natural things that I felt comfortable with, and wonderful with, right from the beginning.  It organically evolved for me into my work.

Q: Does training in Esalen massage benefit people involved in other healing and health related professions?
P.H. I cannot overemphasize the importance of learning how to touch. Anybody involved in caregiving or health care could benefit. A lot of what I learned in massage translated beautifully into my midwifery practice. My massage training was wonderful preparation in terms of learning how to touch with great sensitivity as well  as patience and the ability to be present with a woman in labor.

Q: How far can we go in talking about the healing aspects of Esalen Massage?
P.H. I think so much has to do with peoples beliefs. Touch heals and either you believe that or you don't. There's all kinds of scientific research in progress that backs this up. At Esalen, we know this; we know touch  heals, we see it happen here every single day. We see people leave a massage session feeling completely different  and rejuvenated. We try to arrest a sense of alienation from ones body or a feeling of dissonance between mind  and body. Our goal is to move the client from dark to light, or from feeling terrible to feeling wonderful. Change happens in a massage; people may want to call it healing. We know it works. We know healing happens. We see it;  we feel it. We believe it.

Q: Do you think its a catalyst to self-awareness?
P.H. Its a catalyst for self-awareness; its a catalyst for change. During the massage, we gently make clients aware  of their holding patterns, and help them to get in touch with their breath and their feelings. A lot of self-discovery  happens during a session. We try to awaken the client on the table to places that are tight, to places where they  may be holding their breath, or to places where they may not be breathing effectively. All of this is reflected  back to the client to help them effect positive change.

Q: Is there research and information available that scientifically backs up the benefits of massage?
P.H. Touch creates a sense of well-being. Look at all the studies that have been done on babies. They die without it. How much more graphic, scientific input does anybody need? The work of Ashley Montague, who wrote a  book called Touching, talks a lot about this. Yes, its sensual and pleasurable and yes it reaches much, much deeper  layers than the skin. Were working with the body, mind and spirit. A lot of our work is intuitively based and therefore difficult to quantify. We do try to quiet our minds while we work so that our intuition can come more into the  foreground.

Q: Peggy, can we discuss the issue of nudity at Esalen? How do the Esalen massage therapists deal with this  in a way to increase the comfort level of their clients?
P.H. We drape during massage. The one thing that makes a difference here at Esalen are the hot springs baths where people usually enjoy a soak prior to their massage. Nudity is a little easier and more natural here as a result. People feel more comfortable with it.

Q: But its not something that everyone conforms to?
P.H. No, not at all. When we teach our students to take Esalen Massage out into the world, wherever their  world may be, we tell them to go very gently and to introduce people to massage in the most non-threatening way  possible. Massage someone's foot or hand. Take massage into your world, heal your friends, go into the hospitals  and touch your loved ones in any way you can. You don't need a table, a sheet or oil to spread love in the world through your hands.

Q: How important to massage is knowledge of anatomy ?
P.H. Well, I think its important. Anatomy can certainly be studied on an ongoing basis for its informative value throughout a massage career. But I don't think that's where we start. I think it is very useful and important  to know anatomy at some point. We spend about 12 -15 hours on anatomy in our training and we always have charts  and skeletons present, but we don't spend a lot of class time lecturing on anatomy. Its something students can  learn on their own. We devote more training time to hands on work.

Q: Peggy, have we missed anything important? Do you have any final comments about the Esalen approach to massage?
P.H. We approach our work with reverence and we believe it is an honor to touch another person deeply in  the way that we do.

Thanks so much, Peggy.

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Esalen Massage:
Bodywork with a Place in History
By Brita Ostrom

It is not the technique of the move that is foreground; it is rather the interplay between the practitioner opening, stretching and rolling, and the client breathing, letting go. "I can't say if it was the touch of the air on my skin, the sound of the ocean waves in my ear, the long sure stroke of the practitioner's hand gliding along my spine, or the sense I had that every move matched my response. Whatever it was, I've never experienced anything like this before." With these words, the lucky recipient stretched, stood up, and gazed over the rail at the sea beyond. "I feel like I'm all connected up again."



Such comments are not surprising at the Esalen Institute, situated in Big Sur, California, midway between San Francisco and Los Angeles, sandwiched between the Santa Lucia mountains, and the Pacific Coastline. The nation's first so-called "growth center" established in 1962, Esalen has many faces: its diverse workshops form an educational springboard to the further reaches of human potential; it is a spiritual retreat where those suffering from burnout seek solace form the trappings of city life; its organic gardens and hot sulfur springs are the heart of a healing spa. This is the home of Esalen massage. It is a massage impossible to separate from its place on the map: a product of the baths and the sea and the expansive vision of the 60's brought up to date.

Some two dozen practitioners work on the baths deck, each one adding his particular stretch to the traditional long, oiled strokes punctuated with deep specific work, passive joint movement and energetic connection. Some have backgrounds in sports massage, others in Oriental medicine. It is not so much a common technique that unites them as much as a common approach. Later they will teach these stretches to their students in the more general "Massage Intensive" workshops, as well as those studying in the 28-day massage certification program.

Although workshops include specific massage moves and sequences, it is more the "glue between the moves" that defines this approach to bodywork. This glue is found in the contact between the practitioner and receiver from the minute their eyes meet; the way the hands respond to the client's signals of contraction and release, pain or relaxation; the attention to the whole person rather than a summary of parts; and a shared observation of the innate capacity for self-healing within.

"Together we tune in and go on a journey. A breath, a dance moving and spiraling, energy softly flowing in, radiating at depth; a breath, stretching out, extending and lifting to receive the next wave; a breath, spiraling open, pulsing and glowing from within," describes practitioner Pamela Espinoza.


Photo courtesy of
Esalen Institute archive

No quick fix
This contact precludes the notion that the practitioner is going to fix the client. Instead, the practitioner enables the client to tune into his or her own database of sensation, emotion and mobility. The practitioner is both facilitator and witness to this process; he or she is neither the agent of change nor the healer. Some might call him an educator. Deane Juhan, former Esalen practitioner, writes in "Job's Body," "Bodywork, then, is a kind of sensorimotor education, rather than a treatment or a procedure... I must enter into an active relationship with him, feel him out...The bodyworker is not attacking a localized problem; he is carefully generating a flow of sensory information to the mind of the client...It is the mind of the client that does the fixing." The practitioner delineates the problem, the client clears it up. In the process the client may discover how much energy was expended to maintain the problem in the first place.

The open-air quality of Esalen massage and the interpersonal contact banish the authoritative stance of the more traditional health practitioner, allowing the client an active role in the session. practitioner may encourage breath, use colorful images to suggest a relaxed state, and bring the client's attention to holding patterns, rather than simply relying on deep muscle work. Again and again within the sessions comes the reminder: the whole body, the whole person, is involved here. Practitioners pay close attention to their own responses as well, noting the feelings of discomfort or peace they experience during a session as part of the feedback loop. Laurie Schutz muses, "I probably go into a meditative trance. I'm aware of the tissue not only in its physical sense but with an emotional texture to it." This openness to many levels of incoming data is the bedrock of Esalen massage.


Carl Chase

Photo courtesy
of Esalen Institute
archive

Detractors have called it a "touchy-feely" massage, devoid of skill on the part of the practitioner, emphasizing the sensual, rather than "real" bodywork. In fact, practitioners are highly trained: anatomy and physiology are a part of every class and Annie the skeleton frequently stands available for hands-on exploration of joint articulation. Esalen massage as practiced today includes passive joint movement, multiple stretches, and rhythmic rocking. Esalen practitioner Carl "C.C." Chase literally rocks, stretches, lifts and rolls clients from face down to face up and back again. As Chase sensitively spirals the client into the stretch, he may move to lengthen it a bit, drawing attention to a specific area. The client becomes aware of a new feeling in a new place, a freshened sense of potential in his or her body, as well as a great deal more freedom throughout his or her whole being. Even in the face of all this activity, it is not the technique of the move that is foreground; it is rather the interplay between the practitioner opening, stretching and rolling, and the client breathing, letting go, sighing deeply at the final half-inch drop to the table that makes the session the success it is.

There is something for everyone in this integral relationship. For former veteran emergency room nurse Sherry Sanders Gallaway, "Massage is a job to help bring someone into their body, to create a space where they can breathe and feel themselves wholly. In that sense, I see Esalen massage as sensual. We strive to be sensual in our work; it is with our senses that we live in the world and are not cut off from those around us." Gallaway feels included in her client's release.

Joe's session
A typical session, in the case of myself as massage therapist, begins when I meet a client, Joe. Joe is a guest at the institute and a new-comer to massage. I am careful to make a clear connection with him at the onset, making some eye contact and noting that his body movement seems somewhat constricted, and that his mood seems open and curious. "What is this thing, Esalen massage?" he seems to be wondering. After I ask if he has any injuries or concerns, he responds, "I'm fine, healthy, a little tight through the shoulders maybe." It is late in the day, so I lead him to one of the massage rooms overlooking the ocean, at this point bathed in the beginning golden hues of a beautiful sunset.

As he lies face down on the table, I carefully drape him with a towel. I open the session with light, two-handed contact mid-back, so I can feel his breath, and through the contact with my hands I can encourage him to do the same. And so he can feel me and respond. For other sessions I might initiate contact at the feet or at the shoulders. I wait until I sense an invitation in his breath or in the micro-movements of his body to begin the long full-bodied strokes, applying a thin film of oil. I intend to bring his awareness into his body, away from his habitual thought mode. The long strokes go deeper and more specific, and my hands begin to define knot-bound muscles and held areas. I follow my co-worker Vicki Topp's maxim: You rarely hurt anyone by working too deep; you can hurt someone by working too fast.

I draw my focus to Joe's left shoulder, dangling his arm off the table and shaking it out to give him a sense of looseness. Since many of Esalen's guests come from abroad, I have learned that this light shaking, accompanied by saying "spaghetti," evokes a universal response. At one point after a particularly deep sigh, Joe comments, "I feel like I haven't breathed in months." I explore his shoulder through movement, using the other hand to probe the knotted tissue, ever deepening my touch as Joe relaxes. When my touch prompts him to release the shoulder, I softly comment, "Good!" and go back to the long flowing strokes, integrating the openness he feels in his shoulder into the rest of his back and hip area. I use these strokes to travel to the next focus of attention. Each area is greeted with strokes growing increasingly deeper, with more specific muscle work and movement.

When I approach Joe's left leg, I observe tightening and stiffness through the gluteal muscles. I stroke softly, noting the slight change, and then discover a bumpiness near the ankle. When I ask about it, Joe says, "that's where I broke may ankle in a ski accident three years ago. I guess I've been holding onto my leg ever since." Knowing this is an old injury helps me identify the holding as primarily attitude-based; I use slow, well-supported movement, increasing the range as he lets go, until I am able to rhythmically rock his entire calf and ankle area.

At the conclusion of each segment of work (the left leg, for example) I pause and place my hands very specifically on the ends of the areas involved, sensing into the energy and drawing it right through the field. Deborah Medow, Esalen's polarity practitioner, suggests, "I use may hands to listen to the energy. I feel with my being a quality - cold, tightness, congestion; there could be more space here. I sense emotional shifts, sometimes with just a knowing." These pauses also give Joe a chance to integrate the shifts he feels in that newly smoothed-out left ankle, and his image of being slightly crippled and old is replaced by a new clarity, such as "Maybe I'll hike the back trail in the part tomorrow."

After Joe rolls over onto his back, I find that much of his holding has found a home in his neck. I lift, roll, work the shoulders, return again, and after Joe finally releases his neck into my cradling hands, he says, "I had no idea I was so unconscious of my body." More strokes, muscle work, stretches and energy balancing follow, until the massage concludes with Joe breathing slow, deep breaths, completely wrapped in a sheet. All that remains of the sunset is a single strip of color in the sky. One hour and twenty minutes have passed. I check with him later to find a much straighter Joe, one with a sparkle in his eye. "Thanks," we say to each other.


Mindful massage
Other Esalen practitioners offer highly specialized bodywork. Peggy Horan uses her skills as a midwife to provide ease and education to pregnant women. She credits massage with teaching her sensitivity to touch and the ability to be fully with someone else. Peggy's hands and easy natural attitude around this important time both educate and ease the overworked muscles of pregnant guests. She encourages women to massage their blossoming bellies and to massage their babies from day one. She finds the attention that bodywork brings to the breath carries over into labor and delivery. Peggy has helped with the births of many babies in the Esalen community, and massage is always a part of this process. In fact, the importance of touch and healthy children is underscored in many aspects of Esalen.

David Streeter's fascination with anatomy led to his sports massage practice, combining the deep release of trigger point, cross friction and deep muscle work with the internal awareness and focus of the original Esalen approach. "Although I know all the actions of the body, my focus is on the person and their specific needs rather than on the tissue," he says.

Streeter finds the long strokes of Esalen massage make the work more effective. His martial arts practice brought his attention to the powerful energies that can be called up for self-defense. He now uses that same energy to heal, to penetrate tissue, rather than break bricks. By projecting ki energy through the fingertips his touch can remain light with deep effect. The key to effectiveness in this work, he believes, is to maintain a daily practice, such as t'ai chi or yoga.

Massage at Esalen is a mindfulness exercise; both giver and receiver are called to full presence and attention. Practitioner Kathleen O'Shaughnessey takes an eclectic stance toward valuing diverse "action" meditations. For her, Shamanic trance and drumming, micro-movement, yoga, t'ai chi, all share the "mind-body absolutely in the moment" phenomenon. She states, "The common denominator is the mind's engagement with an activity of the body now." While giving a massage she becomes involved with the textures she encounters: the planes, the plump places, striations of the tissues, corners. She uses a tiny corner she locates alongside the shoulder blade to demonstrate, and indeed, as she traced and retraced, her client fell deeper and deeper into a relaxed state.

Her next client complains of whiplash. She responds with cranial micromovement supported by wedge-type handholds under the neck to draw attention inward to the involved joint. She offers manual support and then performs tiny, whisper-like movements, providing random motion to the involved area until slowly the movement returns. Kathleen has patience for infirmities; she has battled an apparently auto-immune disorder for the past several years, and her work with massage has helped her heal. "When you're that fragile, spirit can actually come through you," she says. "This certainty of a larger presence has imprinted within me. I can give it through my hands more than before. It feels more than me." Her clients say they've never felt anything like it. Thanks to persistent work and exploration, her health is now returning.

Arthur Munyer sets a similar focus in his work with trigger point massage. He dives beneath his long oiled strokes with punctuating pressure using trigger points to bring him to a feeling of presence and awareness of deep emotions. "It's like swimming and being able to go under water and allow the deep currents to direct me," Munyer said. "It is not about pain," he added. "I don't have to push someone into more pain than they are already feeling." Esalen massage provides a nurturing backdrop so that without force the currents he seeks flow forth, revealing the inner depth. In the beginning...none of us knew.



The origins of Esalen massage lie in the origins of Esalen itself; a willingness to explore fresh ideas from Eastern thought and give them new application in the West. Esalen was founded by Michael Murphy, author of "The Future of the Body," and Richard Price to develop some of these impulses toward inner growth and change within the context of small group seminars in a residential setting which, serendipitously, included a nicely developed sulfur hot springs. Richard's training with Fritz Perls, M.D., founder of Gestalt Therapy, questioned the artificial separation between the mind and the body and located within each person the potential for his or her own healing. Add to this the other high-powered seminar leaders, notably Charlotte Selver and her studies in sensory re-awakening, and her student, Bernard Gunther, and the seeds for the Esalen-style of bodywork were in place. As Michaeleen Kimmey, a practitioner in 1964, said of her fellow practitioners of that time, "None of us knew. Bernie knew Swedish, and Gia-Fu taught a form of shiatsu and emphasized the chi forces of his flowing t'ai chi chuan. I studied chiropractic and had an intuitive touch for dealing with people. Storm had wonderful hands."

Gunther, in his interpretation of Charlotte's work, focused on the "feel factor," on sensation monitored from within, the foundation of self-awareness. The practitioner joined in and listened with his intuition, nervous system to nervous system. Storm Accioli brought a sense of ritual to the massage, which she described as a "cosmic experience," adding candles, scented oil, incense and grace. Molly Day Shackman joined her. Shackman's "Massage and Meditation" workshop in September 1968 was the first to offer Esalen-style massage to the public.

Massage defined itself as non-verbal, intuitive, following the flow. Roberta DeLong Miller, a practitioner in the early '70s, opened her book "Psychic Massage" with, "To touch someone else you must be able to touch yourself." Peggy Horan's classes began with hushed silence, followed by a flowing t'ai chi like demonstration of sweeping hands, deeper work on knots, and closing feathery strokes. Deborah Medow blended yoga and massage with drums in the evening, offering participants a chance to get into their bodies. Body, bones energy and spirit.

Yet as practitioners began receiving Rolfing(r) structural integration (Ida Rolf's Structural Realignment 10-session series of deep, intense bodywork, which she taught at the institute), they became curious about fascia alignment and deeper work. Vicki Topp and others studied anatomy and Al Drucker's offshoot, Esalen Deep Tissue Work, uniting intuitive massage with more physiological know-how. A massage class kept the meditative atmosphere but began to include muscle description and discussion on the physiology of breath. Similar refinement occurred in understanding of the energy body, as Bill Liles and Deborah Medow each brought Randolph Stone's Polarity Therapy System to their classes and work. Bodywork consumers began to have choices to make.



Milton Trager, M.D. presented at Esalen the concept of freeing the body while moving it. His rhythmical rocking replaced strokes, intending, he said, to release the mind from notions of immobility and in so doing release the body, nudging the muscles from holding patterns. Deane Juhan, deeply affected by the work, became a Trager practitioner and studied the interplay of

the body's diverse systems. It was as if rock n' roll had come to trance-like Esalen Massage. Esalen practitioner George King, known for his work with professional dance companies, evolved a gymnast's style of massage.

The concept that pain, disease or mental anguish is caused by blockages in the energetic body has appeared in many guises at Esalen. Maria Lucia Sauer Holloman along with fellow Brazilians developed and practiced a spirit guide massage to cleanse the individual's field. Lioness Parizek teaches chakra balancing, a method of integrating the energy centers through self-education, which she has offered to such diverse audiences as the International Women's Forum. Dean Marson augments his Trager-style approach with fine-tuned energetic balancing.

Three years ago the Esalen institute cleared a sweat lodge site, and now regularly held ceremonies illuminate the native American emphasis on ancestors, the earth and healing, adding the smudge of burning sage to the potpourri of herbs used at the baths. Ellen Watson sings to her clients while working on them with her numerous scents. Practitioner C. Jay Bradbury continues the t'ai chi chuan principles of grounding and centering with his students.

Many of the practitioners working on the bathhouse deck have innovated and refined this non-invasive approach to the body, which invites a response rather than demands one. They continue to research ways to make their work more effective; for example, Benj Langdon brings his Feldenkrais training to the massage table. Over time, they have seen the wisdom and effectiveness of listening within, of letting the massage create an environment that allows for a return to optimal health, of reaching inside to the impulse toward balance rather than to impose and fix from an external "expert" stance. They have seen lives prolonged, steps become lighter, laughter return as people attain a respect for their bodies and an acknowledgment of the messages and intelligence they contain. Esalen massage today defines itself as a way of exploring, person to person, a matrix of physical, psychological, energetic and spiritual awareness united by the balm of touch.

Sessions, workshops, trainings and community
Those interested in sampling a taste of Esalen massage can look to the five-day and weekend Workshop Massage Intensive series, suitable for the novice as well as those who already have some training. Classes are small, with two instructors on hand to provide on-the-spot guidance. More professionally minded practitioners enjoy the camaraderie as well as the instruction in the advance and specialized workshops, such as Arthur Munyer and Ingrid May's trigger point workshop. Professional training is available in the 28-day certification program, offering approximately 150 hours of class time. All programs are residential, adding the soft spice of the community and the natural setting to the training format. The many nuances of touch take on special meaning in such a setting.

For would-be massage clients, the certificate of completion the students receive upon successfully graduating is the best guarantee of a massage that meets the high Esalen standards. The newly formed Esalen Massage and Bodywork Association provides news and resources about practitioners and classes worldwide.

For information on how to register at Esalen or to locate a practitioner in your area, contact Esalen Institute, Highway One, Big Sur, CA 93920. Brita Ostrom has led massage workshops for individuals, couples, professionals and beginners, at the Esalen Institute, Big Sur, California, for over 22 years. She brings psychological awareness to her understanding of the body and is a licensed psychotherapist. She says, "A sense of place, of connection with all living beings, is at the center of my work."



Photo courtesy of Esalen Institute archive


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How to Bring the Esalen Approach into Your Practice
by Brita Ostrom

1. Start with nothing. Before your sessions begin, through meditation find that still, quiet clear point of attention within. Return to this place for nourishment throughout both the session and the day.
2. Just say "Hi." Use the introductory time to build a sense of  personal ease between yourself and the client.
3. Slow down. Start your session with a gentle connecting touch,  conclude every segment with integration strokes, adding pauses  throughout. Similar to the moments of silence in a piece of music,  these punctuate the session and draw the receiver in. Add 15  minutes' extra time to every session; it is worth it for both you  and your client.
4. Pay attention. Your attention to muscle knots, constricted  breathing and the soft sighs of relaxation will wake up awareness. Let good feelings count more than pain. The body does not relax  into pain; every painful moment creates an imprint. Build your  session on the pleasurable feelings, bring attention to them, rather than to painful areas. Let the good feeling flow into and  release the sore areas.
5. Keep the atmosphere natural. Use plants, fresh air, soft  lights and sounds to create your own biosphere.
6. Dare to be you. Use your voice, your crystals, your yoga, your art, whatever keeps you inspired in the session. Your own inspiration will allow your client the same space.






The Esalen Institute: An Educational Center with Humanity in Mind
by Karen Menehan, Managing Editor, MASSAGE Magazine

For 35 years the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, California, has been an incubator of techniques that address the body, mind and spirit. Soon after its founding and up to the present day, Esalen, a self-described nonprofit center for experimental education, became the scene of developments and discoveries in psychology, group encounters and bodywork.

Founded in 1962 by friends Michael Murphy and Richard Price, the institute became the hub of the human potential movement in the 1960s. Today about 10,000 people come from around the world each year to experience Esalen's eclectic offerings.

The institute offers workshops geared toward spiritual, artistic and psychological development; among the most popular are those that focus on body awareness. Since the institute's beginning, new bodywork techniques have been developed and supported by the Esalen Institute prior to their introduction to the rest of the world.

Esalen's physical environment, referred to by many as "magical" provides a backdrop of splendor. Nestled on 27 acres of Big Sur's Pacific Ocean coastline, the view from the institute is majestic. In the spring, monarch butterflies flutter through the silken air, while gray whales migrate past the shore. A visitor might come upon a waterfall, wander a cliffside path or meditate in a redwood grove.

The natural environment also includes mineral hot springs, known as the baths, adjacent to a massage deck that sits 50 feet above the ocean. It was there, on the deck, that bodywork pioneers came to Esalen and taught their techniques to others. Among them: Ida Rolf conducted training in her Structural Integration Method at the institute in the late 1960s. It was at Esalen that she personally trained a few people to be instructors of her technique.

Moshe Feldenkrais presented an Esalen workshop on awareness through movement in 1971. Although Feldenkrais had taught on the East Coast in the 1950s, his teaching at the Esalen Institute was the introduction of his work to a new generation of people, and also led to the development of his training program, according to Bonnie Humiston, assistant director of the Feldenkrais Guild.

Although Milton Trager was already applying his technique, now known as TragerWork(r), the first public presentation of his work was at Esalen, in 1975 - and led to a training program and widespread exposure of the work.

And several currently prominent practitioners of massage and bodywork point to their time at the Esalen Institute as a profound learning experience.

Deane Juhan, TragerWork practitioner and author of "Job's Body," believes that the work done by the Esalen Institute was instrumental in taking some of the better values of the 1960s and '70s and injecting them into the mainstream.

"Esalen was sort of the Ed Sullivan show of the first emergence of alternative practices in the U.S. in any kind of organized presentation," Juhan said. "And over the decades it has continued to serve as a forum for whatever's hot and new."

Juhan first worked as a night guard at the institute. Then he began learning Esalen-style massage, deep tissue work and acupuncture there; he settled on TragerWork after attending a workshop presented by Trager at Esalen. Juhan trained massage therapists and gave workshops at Esalen until 1990, when he moved; he still gives workshops there about every other year.

The developer of Aston-Patterning(r), Judith Aston, trained under Ida Rolf at the institute in 1968, assisted Rolf with classes there in the early 1970s, presented the first Rolfing Aston Structural Patterning course at Esalen in 1971, and taught at the institute through 1974. During the late '60s and early '70s, free-form exploration was thriving, Aston said, and two or three different kinds of bodywork were presented at Esalen each week.

Joseph Heller, who developed Hellerwork after being trained in structural integration by Ida Rolf at Esalen, first went to the institute in 1971.

Transformational bodywork practitioner and instructor Dan Menkin trained at Esalen in the late '60s.

The Esalen Institute is also home to its own brand of bodywork: Esalen-style massage (see main article), which draws from both Swedish massage and sensory awareness (a method of teaching people to get in touch with their bodies, especially through breath work.)

In addition to its 28-day Massage Practitioner Certification Program, the Esalen Institute offers bodywork workshops on a variety of topics, including Feldenkrais, sports massage, reflexology, Rolfing(r) structural integration, Rubenfeld Synergy(r) method, craniosacral therapy, trigger point massage and Zero Balancing(r) -- among many others.

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