A holistic perspective sees health as a dynamic state of balance with considerable resilience in the overall system. A healthy person can withstand a certain amount of stress and bounce back. This is because the human body’s ability to heal includes various self-regulating mechanisms that maintain overall balance, which is known as homeostasis.
However, after experiencing sudden, intense stress or moderate stress that is constant over a period of time, the body’s ability to regulate itself becomes compromised and health declines, slowly or not so slowly. Stress causes the body to lose its ability to rebalance, to restore homeostasis.
Unless they are addressed, the stresses of everyday life—environmental, emotional, physical, financial, social etc.—can combine with an individual’s genetic predispositions and result in declining health and well-being.
At the simplest, most obvious level, it appears that Reiki treatment helps lessen the impact of stress, releasing tension from the entire system. Not only does the person move toward his or her own unique balance in body, mind and spirit, but also, depending on the level of physical health when Reiki treatment begins, the body’s own healing mechanisms often begin functioning more effectively.
What is Reiki doing?
How exactly does Reiki release tension and help the body heal? That question has yet to be answered. Although there is increasing research evidence documenting the effects of Reiki treatment (such as lowered heart rate, blood pressure, and stress hormones; increased immune strength), we have only broad theories as to what causes these effects or the pathways through which the healing occurs.
The multileveled, rapid response to Reiki suggests a complex process that engages many body systems, simultaneously or in quick succession, shifting the body from domination by the “fight or flight” (stress) response to the relaxation response. (For more information on these responses, see the Mind-Body Therapies section.) Some researchers theorize that Reiki’s physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual healing effect is triggered on a subphysical level, perhaps in what science refers to as the biofield.
What is the biofield?
The biofield is the term medical science has adopted for the intricately layered vibrational energy field that is said to surround and interpenetrate the physical body. The biofield is extremely subtle and there is as yet no conventional scientific technology that can document its existence or otherwise study it directly. However, for thousands of years, traditional, indigenous, prescientific medical systems have recognized a balanced, evenly pulsing biofield as the foundation of health and well-being, and seen any disruption of this balance as the beginning of illness.

The healing traditions of indigenous cultures around the world use vibration to restore balance through ceremonial drumming, through instruments such as the didgeridoo and the tamboura, and through chanting, overtoning, and humming. Moreover, the therapeutic value of sound and music is increasingly supported by science. Perhaps Reiki’s benefits occur through the same vibrational mechanism, a process which likely involves increasing coherence and decreasing dissonance in the system.
One theory is that the Reiki practitioner’s hands carry the energetic vibrations of the recipient’s wellness. The effect of Reiki treatment could be seen as a shift in attention in which the recipient becomes aware of the wellness that exists deep within his or her being regardless the current level of health. Reiki treatment could then be understood as entraining the recipient back to health in a process similar to the way grandfather clocks in the same room self-adjust to the rhythm of the dominant clock, or in the way we relax when in the presence of someone who is deeply peaceful. Reiki seems to connect the practitioner with an inner source of peace no matter how he or she feels in the moment.
Many therapies aim to restore balance in the biofield—acupuncture, qigong, shiatsu, and yoga/pranayama to name a few. Reiki appears to be the subtlest of these therapies, balancing the recipient through subtle Reiki vibrations rather than through manipulation or even the gentlest force. It is also possible that Reiki, which some practitioners consider more akin to meditation than to energy therapies, does not originate in the biofield, but rather arises from an even subtler source: what physicists have termed the unified field.
References/Further Reading
Becker, RO. (1990). Cross Currents: The promise of electromedicine, the perils of electropollution. Los Angeles, CA: Tarcher.
Becker, RO. Selden, G. (1998). The Body Electric: Electromagnetism and the Foundation of Life. New York, NY: Harper.
Gaynor, ML. (1999). Sounds of Healing. New York, NY: Broadway Books.
Gerber, R. (1996). Vibrational Medicine: New Choices for Healing Ourselves. Rochester, VT: Bear & Co.
Goldman, J. (1992). Healing Sounds. Rochester, VT: Healing Arts Press.
Horrigan, B. (2003). Reiki Vibrational Healing. Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine. 9(4):74-83.
McEwen, B., Lasley, EN. (2004). The End of Stress As We Know It. New York, NY: The Dana Press.
Moyers, B. (1993). Healing and the Mind. New York, NY: Broadway Books.
National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM). (2006). Energy Medicine: An overview. Retrieved on March 23, 2007 from http://nccam.nih.gov/health/backgrounds/energymed.htm.
Takata, H. First Person: Mrs. Takata Tells her Story: Cause and Effect. Reiki Magazine International. 3 (1):8.
Expert Contributor: Pamela Miles, Reiki Master
Reviewed by: Deborah Ringdahl, RN, MS, CNM, Reiki Master
Date: April, 2007
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