Energy Therapy: Healing for the Mind, Body, and Soul

Energy therapies use holistic practices to heal the mind, body, and spirit through balancing internal energy flow. Many of these therapies have been around for thousands of years in different cultures. 

Recently, there has been a shift to find physical and spiritual nourishment outside of Western medicine. Energy therapies can be helpful for healing many types of conditions, ailments, and personal issues.

Understanding Energy Healing

Energy healing, the foundational aspect of energy therapy, channels energy to and through the patient to restore their energy balance1. When something disrupts the natural flow of energy in your body, negative physical, mental, and spiritual effects arise. 

Each energy therapy takes a unique approach to aligning the energy in your body. Energy therapists may use their hands, needles, crystals, and more. For example, acupuncture uses thin needles to stimulate energy points and positively influence your flow of energy.

Exploring Subtle Energy Systems

The flow of energy, called Qi or Prana, is your vital life source that these therapies influence. 

Qi, a part of Chinese medicine, is energy that flows through a network of meridians (or pathways)2. When energy is disrupted, the meridians will be off balance. Tai chi, acupuncture, Reiki, and Qigoing support the flow of Qi and enhance well-being. Even rearranging your home to harmonize your energy, also known as Feng Shui, will help your Qi.

Indian culture calls Prana your fundamental life force, and chakras are central points in the body that help regulate Prana. Each chakra has specific physical, emotional, and spiritual aspects, and when a chakra is out of balance, so are certain aspects of your life. Practices such as meditation and breathwork, which are at the core of yoga, balance and optimize the flow of Prana within the body. 

An aura reading can also determine if your energy is flowing well. Your aura, a layer of colors vibrating from you that aura readers can see, shows your well-being and any blocks that need to be addressed2. You can then work with the facilitator, and other medical and mental health professionals, to make any changes to improve your health.

Types of Energy Therapy

While each energy therapy uses a different method to align your vital energy, they can all help you discover pain points and unlock a healthier you.

Acupuncture

During acupuncture sessions, an acupuncturist inserts thin needles on different meridians in the body to correct Qi flow. This practice could reduce lower back pain, arthritis, migraines, and nausea3. Research shows that acupuncture can be a great addition to other medically-based therapies, and in some cases it’s better at reducing symptoms than the medical alternative.

Reiki

Reiki practitioners use their hands to channel and direct Qi to promote well-being. Studies found that Reiki activates the parasympathetic nervous system4 (responsible for “rest and digest” functions5), making it a great complementary therapy for people who have chronic pain, cancer, and more. In fact, Reiki can reduce depression and anxiety and boost self-esteem, assisting in an illness’ rigorous treatment process.

Qigong

Qigong uses intentional breathing, relaxed movements, and meditation to balance Qi. Using this practice, people can improve their overall health, seeing cardiovascular and pulmonary benefits6. This boost of physical health can help the recovery process for chronic illnesses and cancer patients, as well. It can also provide benefits to just about anyone, boosting their immune systems and sleep cycles. 

Tai Chi

Tai chi utilizes elements of Qigong to channel Qi and bolster physical fitness through intentional, flowing movements. It’s a form of martial arts and could be described as “meditation in motion7.” This practice can help maintain strength, flexibility, and balance, making this ideal for chronic pain recovery. 

Tai chi can also serve as a preventative practice for younger, healthier populations. Maintaining muscle strength, joint health, and flexibility can reduce the risk of developing certain diseases8 like diabetes, heart disease, and dementia; however, even older patients with compromised health can see positive results from tai chi6.

Yoga 

Yoga uses physical postures, breathwork, and meditation to optimize the flow of Prana and harmonize your chakras. Different postures cultivate different energies, so you can move your body in a way that aligns with your current energetic needs. The goal of yoga is to bring greater awareness to your physical self, your breath, and your energy.

Practicing yoga not only increases physical strength and flexibility, but it also improves respiratory and cardiovascular health9. Yoga can alleviate stress, anxiety, depression, and chronic pain. It may improve sleep patterns, as well. This practice can benefit your overall quality of life.

Integrating Energy Therapy into Recovery

Although energy therapies are not a replacement for medical interventions, these practices can greatly facilitate your recovery and improve your quality of life. There has been a growing acceptance for energy therapies in the medical community, even some hospitals have started offering energy sessions on-site with trained practitioners.  

Your holistic recovery could look like attending 5 medical appointments per week and 2 Reiki sessions, as well. You can work with your care team to see which energy therapy you resonate with the most, and you can begin to incorporate mind, body, and spirit healing into your recovery.

Seeking an Energy Practitioner

Picking the right energy therapist who is properly trained and aligns with your goals can help you see more positive effects from these practices. 

First, check with your primary care practitioner or your medical specialist to ensure that energy therapy will complement your treatment plan. They also may be able to give you references to assist in your search.

Your energy therapist should have training and certifications in their respective practice. For example, acupuncturists usually have a masters or doctorate in acupuncture and Chinese medicine, and Reiki masters are trained up to level 3 (the highest level).

When you meet with your potential energy practitioner to see if they’re a fit, consider asking questions such as

  1. What does one of your sessions look like?
  2. How will you channel my flow of energy?
  3. How do you create a calm, healing environment? 
  4. Do you have experience working with issues similar to mine?
  5. What are the potential benefits? How many sessions do I need to attend before I start to see benefits?

Continue to have check-ins with your energy therapist throughout your sessions. Open communication can help you get the most out of your treatment goals. And of course, going into the sessions with an open mind will help your outcomes.

Self-Practice and Techniques

You can practice energy therapy principles in your daily life, even without professional training. 

You may practice meditation to become more self-aware and grounded in the present moment. During meditation, you can do breathing exercises such as box breathing (inhale for 4 seconds, hold for 4 seconds, exhale for 4 seconds, and hold for 4 seconds before inhaling again) to relax and feel connected to your body. You may also mentally visualize a calming scene, a moment where you felt loved, and things that make you happy during this practice.

You can dedicate just 10-15 minutes per day to energy therapy techniques such as these. Focusing on the connection between your mind, body, and spirit can help you create the balanced, healthy life you desire. Healing is accessible, it’s simply learning to access it within yourself.

Tai Chi for Addiction Recovery

Tai Chi is an ancient martial art. Today, you can also use it as a complementary therapy in addiction treatment. Like any other form of gentle exercise, it can help you stay physically healthy during recovery. What’s more, a growing body of evidence shows that Tai Chi can improve your mental health. Many rehabs offer Tai Chi to help clients reduce stress, practice mindfulness, and begin to heal the relationship between their minds and bodies. 

What is Tai Chi? 

Tai Chi began as a Chinese martial art.1 Over time, it’s grown into a type of mindful movement that promotes physical health. While it’s often taught to small groups, you can also practice Tai Chi on your own. 

Compared to some other martial arts, Tai Chi is gentle2 and non-combative. It combines slow movements with mindful breathing and meditation. In most classes, practitioners flow smoothly from one pose to the next instead of sparring with each other. To a casual observer, this type of movement can look a lot like dancing.

What Are the Physical Health Benefits of Tai Chi? 

Tai Chi is a highly accessible form of exercise. It’s safe for people of all ability levels,3 you can practice it anywhere, and its fluid movements improve strength and flexibility. For people in addiction recovery, some of Tai Chi’s physical effects are especially important. 

Decreases Blood Pressure

Consistently practicing Tai Chi can reduce your blood pressure.4 This makes it a powerful treatment for clients recovering from alcohol addiction, which is a risk factor for high blood pressure.5 As your body continues to heal, Tai Chi can help you find a new normal.

Improves Circulation

Data shows that practicing Tai Chi for at least a year greatly improves blood circulation.6 Cycling fresh blood and oxygen throughout the body keeps your brain healthy,7 your organs working smoothly, and your immune system strong. For those in recovery, this boost in circulation can help your body repair damage caused by long-term substance use. 

Relieves Chronic Pain

Tai Chi can alleviate chronic pain8 associated with several conditions, including fibromyalgia, arthritis, tension headaches, and osteoporosis. Because of the correlation between chronic pain and addiction,9 this is often important during recovery. 

In particular, data implies that chronic pain makes people more vulnerable to opioid addiction. If that’s your experience, you’ll learn safer ways to manage your pain during rehab. If you find Tai Chi helpful, it can become part of your ongoing plan of care. 

Reduces Stress

Tai Chi is more than a form of physical exercise. This mindfulness practice also improves mental health and relieves stress.10 And because stress has a direct impact on physical well-being,11 this can be extremely important in early recovery.

Without proper support, stress makes you more vulnerable to addiction.12 But sustainable, fulfilling outlets like Tai Chi help you manage stress in the long term. If you find it helpful, you can continue practicing this martial art long after you leave rehab.

How Does Tai Chi Help With Addiction?

Experts agree that Tai Chi can help with addiction recovery.13 It’s most effective as a complementary approach, alongside treatments like talk therapy or medication. 

Promotes Sleep

Good sleep is foundational to addiction recovery.14 Getting enough sleep regulates stress hormones and helps your body heal. However, many people with addiction also have insomnia or other sleep disorders. This is especially common during early recovery. 

Data shows that Tai Chi improves sleep15 habits, which can in turn improve cognitive function. It also boosts your energy levels, making it easier to participate in therapy. 

Reduces Impulsiveness and Cravings

Your desire to use drugs or drink may never entirely disappear. But in rehab, you’ll learn healthy ways to cope with cravings if and when they arise. Studies show that tai chi improves impulse control,16 which can help you maintain sobriety in every stage of recovery.

Because Tai Chi also reduces cravings,17 you experience fewer triggers. Researchers note that the spiritual aspects of Tai Chi are essential here. As one study explains, mindfulness empowers people in recovery to have “an aware reaction rather than an automatic response” to difficult situations.

Strengthens the Mind-Body Connection

Like other complementary therapies, Tai Chi strengthens the connection between your mind and body.18 And that mindfulness can help you resist the desire to take drugs or drink. You’ll learn to accept your feelings just as they are, instead of trying to fix or change them. This improved self-awareness can help you stay grounded even when you face triggers and other challenges.

Connects You With Community Support

Addiction can be isolating. Because Tai Chi is usually taught in small groups, it invites you to connect with your peers. And building community in rehab can be a very important part of healing. 

Over time, your peers in Tai Chi class can become a strong support network. According to one study, “tai chi may have a significant impact on social support19 as a result of the shared group experience and group motivation components.”

How to Find a Rehab That Incorporates Tai Chi Into Your Treatment Process

Tai Chi is a holistic approach to addiction recovery. This practice promotes mindfulness and general well being. In conjunction with traditional treatments, it can be a powerful way to work through the symptoms of addiction.


If you’re interested in supplementing your addiction recovery with Tai Chi classes, search for rehabs that offer Tai Chi to find the right center for your needs.


Frequently Asked Questions About Tai Chi for Addiction Recovery

How does Tai Chi help with addiction?

Tai Chi can help with addiction recovery as a complementary approach, alongside traditional treatments like talk therapy or medication. Tai Chi promotes good sleep, reduces impulsiveness, strengthens the mind-body connection, and connects people with community support. These benefits can improve overall mental and physical health and support long-term recovery from addiction.

What are the mental health benefits of Tai Chi?

Tai Chi is a form of mindfulness practice that can help you manage stress and improve your overall mental well-being. It can improve your cognitive function, while also reducing cravings that may arise in early recovery. Tai Chi can help you become more self-aware and better equipped to resist triggers and other challenges.

How can I find a rehab that incorporates Tai Chi into my treatment process?

If you’re interested in incorporating Tai Chi into your addiction recovery, search for rehabs that offer Tai Chi classes. These holistic practices can be a powerful way to work through addiction symptoms alongside clinical approaches.

Holistic Therapies in Drug and Alcohol Rehab

The use of holistic therapies in rehab is a highly debated topic. While some experts claim that alternative therapies are the missing piece of effective treatment, others say they lack scientific backing. Still, as modern addiction treatment progresses, more rehabs offer holistic therapy.

Here, we’ll take a look at what holistic therapy options are available, how they work and the research that speaks to their effectiveness in treating addiction.

What Are Holistic Therapies?

Holistic (also known as alternative, complementary or unconventional) therapies are designed to treat a person as a whole—body, mind and spirit. In rehabs, holistic therapies help address issues that both lead to and result from an addiction. Rather than targeting a specific issue, they’re designed to address your overall mental, physical and spiritual wellness.

Alternative treatments use mindfulness, spirituality and energy-related work to boost your health and well-being. Supporters of this approach see addiction as a symptom of broader unwellness. They also point out it’s equally important for the negative emotional and physical side effects of addiction to be treated, in addition to the addiction itself. Certain holistic therapies are commonly used in addiction treatment:

  • Meditation
  • Yoga, Tai Chi, Qi Gong, dance and other types of mindful movement
  • Acupuncture and acupressure
  • Massage
  • Reiki, crystals and other types of energy work
  • Herbal, Chinese or ayurvedic medicines
  • Homeopathy
  • Nutritional therapy

These therapies are designed to treat the underlying causes of addiction and promote more meaningful and longer-lasting healing. They also differ from conventional treatment in that they’re based on a more spiritual understanding of addiction.

Tai Chi
Picking up a healthy practice like Tai Chi helps maintain your wellness in recovery—and your sobriety, as a result.

Do Alternative Treatments Work for Addiction?

Measuring the effectiveness of addiction treatment in general is no easy task. This is even truer of holistic therapies, for a few reasons:

  • Holistic treatments are almost always used in combination with conventional methods like cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and medication. Alternative therapies enhance and support these traditional therapies, which makes it harder to measure the success of holistic methods alone.
  • Holistic therapies include a wide range of practices. The term “holistic therapies” covers a broad scope, so blanket statements about their effectiveness aren’t entirely accurate.
  • Each individual responds differently to different therapies. What works for you might not work for someone else, and vice versa.

The question, “Do holistic therapies work?” is, definitively speaking, unanswerable. But addiction experts do have some evidence of their effectiveness through clinical research.

What We Know About Alternative Therapy in Rehab

Below are some facts about the use of holistic treatments in rehab along with corresponding research for each:

Holistic Therapies Treat More Than Just Addiction

Unconventional treatments attempt to treat your well-being as an interconnected whole,1 rather than honing in on one aspect of your physical or mental health. Holistic measures address other common concerns:

  • Physical symptoms brought on by the addiction and/or withdrawal
  • Emotional imbalances at the root of your addiction
  • Nutritional deficiencies that create chemical imbalances in the brain
  • A lack of spiritual grounding, which can contribute to feelings of loneliness and meaninglessness

These are just some of the underlying issues that may be indirectly related to (but play a significant role in) your addiction.

Wellness Therapies in Rehab Increase Chances of Program Completion

Treatment centers that use holistic measures have better program-completion rates.2 A study by the academic journal Psychiatry Services found that better services in a rehab center and the client’s satisfaction levels were positively correlated to completion of the program. In other words, your comfort level in rehab is important when it comes to completing treatment. And of course, if you complete your treatment program, your likelihood of maintaining sobriety is higher.

Holistic Approaches Treat Trauma Connected With Addiction

The link between trauma and addiction has been well established. Whether your addiction brought trauma into your life or traumatic life experiences led you to addiction, the majority of addicts identify as having some form of trauma. Experts agree that healing trauma is an essential component of recovery. The impact of holistic therapies on trauma3 is quite definitive—if you struggle with trauma and are seeking help for an addiction, holistic treatment options could improve your chances of a lasting recovery.

Complementary Treatments Decrease Chances of Relapse

Once you’ve completed treatment, holistic therapies can help you prevent relapse. Specifically, one study found that mindfulness-based therapies successfully prevent relapse.4 Clinicians found that through meditation, recovering addicts were better able to identify potentially triggering scenarios and remain calm in stressful situations, which may have otherwise caused them to relapse. Receiving alternative treatments while in rehab can provide you with the necessary skills for a lasting recovery.

Holistic Treatments Combat the Stigma of Addiction

One of the greatest obstacles in both seeking treatment for addiction and maintaining recovery is stigma. Stigma often prevents people with addictions from seeking help and adds to the difficulty of staying sober. However, alternative treatments help people in recovery manage stigma more effectively.5 Creating feelings of inner peace and harmony better equips someone to handle the stigma that can come with addiction.

Women Respond Better to Alternative Therapy in Rehab

Studies show that alternative therapies are more effective in treating addiction in women6 than men. This trend may be partially attributed to the socialization of women to be more open to alternative approaches. Whatever the reason, if you’re a woman seeking treatment, it could benefit you to look for a rehab that gives you the option of holistic therapies to complement your core program.

Meditation holistic
Your comfort level in rehab is important when it comes to completing treatment—rehabs that employ holistic measures have better program-completion rates.

Benefits of Holistic Therapy

Although holistic therapy for addiction remains a debated issue among researchers and clinicians, many agree to the following benefits:

It’s natural. Alternative therapies use methods that are natural and don’t involve prescription drugs. While the use of medication can be a good treatment tool, it’s not necessary in all cases and if you prefer to avoid it, holistic measures may be right for you.

It restores your body’s equilibrium. Addiction wreaks havoc on your body’s inner balance. Oftentimes, addiction comes with other harmful habits, such as poor nutrition or sleeping. Holistic therapies can address these other imbalances, leading to overall improved health.

It develops lifelong healthy habits. Meditation and yoga are two examples of healthy practices that you may wish to continue after treatment. These go a long way in helping maintain your wellness in recovery—and your sobriety, as a result.

It treats the body, mind and spirit. Holistic methods treat the whole person by dealing with wellness concerns on multiple levels. By expanding treatment to various aspects of self, holistic therapies encourage a more complete sense of well-being.

Choosing a treatment center that offers holistic options gives you access to these extensive benefits, which you can take with you well beyond your time in rehab.

Wellness Programming at Rehabs

The decision to seek treatment isn’t an easy one to make. But many rehabs try to ensure your treatment journey is as comfortable and comprehensive as possible. And the best treatment centers don’t depend solely on holistic therapies; rather, they use alternative methods to complement evidence-based treatment.

With holistic therapies, you’re more likely to not only find peace in your experience, but also remain in the program when the process gets tough. While you do the hard work of getting sober and sorting through a painful past, alternative treatments make you more receptive to conventional therapy and uplift your overall state.

Compare rehabs offering holistic therapy with key information listed in one place, including price, insurance accepted, and conditions treated.


Frequently Asked Questions About Holistic Therapies in Rehab

Are holistic therapies effective?

Clinical research suggests holistic therapies positively impact recovery: 

• They treat underlying trauma related to addiction. 
• Rehabs with holistic therapies often have higher completion rates.
Mindfulness therapies can prevent relapse.

Can holistic therapies treat addiction?

Yes. Many rehabs now use holistic treatments alongside conventional therapies. Holistic therapies can address aspects of addiction that talk therapy doesn’t, and make your treatment experience more enjoyable.

What types of holistic therapy are used to treat addiction?

While a wide range of practices fall under the term “holistic,” certain therapies are more commonly seen in rehab:

• Meditation
Yoga
• Massage
Nutritional therapy