A Strange Thing

by | Jul 21, 2019

Recently I had a cranio-sacral massage because I never had one before and I’m always up for whatever I haven’t tried in the realm of massage therapy. The massage was incredibly relaxing in an odd way—it wasn’t so much that my muscles felt relaxed, it was more like my soul felt relaxed.

I decided to go back and do it again, because why wouldn’t I do something that makes me more relaxed in less time than a traditional massage? I can enjoy something without understanding how it works (well, sometimes).

On the second visit, as the therapist held her hands over my head, then my neck, then my heart, I felt the familiar waves of relaxation. But when she got to my abdomen, I felt different. I felt sad. Not a little sad, a lot sad. A big wave of sad. Sad worth mentioning and I might as well because there were tears flowing out my eyes.

“Why do I feel sad?”

“Emotional release.”

When I feel sad, I’ve learned to ask myself, “What is the thought I am thinking that is causing me to feel sad?” Usually the thought is an argument with reality, in the present, or often, in the past. (Fear occurs over the future.) I sifted through my thoughts but found nothing that could be articulated, just this profound feeling of sad. Then I noticed her hands.

“Your hands feel hot.”

“It’s a lot of energy being released.”

It didn’t make sense.

“They feel really hot.”

“Tell me about it. I’m sweating over here.”

That’s when I realized I was sweating, too. This was straaange. Nothing came to mind for whatever might be “being released.” And then I remembered something I hadn’t thought about in almost thirty years.

Denial is very strong. I learned this when I worked at the University of Minnesota Derm/Surg outpatient clinic. A woman came in with a large bandage over her nose. She told the dermatologist, “I have a blemish.” When the doctor removed the bandage, everyone in the room (the doctor, the nurse, the resident, the medical student) saw that the part of her nose that should have been under the bandage was missing.

I asked Nancy, the head nurse, about it.

“How does someone have part of their nose missing and not go to the doctor until their nose is almost entirely gone?”

“Denial is very strong.”

Nancy repeated those words when a man came in complaining of “a bump on his stomach.” When the doctor parted his gown, there was a growth the size of a grapefruit. 

“Denial is very strong.”

What I had denied was a miscarriage. I told myself I couldn’t have been pregnant because I never had a pregnancy test, told myself the queasiness I felt in the mornings was because I was hungry, prayed I wasn’t pregnant because my marriage was a mess, told myself I hadn’t lost it because what was lost didn’t look like a baby and had never been there in the first place.

I normally believe losses need to be honored so the person can move on from the loss but that felt strange in this case. I was ready to forget about it but decided that if I was sad and sweating, maybe it was a loss worth acknowledging. 

Often I will make a ceremony of burning things to let go of the past. Or tossing them into a river or an ocean. That didn’t seem right this time. Instead, I gave her a gender and a name and I wrote her a letter and even that feels strange. But at least I’m no longer pretending she never was.


Chewing the Cud of Good

Good friends.

And coffee shops with Elvis lamps.

 

2 Comments

  1. Anna

    I’m grateful you had the opportunity to find the feeling your body had remembered for you, protected you when you weren’t ready to feel it at the time.
    Sounds a lot like what happens in a Rosen session. Whatever the supressed emotion might be, there’s also a feeling of freedom afterwards. And an understanding of why I have acted a certain way my whole life, and how I couldn’t have done anything differently.

    Reply
    • Jule Kucera

      Anna, I really like thinking about it that way, that my body remembered the feeling and protected me when I wasn’t ready to feel it. What a loving thing for a body to do.

      Reply

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