About the Author
Lynne Booth, BA, BRCP, MIIR (regd), ART (regd) HONS, MAR, began studying reflexology
ten years ago and went on to train with the International Institute of Reflexology
(orginal Ingham method). She has a private practice and also runs a reflexology clinic at
a 200-resident St Monica Home in Bristol. The research, development of VRT and the small
medical trial were conducted at the Home. She has presented VRT at conferences and she and
VRT appointed tutors have taught VRT courses in the UK and internationally to 1,800
qualified reflexologists. She has a special interest in arthritis, sports injuries and
stress-related problems. In 1998, Lynne was awarded an ART (advanced reflexology
techniques) fellowship for services to reflexology. At present she is developing and
writing up specialized VRT methods on the weight-bearing hands.
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On first
inspection this technique appears to negate the basic tenets of reflexology, as the main
collection of plantar reflexes is no longer accessible to the therapist when the client is
standing. However, research indicates not only that all reflexes can be accessed through
the dorsum but that the body is more responsive to a healing and energetic stimulation
when treated briefly in a standing position. It has been suggested that VRT can reach
deeper, possibly new, reflexes, allowing homeostasis or balance to be achieved in a
shorter time.
Over the past six years I have developed this simple but profound
form of reflexology, which is used with, and complements, conventional treatments but has
also achieved results for numerous practitioners in less than five minutes. Most VRT
techniques can also be successfully used in reclining, conventional reflexology treatments
where the results are more gentle and subtle.
I discovered the benefits of vertical reflexology when working
with chronically sick residents in my weekly clinic at the St Monica Trust nursing home,
Bristol, which houses 200 elderly people. In a small medically-approved VRT trial, over
60% of the chronically ill residents improved within seven weeks and their progress was
maintained.
Three VRT reflexes
worked simultaneously
Since 1998, over 1,800 qualified reflexologists have
attended VRT courses in the UK and Europe, and feedback shows there is wide application
for shortened VRT/conventional reflexology treatments both in the workplace as well as
hospices, sports teams and elsewhere. Effective self-help VRT on the hands and feet is one
of the key elements, both preventative and curative, for reflexologists, their patients
and family and friends.
The first VRT treatments were directed towards orthopaedic
problems only, and these conditions usually have the quickest response to VRT. But, within
months of using this technique, I became aware that all conditions could benefit and I
subsequently developed other techniques that include synergistic reflexology (SR), where
the hand and foot are worked simultaneously to increase the stimulation of the reflexes.
Further developments include working three reflexes at once in various combinations on the
feet and hands. These techniques, incorporating the new zonal trigger reflexes situated on
the ankles, are particularly relevant for longstanding and intransigent problems. Later
developments include precise nail-working where the toe and finger nails are worked in
conjunction with the new set of dorsal reflexes.

Self-help VRT
The absolute rule with VRT is not to overwork the
reflexes, and a maximum of five minutes standing is ample to achieve good results.
Sometimes immediate improvement is observed with only three minutes of VRT at the
beginning and/or end of a conventional reflexology treatment. The experienced
reflexologist, when using VRT, will be immediately aware of a different feel
to the familiar reflex points and will soon learn to interpret and clear areas of
congestion, often with greater clarity and speed than before. The client will also observe
that the feet feel much more tender when worked in a weight-bearing position, and the
therapist should be aware of this factor and decrease the pressure accordingly. Weekly
treatments produce good results and a maximum of two sessions per week, in chronic cases,
is recommended as the clients body needs time to adjust. Acute cases respond well to
daily treatments, where possible, and the extremely responsive weight-bearing self-help on
the hands and feet can be used several times daily on demand.
Background to the
Discovery of VRT
All reflexologists are aware of the difficulty of treating disabled people in
wheelchairs or who wear callipers. Often it is impossible to work the reflexes on the sole
of the foot for long because the clients leg is at a painful angle. Out of sheer
necessity I began to work the top of the feet as they rested on the wheelchair supports
and gradually became aware that wheelchair-bound clients responded well to this form of
reflexology, especially orthopaedic cases. I often used to ask them to press downwards
with their feet as I could then penetrate deeper into the reflexes. I began mapping out
new or deeper reflexes on the feet but the concept of VRT was only formalized after the
following incident:
A 74- year-old woman was injured in an accident and had very
limited mobility as she was too frail to undergo a hip replacement operation due to
chronic angina. She told me her right leg and hip were in great pain, so I knelt down and
worked the hip, leg, spine and pelvic reflexes for no more than 90 seconds, while she
remained standing. Ten minutes later, after I had left, she had an acute pain in her right
hip followed by soreness and tingling which lasted approximately 30 minutes. Her hip was
then much less painful and by the next day she could move her foot and leg higher than she
had done for months. The next day I visited her to find her holding on to her Zimmer frame
and rather recklessly lifting and swinging her leg to demonstrate her new-found mobility!
I realized at once that the missing link to my research was that the feet had to be fully
weight-bearing for the reflexes to become so receptive. Within ten weeks she had regained
full mobility. Six years later she is still mobile and flexible despite her
consultants prognosis that she would be wheelchair-bound in 18 months.
Following the womans recovery, which was monitored by the
medical staff at the nursing home, I used reflexology on all my clients standing
feet with great success. I immediately began teaching these basic VRT techniques to
colleagues and they achieved similar extraordinary results. In 1997, I conducted a small
medically-approved and monitored trial on eight chronically sick geriatric residents in
the nursing home. Although multiple pathologies were present, the criterion was to measure
decrease in pain and increase in mobility regardless of the medical history.
Reflexologists do not diagnose specific illness but can treat specific conditions in a
holistic manner, enabling the body to achieve self-healing in a shorter space of time.
Over a seven-week period comprising one fifteen-minute VRT/conventional reflexology
treatment per week, over 60% of the participants were found to have more mobility and a
decrease in pain. Two months later, their improved status was constant. In two trial cases
the results were exceptional.
Trial Results
A 61-year-old woman was submitted because of her knee
problems but also had an excruciating deep pain in her left groin that would cause her to
cry out when she moved. At the end of the trial she was virtually pain free after many
months of discomfort in her groin, although her knee failed to respond. Another person
began walking around the room for the first time in a year and experienced a cessation in
an overall soreness of the skin and depression. Most reported better sleep and
less pain and one reported no temper explosions for seven weeks, which, as
they occurred on a weekly basis, was apparently something of a record! By the time the
trial was concluded there was already no doubt among myself, the medical staff and my
colleagues that VRT was not only a powerful new form of reflexology for orthopaedic
problems but that it was an holistic technique that helped stimulate the entire body
mechanism.
Hypothesis
How Vertical Reflex Therapy Works
It rapidly became obvious to me that, by treating the
tops of the feet, the zones and therefore the reflexes were being accessed in a
three-dimensional mode. Clients with a variety of non-orthopaedic ailments were responding
positively, although, in the brief five-minute treatments, the conventional reflexes such
as the stomach, liver or colon were not being worked directly. Instead, the same plantar
reflexes were being accessed vertically from the dorsum.
Neutrality
I propose that VRT puts the body into a neutral state
where the long-term legacy of strain, tension, degeneration or scar tissue in its systems
is bypassed to allow direct access to the original problem. For example, this would
explain some of the recorded VRT case studies where the body has made an almost
instantaneous response, such as when a stiff arm or leg becomes mobile after a long period
of inactivity. It is rewarding if a shoulder frees up in a VRT workshop, as the
reflexologists are made aware of the power of the therapy as well as the speed in which
the body can respond. A word of caution is appropriate as therapists and clients are often
eager to show off their new-found mobility and keep stretching or moving their arm, leg or
neck to show the increased range of movement. Do not over-exercise initially, as the
muscles, ligaments, vertebrae and blood supply, etc., to the area need time and
consideration so they can gently continue the healing response.
The Standing Body
is in a Position of Vitality
My theory is that the upright body appears to be in a
position of increased vitality when it is weight bearing, as the muscles are taut
allowing the reflexes to become much more responsive. There is a positive pressure on the
skeletal bones, and the heart is pumping oxygenated blood to the organs, which, in a
standing position, will be less impacted by bad posture. In a more esoteric sense, it has
been suggested that the feet are also earthed to the ground in a way that appears to give
a more energetic response.
The Zones A
Three-dimensional Model
VRT appears to activate the ten zones in an
unprecedented way. I believe that the zones themselves can become congested and VRT can
recharge and clear these invisible energy lines thus accelerating the healing processes.
The reflexology model states that there are invisible energetic lines between the reflexes
on the feet and hands and every part of the body, and that stimulation of a certain reflex
sends an energetic impulse to a particular organ or gland. With VRT there appears to be an
unprecedented surge of energy and, instead of the stimulation of individual reflexes, the
entire zone is more receptive.
The newly discovered zonal triggers (ZTs) are deep ankle reflexes
that play an important role in activating the zones extremely quickly so that the body is
more receptive to healing. There seems to be a faster and more direct line of
communication between the reflexes and the parts of the body when the feet are weight
bearing. Not only does the stimulation become more powerful in reaching an affected part,
but congestion in another part of the body can be quickly overridden. Many people report a
rush of warmth or energy as they experience VRT, followed by mild tingling sensations as
the body makes numerous adjustments to achieve homeostasis or balance in a shorter space
of time.

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1.
Zonal Triggers
2. Fallopian tubes/ seminal vesicles/ vas deferens/ groin/ lympahtic / helper diaphragm/
heart
4. Colon
5. Small intestine
8. Appendix/ ileocecal valve
9. Knee
10. Elbow
11. Kidney
12 Helper lateral digestive reflexes
13. Liver
14. Gall bladder
17. Stomach
18. Adrenals
19. Duodenum
20 Diaphragm
21. Solar plexus
24. Shoulder
25. Chest/ lung/ breast |
26.
Trachea/ oesophagus/ bronchial tubes
28. Thyroid/ parathyroid
30. Lymphatics
31. Eyes
32 Ears/ eustachian tube
33. Pituitary/ pineal/ hypothalamus
35. Brain/ skull
37. Helper sinuses/ teeth
38. Sinuses/ brain/ skull
40. Helper ovary/ testes
42. Helper lower back/ sciatic/ rectum/ colon/ uterus
44. Hip/ sacro-ileac joint
45. Leg
47. Hip/ Pelvic area
48. Helper lateral spine
50. Larynx/ vocal cords |
Figure 1:
Three-dimensional lateral view of right foot and layers of VRT Dorsal Reflexes
The cross-section of the foot shown in Figure 1 illustrates
the various layers of reflexes that can be easily accessed when the feet are weight
bearing. By pressing reflexes on the dorsum one can access four layers of reflexes at
once:
 | the traditional dorsal reflexes and new VRT reflexes and zonal triggers; |
 | the layer of reflexes connected with the emotional system; |
 | the bodys catalogue of past injuries and degeneration; and |
 | the traditional plantar reflexes. |
Advances and
Variations in VRT
Over the years I have developed many optional advanced
techniques such as linking neural pathway reflexes to two other reflexes on the feet. The
diaphragm rocking (DR) techniques of the reclining foot are deeply relaxing and profound
movements that I originally developed for insomnia to help re-set the body clock. I felt
that it could probably help balance and correct the body when coupled with VRT and this
has proved to be the case. This gentle specific technique appears to prioritize the
bodys needs and pumps energy to the area most needed. For example, a reflexologist
may treat the lower lumbar reflexes as lower backache has been presented by the client.
However, when the rocking technique is introduced half-way through a treatment, the person
treated may report that they suddenly have a feeling of warmth in the neck or upper
thoracic area which would indicate that the original cause of the problem was not in the
lower back. DR has a specific application in the treatment of ME, stress-related problems
and is particularly helpful in the treatment of alcohol and drug abuse especially at the
post-detox stage.
Knuckle dusting is another newer technique where the
fist is gently twisted over all the reflexes on the top of the foot, and it is one of the
most effective techniques. It is only applied for about 15 seconds per foot and appears to
help conditions as diverse as asthma and depression.
VRT nail-working is a new and effective technique
worked precisely but lightly, nail to nail, as if mapping out a tiny grid system. It
appears to tap into the inherent pressure on all the reflexes situated under the nails,
especially the thumb and big toe nail which cover the brain and part of the central
nervous system reflexes.

The VRT 'Pituitary
Pinch'
Reflexology in the
Workplace
Reflexology is increasingly becoming integrated into
the workplace with therapists holding clinics in many of the high street stores and at
commercial firms such as insurance companies. Some hospitals and hospices are realizing
the benefits of reflexology for their staff as well as patients. VRT has a particular part
to play in this field as the accelerated healing techniques mean that three people can be
treated in an hour with Complete VRT instead of one or two. Complete VRT is a
fully comprehensive reflexology treatment of 20 minutes duration, which incorporates
a few minutes of VRT techniques either side of conventional reflexology and relaxation
techniques. I still recommend that a full 45-60 minutes of reflexology/VRT is the
preferred option, as the client is able to experience a longer period of rest and
treatment, as well as a precise and professional conventional treatment. The accelerated
response of VRT offers therapists an extremely useful tool to treat more people in a
shorter space of time and is especially suitable for the elderly, chronically ill and
young children. There is also a wide application for the use of VRT in the fields of
sport, music, theatre and dance, and commerce, as well as in professions such as the
police.
Case Studies
Case Study 1: Orthopaedic
Nicky was an extremely agile fifteen-year-old schoolgirl who
excelled in acrobatics. A week before I saw her she had landed awkwardly after sliding
down a rope and had hurt her back. The lower lumbar area was extremely tender and she
experienced a sharp pain whenever she leaned backwards. I briefly worked her feet with the
five-minute Basic VRT and found the spinal reflexes (around L1 and L2) extremely tender on
both feet. I worked synergistically on the hip reflexes on her hands and feet and then
found the zonal trigger for the lumbar area on her ankle. I asked her to sit on a chair,
placed both feet on my lap and gave her a couple of minutes of gentle diaphragm rocking on
each foot. Half way through treating the second foot she experienced a sharp click in her
upper thoracic spine, between her shoulder blades. When she stood up, a minute later, her
back felt free and she could bend in all directions with no further pain. This example
illustrates the important role that diaphragm rocking can play in every treatment, whether
it is part of VRT or conventional reflexology. The specialized rocking prioritizes and
pumps energy to the area the body needs it most. In other words, I treated both feet with
VRT and concentrated on Nickys painful lower spinal reflexes. But the diaphragm
rocking allowed the body to select exactly which part of the spine needed correcting and
obviously the upper thoracic area had become misaligned as it tried to compensate for the
lower back problem. Once the body had made the correction, she instantly in this case
became pain free. Six weeks later her back was still symptom-free and she reported that
she had felt even more mobile since the VRT treatment. She explained that she
had slightly hurt her back the previous summer and afterwards was unable to stretch quite
so far. She had forgotten all about the incident until she realized that she had regained
that lost range of mobility after VRT.
Case Study 2: Lymphatic
Lily was a lady of eighty-two who was becoming increasingly
inactive due to arthritic joints and general weariness, as she put it. She
came to me for reflexology and VRT as a last resort and was agreeably surprised to find
that her aches and pains began to subside as she had weekly, then monthly, treatments. Her
blood pressure naturally lowered, as it often does with conventional reflexology, to a
more normal level and her GP was able to reduce her medication. Within a few months she
could raise her arm to brush her hair again properly and had so much energy she started
gardening vigorously and even mended a fence! She then presented with a severe lymphatic
problem, especially in the left foot, and I gave her VRT on arrival and worked the swollen
foot very lightly. By the end of her treatment the swelling in both feet had subsided and,
more surprisingly remained so, and the puffiness did not return until about a month later
when she was due for her next treatment. In my conventional reflexology treatments I had
observed that the swelling usually returned within a week or so. She knows she can keep
the problem at bay if she comes every four or five weeks. Lymphatic problems have always
been receptive to reflexology and are some of the quickest to respond to VRT.
Self-help
and Workshop Feedback
A recent letter from a reader of a national broadsheet
newspaper after following the brief self-help instructions in an article about VRT
commented:
I followed the Do-it-yourself VRT.... The result is that
I now get a decent nights sleep with no backache.
A workshop participant reported instantaneous healing of a
swelling:
I came to a [VRT] workshop in May. I had a bad back (a
lump in the sacro-iliac area), which had been causing me trouble for some months. You
demonstrated the treatment, the lump vanished together with the pain, and has not
returned. So thank you for that. I did feel ill for the rest of the afternoon though
I think the change was so sudden. All I wanted to do was lie down.
SA, Devon
Conclusion
The simplicity of VRT, coupled with advanced techniques
for fine-tuning the body, make it a very accessible and effective new skill
for reflexologists. The Basic VRT Revitalizer treatment is suitable for
self-treatment for family and friends as well as other disciplines. Osteopath, and former
reflexologist, Sarah Bunting, DO, states, I sometimes use VRT for a few minutes at
the end of my osteopathic treatments to relax the patient and consolidate my work, and I
always get positive results.
One of the reasons VRT has become well integrated into reflexology
practice in the UK and Europe is that it is simple to learn and apply and the practitioner
kneels for only a few minutes. The use of knuckles and advanced reflexology training (ART)
techniques, plus the different hand and body positions, enable the reflexologist to
experience more flexibility of movement and less risk of repetitive strain injury.
Orthopaedic cases, including frozen shoulders and whiplash, appear to respond the
quickest, and I would encourage therapists to experiment gently with VRT techniques on
orthopaedic conditions first as the results are usually very quick and positive for both
practitioner and client. Reflexology is a profound and non-invasive therapy and VRT is
simply a unique and powerful skill to add to a therapists repertoire.
Bibliography
Booth Lynne.
Vertical Reflexology. Piatkus. 2000.
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