Healing
Wombs: Maya Abdominal Massage
by Patricia Burke with Rosita Arvigo
Catherine arrived at the yoga studio looking weary and subdued. As she
joined the circle and began to check in with the group, her story gently
unfolded. She had been experiencing increasing digestive problems and
discomfort, and awoke in the morning to discover that her uterus had
prolapsed. The cervix was extending out through the vaginal opening. She
felt as if she was carrying a bowl between her legs, and it was bearing
down on all her organs of elimination. I was horrified for her.
In the past I had heard about women having surgeries to repair a prolapsed
of the pelvic floor, and had always assumed that the cause was pushing in
childbearing, but this woman was childless. She was committed to healing
herself through non-surgical alternatives, even if it meant wearing some
sort of sling to hold her internal organs for the rest of her life. I made
it my mission to search the Internet for information about prolapsed
organs and to try to help my non-computer literate friend.
Through that search I learned that my own health was on a collision course
with gravity. Although I had two children by caesarian section and had
never “pushed,” I had almost every risk factor for prolapsed organs,
including years of running and teaching aerobics, and was already
suffering from over three quarters of the symptoms, including an ovarian
cyst. My friend’s illness revealed to me the potential of my own
possible fate. Fortunately, it also led me towards hope in changing my
destiny through the grace of Rosita Arvigo. And, we saved Catherine’s
uterus.
Healing the Wandering Womb
The Arvigo Techniques of Maya abdominal massage are practiced and taught
by Dr. Rosita Arvigo, D.N., who has spent the last thirty years studying
and teaching Maya medicine. Maya abdominal massage is a self-care practice
supported by professional instruction, and is an integral part of Maya
medicine. The massage is performed over clothing and greatly assists in
the release of trauma after accidents, childbirth or illness, as well as
resetting the position of the uterus in the female. Rosita learned these
techniques from her mentor, Don Elijio Panti, the great Maya shaman of
Belize, Central America, with whom she apprenticed for ten years. Before
accepting her as his apprentice, Don Elijio secured Rosita’s promise
that she would remain in Belize to care for “his people,” a promise
she has honored to this day. Don Elijio passed away in 1996 at the age of
103; fortunately, much of his vast knowledge of herbal and physical
healing was preserved. Rosita now works tirelessly both in Belize and the
United States in sharing this important work. Rosita also studied with
Hortence Robinson, an elder and herbal midwife of Belize who has been
delivering babies since she was 13.
The Arvigo Techniques of Maya abdominal massage address the position and
health of the pelvic and abdominal organs. The work is best known for the
correction of the prolapsed, fallen or tipped uterus, and for the
prevention and treatment of benign prostate enlargement in men. Don Elijio
believed that a woman’s center is her uterus. “If a woman’s uterus
is out of balance, so is she,” he would say. Midwives and healers of
Central America agree that most “female troubles” are caused by the
wandering womb. Normally the uterus leans slightly over the bladder in the
center of the pelvis, about one and a half inches above the pubic bone. It
is held in this position by muscles, the vaginal wall and ligaments that
attach it to the back, front, and sides of the pelvis. Uterine ligaments
are made to accommodate a growing fetus and to move freely when the
bladder or bowel is full. The ligaments and muscles can weaken and loosen,
causing the uterus to fall downward, forward, backward or to either side.
A uterus in any of these positions is referred to as “tipped.”
Unfortunately, the causes for uterine displacement are common and varied.
Some of them include: falls that impact the lower back, sacrum and
tailbone; car accidents; ligaments weakened due to overstretching during
pregnancy and labor; bad professional care during pregnancy, labor and
delivery and afterward; carrying heavy burdens during the pregnancy or too
soon after delivery; running on cement surfaces; walking barefoot on cold
floors and/or wet grass; wearing high heeled shoes; chronic constipation;
high-impact dancing, aerobics, horseback riding, gymnastics or other
sports activity; pressure caused by sagging intestines; weak pelvic floor
muscles; poor alignment of pelvic bones with spinal column; surgeries;
carrying children on hips for long periods of time; emotional armoring
from rape, sexual assault, or incest at any time in life; time and
gravity. Modern medicine has little or nothing to offer women with this
problem. Generally they are told, “Your uterus is tipped, but don’t
worry about it.” Yet women have a laundry list of physical and emotional
symptoms that can be addressed and prevented with these simple,
noninvasive massage techniques.
When reproductive organs shift, they can constrict normal flow of blood
and lymph, and disrupt nerve connections. Just a few extra ounces of
misplaced tissue sitting on blood and lymph vessels can cause havoc
throughout the different systems in the body. By shifting the uterus back
into place, homeostasis, or the natural balance of the body, is restored
in the pelvic area and the surrounding organs. Toxins are flushed and
nutrients that help to tone tissue and balance hormones are restored to
normal order. This is essential for healthy pregnancy, labor, and
delivery. Old adhesions from invasive treatments to the pelvic and
abdominal area, including fibroid tumors, endometriosis, and cesarean
delivery are diminished when addressed by uterine massage. In addition,
digestion, urinary and bladder problems can be helped. This type of
massage is also helpful in increasing blood flow to the pelvic region for
men.
Untold numbers of hysterectomies and Caesarian births could be prevented
with this simple, safe, easy to learn massage technique. Women who have
had hysterectomies benefit greatly from Maya abdominal massage as well.
The technique improves circulation in and around the area of the scar and
allows for proper flow of the lymph, which often becomes blocked after
surgery, resulting in swelling, burning and deep aching pains in the
pelvis. When done properly, external massage strengthens the ligaments and
muscles that support the uterus and ovaries. In Belize and many other
South American countries, this gentle, yet powerful technique is performed
a few days after childbirth, accompanied by a herbal cleansing vaginal
steam bath. In contrast, Western medicine’s D&C procedure is much
more traumatic and requires the cervix to be dilated and the uterine walls
to be scraped.
Training Begins
Discovering this important information about uterine health inspired me to
want to learn more. The Center for Cultural Evolution in Colraine, MA
serves as one of the training centers for small groups of men and women
who come together to learn Rosita’s work. Maya massage is performed
fully clothed and is very non-invasive and gentle. Self-care training and
supervision is offered in a 3-day format and includes an evaluation by a
practitioner. Qualified bodyworkers and nurses receive professional
training in an additional weeklong program. I decided to register for the
class.
The training began with a self-care curriculum. Rosita is a gifted and
creative teacher. She explained how the fascia that surrounds each organ
is sticky -- like cling wrap that gets caught on itself -- so the organ
can get stuck in the wrong location and develop adhesions and scar tissue.
Using scarves and her own arms, she became a uterus with its support
ligaments, and contorted herself into various comical but tragic
depictions of a uterus stuck on a bladder, glued to a colon, pulled over
to one side and blocking circulation in a leg, and folded into a cramp.
The ramifications of this four ounce misplaced organ expanding in
pregnancy to the size of a watermelon were profound.
Regarding the deep inquiry into whether God is a woman or man, she
questioned the wisdom of having a hallway (vagina) directly under the
organs of reproduction and elimination, compared to the relative safety of
men’s vital organs. But men, too, benefit from the Maya massage
techniques, and I am now on a much more intimate basis with the prostate
than I ever imagined. A sedentary lifestyle creates compression of the
testicles and groin, increases acidity, decreases waste removal, and
creates malfunction and discomfort. The Maya compliment massage with
marigold seed tea and stinging nettle to relieve prostate pain; there are
other herbs, including manvine, for men’s concerns.
Rosita’s training also directly addresses the impact of sexual assault
and incest in both men and women. Using the work of the late William
Reich, she explained how emotional armoring can be gently released using
the self care protocol, Maya medicine, prayer and herbs.
Training in self care includes an evaluation and training by a certified
practitioner. Lucy was my trainer for that day. As I lay down on the table
fully clothed, oceans of unshed tears overwhelmed me. I was questioning
whether I would survive the seemingly endless onslaught of grief that
would be released, which has been activated but not resolved by other
therapies. I was totally unprepared for what happened next. As Lucy began
to teach me the techniques, I could feel circulation beginning to fill the
front of my body. As she worked on the right side, I could sense my uterus
and fallopian tube coming into center. As she came to left, she found the
ovary far down in the left corner. The fascia, or connective tissue of the
fallopian tubes and ovary, had been tugged down and stitched into my
cesarean scar, pulling the left ovary with it. I was back in time at the
birth of my second son, 16 years ago. The pulling and tugging of Lucy
gently releasing my contracted pelvis was slightly uncomfortable, but
accompanied by a rush of circulation and energy that washed through my
pelvis and leg. I was utterly amazed as I felt a line of contraction let
go from my pelvis all the way up the left side of my body, up the side of
my neck, to the attachment of my skull. The rotation of my pelvis and the
scoliosis curve in my spine, which I had tried to address through years of
yoga, bodywork and therapy, began to release as I lay there experiencing
the grief I felt for needing a section birth due to a “tipped uterus,”
juxtaposed with the joy of holding a cherished infant son.
Medications and sedatives prescribed to trauma survivors do not address
subterranean emotional armoring held in the body. Rosita notes that the
emotion-based physical armoring that accompanies trauma will be released
chronologically, beginning with the recent past. When the armoring is
released from the body it resolves issues which can remain untouched in
twenty years of talk therapy. Practitioners also use plant spirit medicine
and herbs to assist release and integration.
Maya massage is one tool for those who understand the dangers of leaving
our own unresolved issues beneath the surface in present relationships, as
well as for the next generation. The commitment to a regular practice of
abdominal massage, or any other practice which helps bring to the light of
consciousness that which is held in the unconscious, transmutes trauma and
allows us to thrive rather than simply survive.
There is a prophecy from both North American and South American First
Nation people: “When the eagle and the condor fly together, the Age of
Peace will manifest.” Abdominal massage is the gift to the present from
the ancient lineage of Maya elders, carried forth by Rosita Arvigo.
___________________
Pat
Burke is a writer and yoga teacher in Marlboro, MA. She believes that
the Eastern contemplative practices and the indigenous healing traditions
can greatly enhance Western treatment of trauma. She can be reached at
508-480-8884 or pat@earthsongyoga.com.
Rosita Arvigo is the author of three books including: Sastun: My
Apprenticeship with a Maya Healer, Rainforest Remedies: 100 Healing
Plants of Belize, and Rainforest Home Remedies: The Maya Way to
Heal Your Body and Nourish Your Soul. The last book contains
instructions for abdominal massage. A fourth book, The Art of Spiritual
Bathing is due out in November, 2003. The Arvigo Institute, 77 West
Street, Antrim, NH 03440 USA.
Dr. Arvigo established the Terra Nova Forest Preserve and Tree Planting
Camp Program and the Bush Medicine Camp for Children in Belize. Donations
may be sent to: Traditional Healers Foundation of Belize, c/o Diane
McDonald, 330 Stark Highway North, Dunbarton, NH, 03046.