By John Wilks,
from the book “The Bowen Technique - the inside story”
When Bowen therapists talk about a treatment allowing
the body to re-orient to an original ‘blueprint’ or
an organizing principal, the question might be asked
– what exactly is the body trying to orient to and when
and how did this original blueprint arise?

If
one looks carefully at the first few days of embryological
development, one notices that some very interesting
events occur. At the moment of conception, there is
a merging of the mother and father’s DNA to form a single
cell. After a moment of calm, there then occurs rapid
cell division which happens within the outer ‘shell’
of the embryo, the zona pellucida.
Around day 15, a highly significant event occurs. A
primal midline is established in the form of a furrow
in the developing embryo. This primal midline is called
the ‘primitive streak’ and it starts its uprising journey
towards our embryonic heart from around the level that
is later to become the coccyx and sacrum in the adult.

What
exactly initiates it is something of a mystery, but
it forms the basis around which the whole body organizes
itself.
For a start it establishes a reference line for front/back,
left/right and top/bottom. The primitive streak is referred
to as an ‘embryonic organizer’ as it establishes a basic
‘body plan’. Different levels of the primitive streak
determine the development of different areas of the
body. For example the ‘head centre’ goes on to form
the heart, brain and eyes, the middle centre, the gut
and trunk and the tail centre, the pelvic organs and
the neural tube.

What
is interesting for us as Bowen therapists is the importance
of the primitive streak in terms of developing bones,
muscles, organs and connective tissue.
Many Bowen therapists have remarked on the power of
the first 2 Bowen moves.
It is interesting to observe the sensations that start
arising in the client after just these 2 moves. Many
will have sensations of heat or an uprising force within
the spine. The fact that so many clients experience
an uprising force is interesting as their sensations
correspond exactly to embryonic development as though
those embryological forces are still present within
the adult body.

The
primitive streak will also form the neural tube which
then goes on to form the brain, spinal cord, the autonomic
nervous systems (sympathetic and parasympathetic) and
the neural crest.
Neural crest cells help form the inner membranes surrounding
the brain and spinal cord (particularly the pia and
arachnoid membranes) For example. In the coccyx procedure
we move directly over the dura, arachnoid and pia membranes
as they attach to the coccyx in the form of the filament
terminalis – the only place in the body where all the
3 layers of membrane come together.
Because of the coming together of these three layers
of dura, arachnoid and pia, this sends a very powerful
impulse up the spine towards the cranium.

Another
consequence of embryological development is the fact
that blood supply and nerve supply to tissue is inextricably
linked because of their derivation from the same embryological
tissue
It is well researched by Mae Wan Ho and others that
collagen holds memory and that it is highly adaptable
at registering new experience.
Is it possible that by stimulating the fascia we are
in some way allowing the body to access and re-orient
to these deep embryological ordering forces held in
the collagen at a cellular level in the body? From clinical
observation, something of this kind certainly seems
to be happening..