REIKI
Strictly Secular?
"Volunteers at the Reiki clinic [at
the Tuscon Medical Center] have found it helpful not to use metaphysical terms when
talking to patients or to hospital staff about Reiki. Terms like aura, chakras, energy
bodies, etc. tend to cause confusion and mistrust"William Lee Rand
A few months ago a Christian who worked at
Portsmouth Regional Hospital (PRH) in Portsmouth NH contacted me about a concern she and
other Christian staff workers shared. The hospital offers Reiki to patients. Further, it
offers Reiki without any mention that it is a religious practice. I was allowed to speak
to a gathering of staff at PRH to present the case that it was indeed grounded in
religion. They were not convinced. There were three Reiki Practitioners present, one of
which was a "Reiki Master." Later, a Portsmouth Hospital spokesperson stated in
a letter to me that "our presentation and use of this practice to all patients is only
as a secular relaxation technique."
PRH is not alone. Reiki treatments can be
found in many hospitals, such as the Tucson Medical Center, Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat
Hospital, Memorial Sloane Kettering Hospital, Columbia Presbyterian Medical Hospital in
New York, and California Pacific Medical Center. Is it simply a secular relaxation
technique?
What Is Reiki?
Reiki means "Universal Life
Force" (Portsmouth Regional Hospital, a brochure titled Reiki). It was
discovered by Mikao Usui in the mid-1800s.
How Does It Work?
This "ancient art of healing" is accomplished
through the "laying on of hands" (ibid.). It is based on the premise that there
is a "Universal Life Force" (Reiki) that permeates and animates all things. We
have this Universal Life Force in us. The brochure from PRH stated that this Life force is
known by various names in different cultures in Japan as Ki, in India as Prana, in
China as Chi, and in Western traditions as Spirit. Sometimes the Universal Life Force
becomes unbalanced, causing illnesses of various kinds.
Chakras are spiritual energy centers
existing throughout the body. There are seven total chakras, and each has a list of body
organs with which they are associated. The patient tells the Reiki Practitioner what the
illness is, the Practitioner then lays her/his hands on the patient, thereby "adding
more energy to our life force " (PRH brochure). This brings balance to
the Universal Life Force in the patient, restoring health.