69
february 2016
yogajournal.com
TIFFANY CARONIA LIES on her back, fidgets for
five seconds, and then slips into Savasana—
palms up, legs ever so slightly externally rotated,
a gentle smile across her mouth. It’s a pose the
35-year-old vinyasa yoga teacher in Los Angeles
knows well, which is why it comes so naturally
to her here, on her acupuncturist’s table.
The fact that Caronia is able to quiet her
mind and drop any attachment to external
senses—the practice of pratyahara, the fifth limb
of Patanjali’s eight limbs of yoga—is one of the
reasons she experiences such great benefits from
her acupuncture sessions, says Caronia’s acu-
puncturist, Maria Villella, LAC, a vinyasa and
Ashtanga Yoga teacher in Los Angeles. “With
any healing modality, the more you’re able to put
yourself in a deeply relaxed state, the more bene-
fits you’ll receive,” says Villella. “I think it has
a lot to do with the mind-body connection we
develop on our yoga mats.”
Caronia says her trust in Villella is also key:
“I truly believe that what Maria does will help
me,” she says. There’s scientific proof Caronia is
on to something. Researchers are seeing time
and again that our expectations of healing play a
big role in the psychological and physical benefits
we experience. In one recent study published in
the journal Science Translational Medicine, scien-
tists looked at people with recurring migraine
headaches over the course of multiple attacks and
found that when docs told patients they had high
expectations that a treatment would work well,
it did—even if it was a sugar pill, and even when
the patients were told they were getting the
placebo. Other research has found that when
patients believe in the effectiveness of a therapy—
whether they get a vote of confidence from their
practitioners or not—it can stimulate real physio-
logical responses, including changes in heart rate,
blood pressure, and even chemical activity in the
brain that decreases pain, anxiety, and fatigue.
“This research is proof that there are a num-
ber of psychological factors that play a role in how
well a treatment works,” says Kristin Skotnes
Vikjord, a clinical psychologist and yoga teacher
in Amsterdam. “The bottom line is that if you
seek out treatment that you believe will work, it
has a better chance of working.” Gail Dubinsky,
MD, a physician and yoga teacher in Sebastopol,
California, adds that treatments that really reso-
nate with you have another benefit: It’s more
likely you’ll stick with them and stay compliant
with the other suggestions the practitioner offers.
Of course, there are other important factors to
consider when deciding which healing modality
will work best for you. For starters, you want to
be sure your choice is a safe option for your condi-
tion: You might do some research, talk to your
doctor, and reach out to others with your same
ailment to learn what helped them the most.
There’s also the convenience factor: It’s probably
not realistic to drive an hour each way for hydro-
therapy when there’s massage and reflexology in
your neighborhood.
From acupuncture and aromatherapy
to reiki and reflexology, you have
plenty of options when it comes to
integrative therapies. Yet choosing
the modalities that will offer the
most healing benefits for you
can be tricky. Follow this guide to
13 popular treatments to find your
alternative-medicine match.
ingPATH
STORY BY MEGHAN RABBITT
PHOTOGRAPHY BY THE VOORHES