The Munyer Method™
A Path of Healing
Four Body Trigger Point Release
by Arthur Munyer & Robert Weston
Chapter 1: An Introduction to the Munyer Method™
Arthur Munyer/Shambho sits directly in front of a client. They are both in identical Ikea chairs, only Arthur’s has a sheepskin draped over it. Their knees are nearly touching. They are in the studio/sun porch of Arthur’s home in Carmel, California. The room has windows all around, revealing a lush, tree lined back yard. Sunlight pours into the room, refracted into sparkling diamonds by a hanging crystal. There is a picture on the wall of a pair of hands holding a newborn infant. There are several ‘altars’ around the room with various icons: statues, crystals, pictures of spiritual teachers.
Fred (not his real name) has come to Arthur for trigger point massage
to address a chronic neck stiffness and pain he has had now for nearly
10 years. He has sought almost every kind of remedy for this condition
you can imagine: deep tissue massage, chiropractic, physical therapy,
stretch exercise, electro contractions, magnets, essential oils, psychotherapy,
antibiotics, cortisone, and supplements galore. All have helped, to a
degree or temporarily, but his range of motion is still 30% restricted
and the pain is acute. Arthur is his latest effort. A call to the local
massage school asking for a referral to a trigger point masseur yielded
only one name: Arthur Munyer.
Arthur, also known as Shambho, a Hindu word meaning “abode of bliss”,
is a senior instructor of Esalen® Massage and Trigger Point Release.
He has practiced and taught bodywork, spiritual, and emotional release
disciplines at Esalen® Institute in Big Sur and other locations in
the US, South America, Europe, and Bali for over 30 years. He is also
a certified Sivananda Yoga instructor. He has developed his own unique
somatic healing practice which he calls “The Munyer Method™.”
Fred and Arthur talk. In fact, on this first visit, they talk the entire
session. There is a massage table right beside them, and Fred naturally
expected to spend most of his time on it. But Arthur has other ideas.
He wants Fred to tell him about the best thing that has happened to him
in the past 24 hours. Fred wants to tell him about his neck, but Arthur
doesn’t seem all that interested. Instead, he asks about what has
given him the most enjoyment during the past day. Fred thinks about it,
describes a moment of walking through the Point Lobos National Reserve
just up the road. He describes the natural beauty of the place, the freshness
of the air, the dramatic joining of ocean and land, the unique geology,
the seals, otters and sea lions. He begins to relax. Arthur notices that
Fred is shaking his legs.
“Slow that down,” he says, and then leads Fred into a wide
ranging meditative exploration of his body and the images, thoughts,
and feelings that come up as he moves his legs slower and slower, finally
in micro movements that almost don’t look like movements at all.
Fred’s mind wanders all over the place, from some image from childhood
to memories of a painful divorce over 40 years ago, feelings about his
mother, his relationship with his current wife, unemployment, fatigue,
depression and neck pain. Throughout the journey Arthur is watching Fred
closely, listening, listening not so much to the story as for something
in his voice or perhaps in his body movements. Sometimes they sit without
either of them speaking for a long time. Arthur asks Fred to check in
with his body at intervals. “Are you feeling anything in your hands?
Notice any heat on your face?”
After a while he asks Fred to look around the room. He had invited him
to do this the moment they sat down. “Just take a look around.” he
says. “What do you notice?” Fred had commented on the spider
webs outside the windows, the greenness of the shrubbery, and the warmth
of the sunlight. Now Arthur asks “Do you notice anything different?” Fred
scan the room again, and sure enough, he says, things look brighter,
greener, more 3-D. He sees a picture he hadn’t seen earlier. “How
is your neck feeling?” Arthur asks.
Fred twists his neck around, back and forth. “About the same,” he
says.
“We’ll have to work on that,” Arthur says. And eventually
they do. Intensely. Arthur is indeed a trigger point masseur. He eventually
uses various body-work techniques to release and move Fred’s neck
in ways it hasn’t moved in years. But they always start the same:
Scan the room. Tell me about something good that happened to you today.
Notice an unconscious gesture or movement. Slow it down. Follow your
thoughts, feelings, images inside your self. Notice repetitive stories.
Allow feelings to come up and be expressed. Come back to present time.
Reorient to the room. And then, if asked for, table work. Deep, strong
table work.
Over time, Fred begins to comprehend what Arthur is doing. “The
Munyer Method™,” is an integrated four body (physical, mental,
emotional, and spiritual) therapeutic process for the healing of trauma
through the movement and release of trapped or compacted energy. Fred
had thought that he was signing up for “Trigger Point Massage,” a
method developed by Janet Travell in the 1960’s which involved
a combination of pressure and injection to unlock trigger points of contraction
within the muscles and tissues of the physical body. Arthur doesn’t
use injections. And though he knows the anatomy as well as any therapist
Fred has worked with, his interest is that of true yoga, an integration
of body, mind and spirit.
Of the four bodies, the Physical is the most obvious. It is where most
massage begins and ends. There are the muscles, tendons, cartilage, fascia,
bones, lymph and blood. According to Arthur and a great many other somatic
therapists and teachers, the physical body registers traumas of all sorts
and, if the traumas are severe or sustained, retains physical symptoms.
The trauma may be physical, including birth itself, but it may be psychological,
emotional or spiritual as well. Life affords manifold opportunities for
trauma. From the original one of birth, through early childhood confusions
and possible abuses, into adolescent emotional distresses, relationship
failures, vocational frustrations, and the occasional fall off a log
or getting a little whiplash from a rear ender. Each of these, if severe
enough or endured long enough, will likely result in pathological symptoms,
ranging from migraine headaches to cancer. Stiff necks are a common trauma
consequence. Whether the trauma was whiplash or computer freeze, necks
appear to be highly vulnerable. Lower back is another hot site.
The Emotional Body is home of our feelings. According to Arthur, there
are really only five feelings: Love, Joy, Sadness, Fear, and Anger. All
the others are sub sets or aspects of these five. We are, he maintains,
in one or another of these states, or a combination of them, all the
time. An appropriate response to the question “How are you feeling?” would
be: “I’m feeling a lot of love, and some sadness.” Or, “I’m
experiencing a lot of anger right now.” Or, “I’m really
sad.” Or, “I’m feeling afraid of …..” Or,
hopefully, “I’m really joyful right now.” Of course
we usually prefer to respond with the conventional “I’m good.
How’re you?”
Love is the feeling of enjoyment and attraction to someone or thing.
There will be gratitude and perhaps some ‘longing after’ in
love. Desire, lust, is an elemental manifestation of love. It is clearly
a positive feeling, an affirmative state of being, though it is possible
to become a ‘love junkie’ and codependent. It is related
to Joy, which is simply the expression of delight in or enjoyment of
some one, some thing, or simply life itself. Sadness ranges from despair
and depression on the one hand, to the heartfelt reaction to a situation
or story or song that touches us with its tragedy or poignancy. Anger
is a rousing energy that responds to situations we find unjust or irritating.
It can be healthy and motivational, or can be pathological when it becomes
locked into hatred, prejudice or a passion for vengeance. Fear is what
eats us up as worry, gives us panic attacks, and free floating anxiety,
and turns us into cowards and wimps. When positive it serves as caution.
The Mental Body is the home of our stories and the source of our choices.
It is the house of analysis and talk. Most of us are more comfortable
in this body than any of the others. We are happy to talk endlessly about
our opinions, experiences, hopes, desires, plans and catastrophes. Much
psychotherapy deals exclusively with this body, under the impression
that understanding something will lead to healing. Not necessarily so,
according to Arthur. He points out how easy it is for us to get stuck
in our soap operas and life dramas, and how telling the story over and
over may bring some relief but it may also reinforce the trauma unless
there is a fundamental energy release. We can, Arthur insists, make choices
in the Mental Body that will definitely affect our sense of being. It
is here that we can take control of our use of language, whether in self-talk
or conversation. Contradicting the negative, critical, put-down of most
self talk can shift our experience. Taking responsibility for our condition
through “I” statements instead of projections and blame can
lead to empowerment: “I need or want you to” vs. “You
ought to;” or, “I feel anger” vs. “You make me
angry.”
The Spiritual Body is where we experience the realities of bliss, cosmic or agape love, peace, and enlightenment. This is the realm of our specific religious and spiritual practices and commitments. It can be the locus of dogma and fundamentalism, or the airy fairy platitudes of pop spirituality. At its best, the Spiritual Body is an experience of presence, consciousness in the now, and unattached love.
The point of all this, according to the Munyer Method™, is that in a “natural,” undamaged state, energy flows in and through all four of these bodies all the time. When trauma occurs, however, instead of a ‘natural’ discharge of energy, in most humans there is a blockage, a compaction of energy in one or more of the four bodies. We get stuck. Stuck physically, mentally, emotionally or spiritually, and usually in all four domains. And so we do not heal. We do not recover from the ‘slings and arrows of outrageous fortune’ that Hamlet complained of so bitterly and which we all know to some degree or other. Symptoms appear: stiff necks, depression, indecision, despair, migraine headaches, diabetes, cancer, and the addictions, prescribed and otherwise, which are supposed to kill the pain. What is needed is a way to access the compacted energy, whatever body it is in, release it, and allow discharge and expression. Hence, The Munyer Method™.
The method is an original integration of therapies and practices ranging from hatha yoga, Esalen® Massage, Rolfing, Feldenkrais and the Alexander Method, to Gestalt psychology (Fritz Perls), trauma therapy (Peter Levine), and meditation and mindfulness practices. The context of the method is Shivananda Yoga and the spiritual teachings of various spiritual traditions, articulated profoundly in the work of Eckhart Tolle. It is a method that has evolved over thirty years.
This book provides the reader with a practical manual of this unique four body integrated healing method, a practice that has application for body workers, therapists of all stripes, and the layperson who is looking for a guide through the maze of healing modalities that are out there. A Path of Healing: Four Body Trigger Point Release is primarily a reference guide for body work practitioners who are interested in moving beyond physical manipulation into release in any of the four bodies. It is based on 30 years of practice and teaching others how to accomplish this work. Join Fred and others as they journey with Arthur/Shambho on a path of healing.
• Subsequent chapters describe and illustrate bodywork, gestalt
practices, and meditation techniques as applied to the Four Bodies to
achieve release and healing.
• Content to be drawn from current manuals including gestalt stories,
case studies, workshop examples, testimonials, meditations, and theoretical
background as needed.
• Material to be organized as a manual, going “body by body,” providing
techniques, tools and guidance, and illustrated by several “fictional” -
but reality based-- case studies that demonstrate the method in an integrated
fashion.
• Subsequent chapters describe and illustrate bodywork, gestalt
practices, and meditation techniques as applied to the Four Bodies to
achieve release and healing.
• Content to be drawn from current manuals including gestalt stories,
case studies, workshop examples, testimonials, meditations, and theoretical
background as needed.
• Material to be organized as a manual, going “body by body,” providing
techniques, tools and guidance, and illustrated by several “fictional” -
but reality based-- case studies that demonstrate the method in an integrated
fashion.

