Guest guest Posted November 28, 2006 Report Share Posted November 28, 2006 Marge, thanks for your insight! With my son (who has OCD/obsessive-compulsive disorder), I guess the next day he was back to " normal " (no worse/no better with the OCD), but as I said, his OCD really, really worsened later in the evening after having the therapy. I bet it did have something to do with that SER you mentioned. Interesting! That was years ago when he was in 6th grade, he's now in 12th grade. Back then he had a lot of compulsions/rituals. We treated him with inositol powder and it really helped. Early this year he had a return of OCD but now it's bad thoughts/scrupulosity, no physical rituals/movements like before. The inositol hasn't really helped this time. I'm always trying to research OCD & the brain (neurotransmitters) and am wondering if another is involved in this " bad thought " part of OCD. The craniosacral therapy might have a different effect this time maybe, but financially can't try that right now. OK, I'm rambling with thoughts here, LOL! Thanks again for your thoughts on this! Chris in NC , " Marge Lee " <margeleept wrote: > > Hi, > > I'm a brand new member of this group and also have advanced training > from Upledger in CranioSacral Therapy. The vast majority of people I > see think the work is wonderful and have no adverse reactions. > However, what you describe can happen. I have a couple of thoughts on it. > > First, there's an emotional component to CranioSacral Therapy. The > theory is that emotional energy can be stored in the tissues, which > can actually have an effect on the physical body. There is a Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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