What is Shiatsu?
Shiatsu is a therapeutic practice that can support individuals in moving
towards greater health and well-being.
Shiatsu is a relaxing treatment and can be beneficial for back pain, stress,
headaches, whiplash injuries, neck stiffness, joint pain and reduced motibility
and many sports injuries amongst other ailments.
What follows is an edited extract from Paul Lundberg’s ‘The
New Book of Shiatsu’ offering a simple and informative introduction
to Shiatsu. Paul is both an Acupuncture and Shiatsu practitioner and teacher,
having taught and practiced for many years. He is a founder member of both
the Shiatsu Society and the Register of Traditional Chinese Medicine, and
was one of the first members of the Shiatsu Society’s Assessment
Panel
Introduction
Shiatsu is a Japanese word meaning "finger pressure". It is a new name for
the oldest form of medicine - healing with hands. Everybody has the healing
power of touch and responds to touch. It is a natural ability that people
are now beginning to recognize again.Shiatsu uses hand pressure and manipulative
techniques to adjust the body's physical structure and its natural inner
energies, to help ward off illness, and maintain good health.
Shiatsu is
characterized by its great simplicity. It grew from earlier forms of massage,
called Anma in Japan (Anmo or Tuina in China) which use rubbing, stroking,
squeezing, tapping, pushing, and pulling to influence the muscles and circulatory
systems of the body. Shiatsu, by contrast, uses few techniques and to an
observer it would appear that little is happening - merely a still, relaxed
pressure at various points on the body with the hand or thumb, an easy leaning
of the elbows or a simple rotation of a limb. It almost seems a lazy activity
and, to the extent that it conserves one's energy, it is. But underneath the
uncomplicated movements much is happening internally to the body's energy
on a subtle level.

Subtle Energy in the Body
The Oriental tradition describes the world in terms of energy. All things
are considered to be manifestations of a vital universal force, called 'Ki' by
the Japanese, ''Chi", or 'Qi', in China. Because of the
Japanese origins of shiatsu therapy, the Japanese word Ki is used in preference
to the Chinese word, Chi. Ki is the primary substance and motive force
of life. It is most often described as "energy", but Ki is also
synonymous with breath in the Japanese and Chinese languages. In Oriental
medicine, harmony of Ki within the human body is conceived as being essential
to health. All its endeavours are addressed to this end.

History of Shiatsu
The Development of Shiatsu in Japan
Shiatsu was developed
in the early part of the 20th century by a Japanese practitioner, Tamai
Tempaku, who incorporated the newer Western medical knowledge of anatomy
and physiology into several older methods of
treatment. Originally he called it "Shiatsu Ryoho", or "finger
pressure way of healing", then "Shiatsu Ho ", "finger
pressure method". Now known simply as "Shiatsu", it was
officially recognized as a therapy by the Japanese Government in 1964,
so distinguishing it from the older form of traditional massage, Anma.
The role of shiatsu therapists is to diagnose and treat according to the
principles of Oriental medicine.
Chinese origins of Shiatsu
The earliest known book of
Chinese medicine is called the 'Huang Ti Nei Ching', 'The Yellow Emperor's
Classic of Internal Medicine'. In it the legendary Emperor questions
his physician, Ch-I Po, about problems of medicine ,and health among
his people. In one well known passage Ch'i Po explains that different
forms of medicine were developed in different regions
according to the prevailing climate and the resulting constitutional problems
from which people suffered. Treatment using herbs, needles and heat were
attributed to Northern, Southern, Eastern, and Western regions, but
development of physical therapy including massage and breathing exercise
was accorded to the people of China's central region. Thus began the long
association of massage and manipulative therapy with special physical exercise,
breathing techniques, and healing meditations which represented the
highest level of Chinese medicine. These came to be known collectively
as "Tao Yin", methods for guiding the subtle energies within
the body to flow smoothly. Shiatsu is the modern inheritor of this tradition.
Chinese medicine was introduced to Japan by a Buddhist monk in the 6th
century. The Japanese developed and refined many of its methods to suit
their own physiology, temperament, and climate. In particular they
developed the manual healing and diagnostic arts, evolving special techniques
of abdominal diagnosis, treatment, and abdominal massage.

Styles of Shiatsu
Many early Shiatsu practitioners developed their own style and some, including
Tokojiro Namikoshi andd Shizuto Masunaga, founded schools that helped establish
Shiatsu as a therapy. There are many different styles of Shiatsu today.
Some concentrate on "acupressure (acupuncture) points". Some
emphasise more general work on the body or along the pathways of energy
to influence the Ki that flows in them. Others highlight diagnostic
systems, such as the "Five Element'' system or the macro-biotic approach.
But all of these are based on traditional Chinese-medicine.

Zen Shiatsu
Masunaga incorporated his experience of Shiatsu into his studies of Western psychology
and Chinese medicine; he also refined the existing methods of diagnosis.
His extended system incorporated special exercises, known as "Makko
Ho', to stimulate the flow of Ki, and he developed a set of guiding principles
to make the techniques more effective. He called his system "Zen Shiatsu" after
the simple and direct approach to spirituality of the Zen Buddhist monks
in Japan.

The Chinese Approach to Understanding
the Body and Health
You may notice a circularity in the logic of Chinese medicine. Westerners
think of cause and effect as a linear progression of ideas and events from
A, through B, to C. Eastern philosophy regards events as mutually conditioned,
arising together. They are not seen as distinct from the environment in
which they occur. The background is as important as the fore-ground. An
example is given here to help to clarify the difference.
A headache is not just an event in the head, according to Chinese medicine,
nor is it merely a pain, or something to be stopped without regard for its
origins, nor even treated on the same basis as someone else's headache. Rather,
it is an obstruction of Ki, related to the overall energy patterns in the
whole body of the particular individual, their circumstances, and lifestyle.
Treatment might involve work on the arms or legs as well as (or instead of)
the head and will bring more lasting and satisfactory changes than will an
attempt to block the superficial symptoms.
