Reiki – The Gentle Healer
By Graham Christie
I shall never forget my feelings on the
day when I was asked if I would visit a hospital to give Reiki
healing to someone whose leg had been amputated following a car
accident. I had first met Ros the previous December at a
Christmas dinner for alternative health practitioners, this
being a new venture for me as a newly qualified Reiki
therapist. Over dinner we discussed how our respective
treatments had been and how treatment could be combined to be
more effective.
In March 1998,
Ros telephoned me, and explained in her usual bubbly manner “I
am in Old church hospital, and I have had my leg amputated
following a car accident. Can you visit me and give me some
Reiki healing? I immediately agreed and arranged a date for the
following Tuesday. After I had put the telephone down, my fears
welled up inside me.
How do you treat
a person who still feels their leg is attached to their body?
As I had only recently qualified, could I help her? It’s
amazing how inadequate you can feel when confronted with a real
test!
Prior to
qualifying I was a very squeamish person, but one thing Reiki
has given me is trust. People are only sent to you for
treatment through fate, a chance encounter, a recommendation,
therefore you are only asked to deal with a situation that you
can handle. Reiki has its own intelligence and works in the
best possible way for the individual.
When I arrived
at the hospital, I nervously located the ward that Ros was in,
and spotted her surrounded by flowers and get well cards and
after a brief chat, I “tuned in” so that I could commence the
treatment.
Whatever your
personal beliefs are, I feel we all have a “Guardian Angel”,
and when you start administering Reiki you have that feeling
that someone is there helping you, and this time was no
exception. I put myself completely in the hands of my healing
guide, silently saying “look I haven’t a clue how to deal with
this, over to you”.
What followed
was amazing. My hands were virtually taken to different parts
of Ros’ head and body. She felt tremendous heat through my
hands and a huge wave of emotion swept through her, releasing
the emotional pain that was still locked inside her. When
treating the area where her leg should have been, she could
feel it being taken away (when doing healing on amputations you
have to go into the subconscious and alter the blueprint of the
body so that the mind accepts the loss of the limb).
Reiki is one of
the simplest, yet most effective methods of healing, working on
the physical body, the mind, the emotions and the spirit. Like
all forms of healing, recovery takes time and patience, and so
this first treatment began a long process of healing that would
eventually heal the four aspects that Reiki treats, releasing
all the emotions that the accident created.
I continued
visiting Ros weekly until July, when she felt that Reiki had
helped her reach a full emotional recovery. By then she had had
her ‘new leg’ fitted and was back to swimming, cycling and
playing tennis.
We can all overcome sickness or
accidents if we have a positive approach, and the correct kind
of help. A miracle happens every day which is beyond human
understanding, but only because it is outside known physical
laws. Everyone has a choice to stay where they are or to grow
as a person. Reiki gently dissolves the inner obstacles that
can block the ability to get well, love, and respect each
other.
The
Patient’s View
By Roslyn
Aston
I am a practising
homoeopath, who after a recent traumatic accident
discovered the benefits of Reiki healing.
During a road accident in March, I had
my right leg severely crushed between a stationary car and a
moving car. My right leg had to be amputated above the
knee.
After my recovery from intensive care,
I began treating myself with homoeopathic remedies for shock
and trauma, grief for the loss of the limb, both bone pain and
severe phantom pains, muscle twitching and
infections.
The skin at the back of my residual
limb was so damaged that skin grafts were necessary. To heal
the skin and to prevent scarring, I used Vitamin E and the
homoeopathic remedy Silica. This approach proved very
successful.
After the first week in hospital, I
was still experiencing phantom pains. These pains would shoot
down the length of my right leg and felt like knives cutting
through the foot. I had met Graham Christie recently and felt a
need to ask if he would give me some Reiki healing. During the
first session of healing I felt an immense release of emotions
which I interpreted as grief. Then, within a few minutes, I
felt happiness and found myself
grinning.
As the healing continued, I felt a
great heat wherever it was focused. As it continued further
down my body, I felt at one point that my right leg – or the
ghost of it – was slightly lifting off the bed and my right
hand then made several thrusts as if to say ‘goodbye’ to it. I
then felt my left leg moving and twitching as if it was telling
me that it wanted to ‘move on’.
Finally, at the end of the session,
Graham moved to about twelve inches away from the end of my
stump, when I felt a violent jerking as if repeatedly lifting
off the bed.
Immediately, at the end of the
treatment, I felt relaxed but exhausted. But within 30 minutes
I felt that my ‘batteries had been recharged’. I also felt that
the phantom pain had reduced by around 80%. With further
sessions of Reiki, I felt a mixture of emotions rising up to
the surface, particularly grief, acceptance and frustration,
and have always felt better for this.
I went on to take a Reiki I course,
both to find out more about Reiki and to make use of it myself.
Self-healing has so far been successful.
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