WILHELM-REICH by Michael Gerber MD Body/Mind Pioneer Wilhelm

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WILHELM-REICH by Michael Gerber MD Body/Mind Pioneer Wilhelm (fromAlternative Medicine magazine): WILHELM- REICH by Michael Gerber M.D. Body/mind pioneer Wilhelm Reich asserted that the repression of our natural sexuality was the cause of many diseases and social ills.Emergence of sexual health as a topic of polite and even scholarly conversation has greatly to do with the genius of the psychiatrist, Wihelm Reich, M.D. Raised as an Austrian Jew at the tum of the last century,he was a star student of Freud but moved far beyond Freudian limitations. Freud alwaysmaintained a body-mindduality and adhered to a lengthy therapy system of dreamanalysis and freeassociation, with the physician being the passive observer and later the object of transference. In psychoanalyzing his patients,however, Reich noticed physical manifestations intimatelyassociated with thoughts and emotions. He beganworking on his patients' bodiesas well as their minds tochange theirstate.Reich improved their breathing and loosenedthe chronic tension in their muscles. He developed a system of therapyhe called CharacterAnalysis and formulated his theoryof the function of the orgasm. To Reich, the orgasm was not just for pleasure or procreation but a meansto re-equilibrate the entire energy system of the organism, and a requisite forphysical and psychic health. Reich felt that due to social conditioning, the vast majorityof peQplewere incapableof having a true, or what he called a total, orgasm.He placed the causesof most of society's ills on sexual dysfunction. Reich began to argue that distorted sexual attitudes and behaviorstemmed from the major emphases and characteristicsof capit.alistic society itself: methods of child rearing and education; patriarchal patterns of family life; rigid moral structure; an authoritariansystem of relationships; and alienating modes of work. Forever the iconoclast, Reich startedmovements of sexual liberation in the late 1920'sthat were arguably 50 yearsahead of theirtime and popularacceptance. He becamea communist inGermany for some yearsand developed a sexual bill of rights that proposedthe abolition of virtually all laws against sexual expression and freedomand includedsuch specificsas the freeavailability and distribution of contraceptivesto all,including teenagers,and sex education programsin the media and in-businessesabove a certain,- size. LaterReich becameenormously critical of communismand lost confidence in the left wing's abilityto change the system. The fascinatingstory of Wilhelm Reich hasbeen told in a numberof books. Forthe moment let's concentrate on his perceptionof the total orgasm. In a total orgasm bothpartners enjoy the experienceof spontaneityand completesurrender. The naturalbuildup of sexual excitement gives way to a gracefulrelease, like thebreaking of an oceanwave or the pulsations of a jellyfish.Ejaculation is smooth,unlike the normal contractions that people experience,which Reich attributed to individuals resistingfull release. In defining this experience, in total orgasm the entire body, not just the narrow pelvic area, becomes physically arousedand charged, and involved in involuntary, rhythmic pulsations. The mind is aware only of the physical sensations of the moment. Reich defined his concept of orgastic potency as, "the capacity to surrender to the flow of biological energy, without any inhibition, the capacity forcomplete discharge of all dammed-up sexual excitationthrough invol untary, pleasurable contractions of the body.ff Descriptions of total orgasm always involve the conceptsof completesurrender, delicious dissolving and a feeling of oneness with the universe. It is a qualitativelydifferent experience than normal sex. According to Reich, however, totalorgasm can only happen if two partners can express their love to eachother through mutual giving and surrender. A second requirement for full orgasmis that bothpartners besufficiently free of "armor" for their bodies tofunction as clearchannels forthe unimpeded flowof energy and excitement. Armoris the storageof unresolved conflicts' "frozenhistory" of grief, anger, rage or fear which are repeatedly blocked from expression_ This chronic repression can be stored in the musculature of the shoulders, back,chest, neck, face, pelvis and other parts of the body_Throughout his life Reich emphasizedthe necessity for the gradual dissolution of the armor- If done toorapidly it can precipitate highly disturbing memoriessuch as feelingsof abandonment and even panic. In the full orgasm, breathing is of centralimportance.During therapy; Reich had observed that virtually all hispatients breathed in ashallowjerky or tense manner- Shallow breathing, he believed, functionsphysiologically to cut offdeep feeling of any kind. Inthe sex act, breathing shouldbecomedeeper, more rhythmic thannormal and pleasurable in itself. Shortlybefore orgasm, both sexes should experience deep, current-likesensations running up and down their bodies. Reich termed these "streamings." If these conditions are not met and the energy flow is blocked,several consequences follow_The climax will belocalized in the loins. Pleasure from foreplayand climax will quickly evaporate, and insteadof deep satisfactiona sense of emptiness or fatigue can takeover. Reich saw that the abilityto lose ourselves wholly in the sexual embrace is the fundamental signof emotional, physical and sexual well-being. Thus, forReich the power of sex is rtotto be found in the orgasm perse, but in completely entering into the enjoyment of the present. Reich called those people forwhom the complete orgasm was a frequentor regular occurrence-as opposed to a once- or twice-in-a-lifetimeexperience-­ genital characters_They possesstrue emotional and physical health. He noted that anyo�e who is tense and immersedin fantasiesor fretfu[ thoughtsduring intercourse cannot be fully alive to the experience. So he maintained that the ability to enjoy a complete orgasm is a sure indicator of one's capacity to be truly spontaneous in life, to love in general, andto be emotionally and physically sensitive to the world at large. It is important to see that Reich was not advocating sexual intercourse forits own sake or claiming that orgasm was the point of existence. Rather, orgastic potency was conceived of as an important criterion of full emotional health. Reich frequently referredto the pulse of life. He recognized that everything in the universepulsates, fromamoebas to stars. Everythingcontinually expands and contracts according to a natural rhythm.This is a basic expression of existence, inextricably involved with the overall lifeprocess of everyorganism. In humans, eachof our organs and all of our biological and emotionalfunctions expand and contract--the beatingof our heart, the inhalation acid exhalation of our lungs, even our inward and outward moods are all governed by this fundamental mechanism. Chronic rumoringprevents pulsation; total orgasm dissolves the tensions and rebalances, or re-equilibrates, the overall energy flow of the body.In his later years Reich felt that sexuality itself might be a tremendously powerful spiritual force. He seemed to see the full orgasmic experienceas possessing a tremendous transformingpower, capable of shattering an individual's feeling of isolation and alienation fromthe world. Essentially he wassuggesting that the full orgasmic experience has the capacity to change, perhaps permanently, our daily human consciousness. He asserted that it is through the sexual orgasm that man and woman most closely experience the oneness with the cosmos that all religions speak of. in fact, the descriptions of surrender, peace, bliss and onenessassociated with total orgasm correspond exactly with people'sdescription of ecstatic religious experiences. For this typeof thinking and concepts such as orgone energy (universal · bioenergy) and bions (fundamental energy units), Reich managed to alienate the political, scientificand medical establishments of his day. He was imprisoned for distributing medical equipment acrossstate lines ( orgone boxes which accumulate the orgone energy forhealing purposes) in 1956and died in prisonin 1957, two days beforehis parole hearings.The governmentalso burned all of hisbooks and destroyed most of his laboratory.Hislife and ideashave influencedmany later teachersand schoolsof philosophyand health including virtually all Western body/minddisciplines. Reich's theories also parallelmany concepts in Ayurveda and Chinese medicine. Sources: My thanksto Timothy Fraer,D.D.S., M.A. forpr oviding inspirationand understandingof Reich's principles to prepare this article. Some of the information in this article came from: The Man Who Dreamedof Tomorrow: A Conceptual Biography of Wilhelm Reich. William Edward Mann.j. P. Tarcher, Inc 1980. Reichian-inspired work is currently_being performedat the Orgone Biophysical Research Lab in Oregon: P.O. Box 1148, Ashland, OR 97520. Website: id.mind.net/community/orgonelab/index.htm Contact Michael Gerber, M.D., has practiced orthomolecular medicine, chelation and nutrition therapyfor28 years.He is founder and director of the Gerber medical clinic in Reno, Nevada, at which acupuncture, neural therapy, Sanum Therapy, homeopathy? herbology,and detoxificationmodalities are also employed. He is a past president of the Orthomolecular Medical Societyand currently President of the Nevada Homeopathic and Integrative Medical Association. Gerber Medical Clinic is located at 3670 Grant Dr., Reno, NV 89509.Tel.- 775-826-1900. .
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