Zdrowie nigdy nie ginie. Anna Falkiewicz o lęku, traumie i terapii czaszkowo-krzyżowej | Soma Land 6
In this sixth episode of SOMA LAND, we welcome Anna Falkiewicz – a biodynamic craniosacral therapy therapist, translator, and organizer of Georgia Milne courses in Poland, a person who combines experience with bodywork, deep presence, and a psychological understanding of the human person. https://annafalkiewicz.pl This is a conversation about how therapy isn't always about fixing. Sometimes the most important thing is being, listening, trusting, and creating a space where the body can find its own path to health. Anna shares her personal story – the moment craniosacral therapy entered her life as a way to support her younger daughter. The phrase "Health never dies, it's only covered by experiences" became a source of hope for her and the beginning of a path that led her to work with others. We discuss the biodynamic approach to craniosacral therapy, fieldwork, feeling, subtle qualities, the breath of life, the long flow, presence, and trust in the process. The topic of Touch of Presence—the touch of presence according to Georgia Milne—also comes up, explaining why her courses are more than just learning techniques. They're an invitation to experience, to put aside overanalysis, and to connect with oneself in silence, one's body, and one's relationship with another. An important part of the conversation is working with people experiencing anxiety, depression, trauma, and difficult life moments. Anna discusses how craniosacral therapy can be a tremendous support, but it doesn't replace psychotherapy, psychiatry, or pharmacological treatment when needed. We emphasize that decisions regarding medications always rest with the doctor, and that bodywork can support the process of healing, regulation, and the return to resources. We also touch on Anna's research on the relationship between craniosacral therapy and anxiety disorders. We discuss the patient's subjective experience, which can be incredibly important in therapeutic practice: if a person feels more calm, more agency, more space within themselves, and a better quality of life, this is a real change. Even if it's not always immediately visible in an imaging study. We also discuss why not every therapist needs to work with every patient. Sometimes the greatest responsibility is referring a person to a psychotherapist, psychiatrist, physiotherapist, osteopath, or a therapist who works more structurally. In a biodynamic approach, the body is treated as a whole, and the therapist seeks health, not pathology. The idea isn't to push the process, but to support it. In our conversation, we also return to Georgia Milne's courses: embryology, support points, fluids and spaces, and navigation skills. These aren't courses about ready-made recipes, but about discovering your own path to quality, which can later come alive in the office. Anna emphasizes that subtle sensations, which we often ignore, can become very important information about ourselves and how we connect with others. The episode also touches on embryology and the idea that the entire body grows from a single cell. This changes the way we view the human being: not as a collection of parts, but as a living continuum of tissues, fluids, fascia, memory, and relationships. We talk about the body as a "second placenta," about the process of aging and decay, about the wisdom of the organism, and about how malleable, intelligent, and capable of change the body can be. This is a conversation about therapeutic humility, not overstepping the patient, respecting their readiness, and the right of the person to be exactly where they are. A beautiful phrase is used: we are "midwives of health." We are not the agents of the process. We can accompany, provide support, facilitate the transition, and help the body do what it is ready to do. This episode is for craniosacral therapists, osteopaths, physiotherapists, psychologists, psychotherapists, bodyworkers, and anyone who wants to understand biodynamics, the touch of presence, working with anxiety, resources, the nervous system, and Health with a capital H. Leave a comment: Can you trust your body when it asks not to act, but to stop? Subscribe to SOMA LAND and join further conversations about the body, therapy, presence, the nervous system, health, and the human being as a whole. Produced by Oneworld Media: https://www.oneworld.pl #czaszkowokrzyzowatherapy #biodynamics #touchofpresence #pracazcialem #ukladnerwowy

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