The modern world was introduced to Foot Zoning or Foot Zone Therapy in 1979 when Ed and Ellen Case of Los Angeles brought back an ancient Egyptian papyrus scene depicting medical practitioners treating the hands and feet of the patients.
They found six pictographs of childbirth, dentistry, embalming, pharmacology, and reflexology in the tomb of Ankhmahor (the highest official after the king) at Saqqara (the physician’s tomb) near Cairo. These pictographs and papyrus scenes dated back to 2500 BC.
Traditional East Asian foot reflexology is called Zoku Shin Do. The foundation of this foot portion of the Japanese massage technique goes back to ancient China and is over 5000 years old.
This traditional practice that has endured for centuries stands in stark comparison to modern gimmicks such as cleansing foot pads that are unsafe and ineffective.
Ancient Practice in India and China
Foot Zone Therapy was used as a healing method in India and China and is documented in Inca ruins from the early 6th Dynasty, about 2330 BC. Energy work through the feet also has roots in ancient East Indian, Arabic, Grecian, Russian, and European sources. Primitive African and Native American Indian cultures have also developed their own modality of healing through the feet.
The Cherokee tribes of North America practice a form of Foot Zone Therapy. In the 1690s, Jim Rolls, a Cherokee Indian, said pressure therapy on the feet to restore and balance the body has been passed down through the generations. Jenny Wallace, a Cherokee Indian from the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina says the clan of her father (Bear Clan) believes that feet are important.
Your feet walk upon the earth and through this, your spirit is connected to the universe. Our feet are our contact with the Earth and the energies that flow through it.
Many people and cultures deserve the credit for the development of Foot Zone Therapy. However, the rediscovery of foot zoning in America began in the early 1900s when Dr. William H. FitzGerald theorized that the human body was divided into ten zones, connected together by the nerves that carry the impulses. He devised the system of mapping the body into five zones on each side of a median line. These zones run the length of the body from the head to the feet. He called these zones the “ten invisible currents of energy” through the body, and demonstrated the correlation between the reflex points on the feet and areas in distant parts of the body.
Dr. FitzGerald showed how the pressure of between 2 and 10 pounds on a given finger or toe could alleviate pain anywhere in the corresponding zone in the body.
Dr. FitzGerald was the senior nose and throat surgeon of St. Francis Hospital in Hartford, Connecticut. While working in Vienna, Dr. FitzGerald came in contact with Dr. H. Bressler who was investigating the possibility of treating organs with pressure points. At this time, Dr. Alfons Cornelius published his book Pressure Points, their Origin and Significance.
Replacing Painkillers with Zone Therapy
When Dr. Fitzgerald returned to America, he used Zone Therapy to deaden pain, replacing drugs in minor operations. He treated lumps in the breast, uterine fibroids, respiratory problems, and eye conditions. Through his studies, Dr. FitzGerald was able to map the ten zones of the body.
He called his work Zone Analgesia where pressure was applied to the zones corresponding to the location of the injury. He also used pressure points on the tongue, palate and the back of the pharynx wall in order to achieve the desired result of pain relief or analgesia.
Dr. FitzGerald discovered a very interesting fact, that the application of pressure on the zones not only relieved pain but in the majority of cases also relieved the underlying cause as well.
One of his students, Dr. Edwin F. Bowers, a dentist, persuaded the editor of the Associated Sunday Magazines to publish a series of articles demonstrating the technique and outlining the successes. Accompanying the introductory article was this comment by the editor, Mr. Bruce Barton:
For almost a year Dr. Bowers has been urging me to publish this article on Dr. FitzGerald’s remarkable system of healing, known as Zone Therapy. Frankly, I could not believe what was claimed for Zone Therapy, nor did I think that we could get magazine readers to believe it.
Finally, a few months ago, I went to Hartford unannounced and spent a day in Dr. FitzGerald’s offices. I saw patients who had been cured of goiter. Throat and ear troubles were immediately relieved by Zone Therapy. I saw a nasal operation performed without any anesthetic whatever; and, in a dentist’s office, teeth extracted without any anesthetic except the analgesic influence of Zone Therapy.
Afterward I wrote to about fifty practicing physicians in various parts of the country who have heard of Zone Therapy and are using it for the relief of all kinds of cases, even to allay the pains of childbirth. Their letters are on file in my office.
This first article will be followed by a number of others in which Dr. Bowers will explain the application of Zone Therapy in the various common ailments. I anticipate criticism regarding these articles from two sources: first, from a small percentage of physicians; second, from people who will attempt to use Zone Therapy without success. We have considered this criticism in advance, and are prepared to disregard it.
If the articles serve to reduce the sufferings of people in dentists’ chairs even ten percent if they will help in even the slightest way to relieve the common pains of every-day life, they will be amply justified.
We do not know the full explanation of Zone Therapy; but we do know that a great many people have been helped by it, and that nobody can possibly be harmed.
These articles were later published (1917) in the book Zone Therapy: Or Relieving Pain at Home.
Relieving a Headache
In Chapter II of Zone Therapy: Or Relieving Pain at Home, the following technique is outlined for relieving a headache.
“The next time you have a headache, instead of attempting to paralyze the nerves of sensation with an opiate, or a coal tar “pain-deadener,” push the headache out through the top of the head. It’s surprisingly easy.
It merely requires that you press your thumb – or, better still, some smooth, broad metal surface, such as the end of a knife-handle firmly against the roof of the mouth, as nearly as possible under the battleground and hold it there for from three to five minutes by the watch. It may be necessary, if the ache is extensive, to shift the position of the thumb or metal “applicator” so as to “cover” completely the area that aches.
Headaches and neuralgias, of purely nervous origin, not due to poison from toxic absorption from the bowels, or to constipation, or alcoholism, tumors, eye-strain, or some specific organic cause, usually subside under this pressure within a few minutes.”
Hooking Technique
From 1913 to about 1920, Dr. FitzGerald was lecturing students at The Riley School of Chiropractic in Washington DC. Dr. Joseph Shelby Riley was one of Dr. FitzGerald’s students. Dr. Riley was a well-known doctor of Chiropractic. He was also a teacher and administrator at The Riley School of Chiropractic previously known as the Washington School of Chiropractic before being purchased by Dr. Riley.
Through his studies, Dr. Riley added zones across the hands and feet. He also developed the “hooking” technique, recorded reflex points of the ear, face, and hands, and detailed the first diagrams of reflex points found on the feet. In 1918, Dr. Joseph Riley and his wife, Dr. Elizabeth Riley, published “Zone Therapy Simplified” in which they charted the first reflex zone map of the feet. In 1942, the 12th edition of “Zone Therapy Simplified” was published.
Foot Reflexology Mirror the Organs
In the 1930s Eunice Ingham worked with Dr. Riley in St. Petersburg, Florida. She was a chiropractor and physiotherapist. As she mapped the reflex points on the feet, Dr. Ingham found that the “reflexes on the feet were an exact mirror image of the organs of the body. She continued to chart the feet and developed it into Reflexology.
In 1938, she wrote, “Zone Therapy and Gland Reflexes” and “Stories the Feet Can Tell”. These works documented her cases and mapped out the reflexes on the feet. After the books were published she toured America conducting workshops teaching how people can help themselves, family, and friends using her technique. In 1951, she published “Stories the Feet Have Told.”
Reflexology for Paralysis
Interestingly, at this same time in England, physiologist Sir Charles Sherrington was studying the spinal cord and later studied problems with spinal reflexes. He won a Nobel prize for proving that the whole nervous system and body adjust to a stimulus then it is applied to any part of the body. He shared the Nobel Prize with Dr. Edgar Adrian a British electrophysiologist, who studied the mechanism of nervous action; electrical studies of the neuron.
At about the same time that Dr. Joseph Shelby and Dr. Eunice Ingam were discovering the reflex points on the feet, hands, and face, there was a young man in Norway by the name of Charles Ersdal who suffered from paralysis on the left side of his body. He heard of the reflexology technique and allowed a friend of his, Enrar Svenson, a chiropractor and reflexologist, to treat him.
Enrar treated Ersdal over a period of two years resulting in the cure of his paralysis. This peaked Ersdal’s curiosity and he began a study of reflexology. He was particularly interested in discovering why reflexology would work on some patients but not on others.
One night as Charles was asleep he received the answer to his question in a dream. He was told that the body needed to be treated in its entirety and not only in reflex points. He was also shown the placement of the spine, the organs, and systems of the body as they are scaled down three-dimensionally on the feet. Charles continued his study of the human body and physiology and mapping the body on the feet. He opened a clinic in Kristiansand, Norway, called the Centre for Alternativ Medisin, where he treated patients and taught his method of foot zone therapy.
Ersdal’s Method
Charles also taught in Finland, Sweden, Russia, and at the European College of Natural Medicine in Germany. It was there that Katri Nordblom first met Charles Ersdal. Katri was living in Sweden at the time but traveled to Germany during the summer, Easter, and Christmas holidays to take courses at the College.
After moving to America in 1989, Katri discovered that people were interested in learning Ersdal’s method of foot zoning so she invited Ersdal to America to teach for a group of people from the community. Ersdal’s first class in America was in June 1989 in Montana. Over the course of the next three years, Ersdal traveled to America two to three times a year teaching his methods. He would hold classes over a period of about five days discussing physiology in depth before demonstrating his foot zone technique. Classes were held in Montana, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Wyoming, Nevada, and Idaho at the invitation of Katri Nordblom and Christine Horvath. Christine was a student of Ersdal’s who lived in Minnesota.
When Ersdal first began coming to America to teach, although he was able to speak conversational English, he would lecture in Norwegian with Katri’s husband, Hans, translating into English. As Ersdal became more proficient in English medical terms, he began teaching classes without the assistance of a translator. He also taught much of the anatomy portion of the class in Latin. The first maps of the feet made available to his students were in Norwegian but later maps were in labeled in English.
Foot Zoning in America
During this time, word of Ersdal’s methods began to spread and many people did not want to wait for him to visit America so they would travel to his clinic in Norway to learn from Ersdal, two of those students included Julie Holderegger of Idaho and Martha Libster of Chicago, Illinois.
Between Ersdal’s visits to American, previous students would work with current students to ensure proper placement of the hands on a client’s foot. Those teachers included Katri Nordblom, Christine Horvath, Julie Holderegger, and a gentleman by the name of Bob Personette.
Although Ersdal’s map of the feet was very detailed, he realized that the treatment was incomplete and continued to study the body and it’s placement on the feet.
Katri Nordbloom recognized what she felt were limitations to Ersdal’s map of the zone and began teaching her own method of foot zone technique. Martha Libster began teaching their own method of foot zone technique, combining her knowledge and practice of Ersdal zone therapy with that of foot reflexology and nurse-herbalism. Ersdal continued coming to America and teaching in Minnesota at the request of Christine Horvath.
After Charles Ersdal’s death on March 23, 1995, Christine Horvath received permission from Ersdal’s family to continue teaching Ersdal’s method of foot zoning using Charles’ very detailed maps of the feet. She is the only person in America authorized to teach from his maps. Ersdal’s son, Robert, continues to run the clinic that Charles started in Norway.
Like a cook who is given a recipe and makes adjustments to suit their tastes, students of Ersdal’s took what they learned from him and began adjusting and adding to his method, creating maps of the feet and zone techniques that reflected their understanding and education. Some opened schools, like Katri Nordblom and Martha Libster, others taught workshops independently to friends and neighbors who wanted to learn.
At this time, in addition to Katri’s school in Montana, Nordblom American Institute of FootZonology, and Martha Libster’s school in Chicago, Golden Apple Healing Arts, you can learn the foot zone technique from schools such as We Do Feet with locations throughout Utah, Idaho, and Nevada, or the Academy of Foot Zone Therapy which holds classes in Utah, Arizona, Washington, and Nevada. Christine Horvath continues to teach the foot zone technique, using Ersdal’s maps of the feet, in Minnesota.
Jada
Such a great post Kathy! I am looking forward to the rest of your article 🙂
I am a zoner and have been getting “zoned” for nearly 6 years now. I personally have experienced so many miracles from the zone–from a boost in fertility to complete spinal alignment and great pain relief [all through my feet!]–that I just had to learn this amazing skill to share with others. Foot Zone Therapy has brought me on a journey to health and healing on so many levels. I hope everyone takes this information and really soaks in all of the possibilities of Foot Zoning–it is truly an amazing healing modality!
Rhenda
I live in Winfield, Kansas. I’m am almost on the Oklahoma border and Central in the state, just South of Wichita. Thanks for your help. Do you know of a reflexology book that I can do myself? Doctor bills and medications for Lyme are astronomical and I don’t think I can afford another office visit.
Katherine Atkinson
Actually, I can do one better. 🙂 One of our instructors, Stephanie Marcum, just moved to Hawaii and she’s publishing a book and an iPad ap that shows and demonstrates the foot zone technique so you can learn it yourself! You can find her contact information on my website at: http://mindbodyandsoleonline.com/foot-zoning/find-a-foot-zone-therapist-near-you/.
I’ll also check to see if anyone knows of a foot zoner in your area. 🙂
~ Kathy
Rhenda
Thank you so much!
Stephanie Marcum
We just got the first book up. It will only give you the first area. Book 2, 3, and 4 will be finished in the next couple months. It is a starting point for those that don’t live near a footzoner and would like to learn how to do it themselves. I had my 11 year old daughter test it out for me and she picked up how to do it quickly. Hope this helps.
Stephanie Marcum
http://itunes.apple.com/us/book/foothold-book-1/id535768260?mt=11&ign-mpt=uo%3D4
Sorry here is the link.
Katherine Atkinson
That’s great Stephanie! I’m so excited that it’s finally out! I’m not surprised that your daughter picked up on it so quickly, if I remember correctly she is quite the exceptional girl. 🙂
Rhenda
Katherine, I too have Lyme and could use this therapy to help with pain. There are no therapists in my state, so I wondered if the book you mentioned would help me do the foot zone on myself?
Katherine Atkinson
No, the book mentioned deals only with meridian therapy which Dr. Fitzgerald called zone therapy.
A foot zone therapist will help with much more than the pain and will help bring all your body systems into balance. If you can’t find a foot zone therapist in your state, the next best thing would be a reflexologist although the results may not be as effective.
The listing on my site privides contact information on foot zoners who are graduates of We Do Feet. The article tomorrow will provide information on the other schools who certify students in the foot zone technique and you may be able to find information on their graduates from their website.
Although widely practiced in Europe, the foot zone technique is in its infantcy in the US, having been taught here only since the late 1980’s (isn’t it interesting how we seem to be behind the curve when it comes to holistic medicine – but that’s a different topic), however, interest is growing as more people realize the benefits of this wonderful modality. 🙂 As interest in the treatment grows, interest in learning the modality grows as well.
What state do you live in and maybe I can help locate someone who can help?
Celestia
I would love to hear testimonials of women who have used foot zoning to relieve pain in childbirth.
Katherine Atkinson
Hi Celestia, 🙂
The benefits of foot zone therapy go far beyond pain relief to include pain prevention. Foot zone therapy is about bringing the body back into, and keeping it in, balance. Clients who receive regular foot zone treatments before and during pregnancy report easier, less painful child birth and faster recovery time.
Meridian therapy (which Dr. Fitzgerald called zone therapy) deals more with pain relief and was a precursor to reflexology and then ultimately foot zone therapy.
The remainder of the article, to be published on Friday, will delve into foot zone therapy, but on my website you can find testimonials from clients. http://mindbodyandsoleonline.com/welcome/testimonials/
Thank you for your interest! 🙂
~ Kathy
Jada
Celestia,
Here is a link to article I wrote about my personal experience with the zone, pregnancy, labor, and delivery. I hope this helps 🙂
Jada
http://intrinsicallyawaken.blogspot.com/2012/04/zone-and-pregnancy-by-jada.html
Josh
If you want to talk to someone about for zoning and child birth there is only one professional I would recommend. She lives in Clifton, ID her name is Laree Westover. She has been a foot zone therapist for 38 years and a midwife for 42 years. You can contact her by calling butterfly express. The number is everywhere on the internet.
D.
I wanted to send this information to my son, who is having some terrible low back pain issues which developed while they were in the process of moving furniture into a new home. However, this article is so poorly constructed I hesitate to send it. One thing which is NOT clear is whether or not the “corrections” to the article are complete? I mean, in two difference places in the comments section Katherine has referred to mistakes in the article. Would I be better off just sending him the information directly from Katherine’s web page?
Katherine Atkinson
Hi D., 🙂
The problems with the article have been corrected. There was a problem when Sarah tried to import my article to WordPress which resulted in only a portion of the article being printed. The entire post is on the History of Foot Zone Therapy which begins with Fitzgerald (at least in “modern” times) and his discovery of the meridiains which he called “zones.” He discovered that by applying pressure to any point along a particular meridian, he could eliminate pain at any other point in that meridian – hense the title of “pain relief”.
The part that didn’t come through for Sarah took Fitzgerald’s discovery of meridians to Dr. Shelby and Dr. Eunice Ingham who discovered that the meridians continued to the bottom of the feet. Shelby developed the hooking technique used my many reflexologists and foot zone theripists and Ingham mapped out parts of the body on the foot.
Following Dr. Shelby and Eunice Ingham, Charles Ersdal developed VERY detailed maps of the feet and developed a very complete, exact, and detailed treatment which he called the foot zone.
The entire article is quite lengthy, so Sarah will provide the second half on Friday. You are welcome to send him to my site for the entire article or wait until Friday for the remainder to be posted on this site.
Foot zone therapy is quite helpful for many issues and I have had many clients who report elimination of back problems after sessions. You can find a listing of foot zone therapists on my website to help you locate a foot zoner near you (or near your son as the case may be), and there’s also testimonials from clients to give you an idea of how the foot zone might be of benefit. 🙂
I’m so sorry for the confusion! Sometimes there are glitches in our “modern technology” which cannot be avoided. 🙂
I hope you use the article for what it was intended, information on the history of foot zone therapy, and begin seeking out foot zone therapists in your area to discover what benefits the zone may bring to you. 🙂
Thank you!
~ Kathy
Howard C. Gray via Facebook
By locating sore spots on the sole of the foot (ever wonder why sole rhymes with soul?), you can alleviate other areas of pain. I like pulling my toes, personally. Sometimes I get an ahhh after they pop.
Kelli
Sounds pretty helpful. Its always good to know drug-free ways to relive pain due to how common this ailment is in our modern world. I have some pains in my neck sometimes that I use to take magnesium for, but I should look into foot zone therapy.
Monica
I would love to know more about using this during childbirth! Anyone have any recommendations?
Katherine Atkinson
Hi Monica, 🙂
I’ve had many clients who get regular foot zones before and during pregnancy and report WONDERFUL results during delivery.
Jada
Monica,
Here is a link to a post I wrote about my own experience of zoning and pregnancy.
http://intrinsicallyawaken.blogspot.com/2012/04/zone-and-pregnancy-by-jada.html
LeAnn Pich via Facebook
My question too: what is the battleground?
Katherine Atkinson
Pressing the roof of your mouth as close as possible to the “battleground” means underneath the area of the head that hurts (as much as possible). Remember that his discovery was the meridian lines (zones) that run up and down the body and that pressure applied anywhere along that meridian would relieve pain anywhere else along that same meridian. So what you’re trying to do by pressing the roof of the mouth under the area of pain is apply pressure to that meridian.
Michaela Edwards-Gutierrez via Facebook
this works I did it many times. I have been pain free for a very long time.