Saturday, April 4, 2015

Massage and Bodywork - The Meeting of Art and Science

“The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious.  It is at the source of all true art and science.”
                                                                                             -Albert Einstein

Bodywork is one of the great meeting grounds of art and science, and the human body, the human being, is one of the great mysteries of the universe.  For thousands of years, bodyworkers from every corner of the world have used their sense of touch to refine their understanding of the human body.  Whether we were shamans, witches, or physicians – healers of all kinds used their sense of touch to “look”, or to “listen” into the body.  Our incredibly sensitive knowing hands have given us insight to the bodymindspirit.  It is good to remember that most of what we “know” with our hands, as Mr. Einstein says, is the experience of the mysterious.  

Science has endeavored to understand the human body by breaking down the whole into its respective parts and systems, progressing all the way into our molecular building blocks, into our DNA.  Many diseases that used to be common killers have been all but eradicated and surgeons have explored every part of the body and prolonged life with their interventions, yet the healing power of simple human touch is still a mystery to modern science.  Modern medicine also has an ancient history of practitioners who have been driven by the “experience of the mysterious.”  These different paths of “knowing”, of the physician and the bodyworker, have been diverging for some time now, particularly in the last hundred years.  It is time for them to come back together.

In the 21st century, the modern massage therapist stands in the great meeting ground between art and science.  We are surrounded by the ever-changing knowledge of modern medicine, by the ongoing succession of discoveries, many of which will disprove the prior theory or knowledge of that particular field of study.  We also work every day with that ancient art of “knowing” – touch.  Through touch we bring the life force, the inner healing power of another human being to bear on the stresses and dysfunctions of the body.  We learn the knowledge of all the systems, the science of the body, and then proceed to work with the whole person, with the bodymindspirit.  We are bridging the gap between art and science and we should remember that our roots in the art of healing are very deep.  The fact that the bodywork may be mysterious to the world of science does not diminish it.  We should always hold a prominent space in the field of the healing arts.

The possibilities that are open to the modern massage therapist are seemingly endless and more people are discovering the benefits of bodywork every day.  It is a time that is full of potential.  Each of us will have to decide for ourselves how we are going to balance art and science, how we will relate to our experience of the mysterious.  No matter how far we journey into the science of bodywork, it is wise to understand and trust the things we can never know about the incredible complexity of each individual human body, each individual human being.

“Wisdom is knowing what you don’t know.” -Chuang Tzu

Carl Johns

Intouch Massage Therapy 
 Craniosacral Therapy and the Concept of “Less is More”


“You need to learn a thousand techniques in order to understand a single one.  Then you only need one.”
                                                                                              Hugh Milne

“Learn your methods and techniques, and be prepared to abandon them when you encounter the human soul.”
                                                                                               Carl Jung


Bodywork is an art.  Craniosacral therapy is an art.  In order to achieve the highest levels of creativity, an artist needs to have a solid technical foundation.  The great abstract painters begin by the study of life drawing and the great jazz improvisers begin by practicing scales and chords.  In bodywork we study the anatomy and physiology of the human body, and we learn a great array of techniques that allow us to apply touch work to the body in an organized way.  

A great work of art often has to do with what is left out – not used – in that creative moment.  We choose from our vast array of techniques what is appropriate with our client, with that particular human being, at that particular moment in time.  Less really is more – more time for your client to experience the work, to unwind with it, to open to change, and to allow the inherent health of their body to come forward.  

These concepts can sometimes seem foreign in our fast-paced-more-is-more-no pain-no- gain culture.  Experiencing craniosacral therapy is a beautiful way of tipping the balance back toward a more peaceful and deep experience of bodywork.  A way of achieving a deeper balance that allows the inner wisdom of the body come into the healing process. 


Carl Johns

Intouch Massage Therapy