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Glossary›Energy Healing

Glossary

Energy Healing

A practice that works with the body's subtle energy fields—called qi, prana, or biofield—to restore balance and support physical, emotional, and spiritual well-being.

What is Energy Healing?

Energy healing is an umbrella term for therapeutic practices based on the premise that a subtle energy—variously called qi (Chinese), prana (Sanskrit), ki (Japanese), or biofield (contemporary scientific term)—flows through and around the living body. Practitioners work to detect, clear, and rebalance this energy field through touch, near-touch, intention, movement, or other methods. The underlying theory holds that when energy flows freely, the body maintains health; when blocked or depleted, illness or distress arises. Energy healing is used to address pain, anxiety, fatigue, and other conditions, and is increasingly offered in integrative medical settings alongside conventional care.

Origins & Lineage

Energy healing practices date back thousands of years to ancient civilizations including China, India, Egypt, and Greece. In Traditional Chinese Medicine, which extends more than 5,000 years, healers developed the concept of qi—life energy flowing through meridians in the body. In India, the energetic body was described in ancient Hindu texts as having seven main chakras, or energy centers, with nadis conveying prana. In ancient Egypt, energy healing was intertwined with religious practices; Egyptians believed in the interconnectedness of body, mind, and spirit and employed laying on of hands, rituals, and symbols to channel healing energies.

During the Renaissance, physician and alchemist Paracelsus (1493–1541) introduced the concept of “vital force” that maintains human health. In the 18th century, Franz Anton Mesmer (1734–1815) developed the concept of “animal magnetism”—the idea that all living beings possess an energy field that can be influenced for healing.

Modern energy healing took shape in the 20th century. Mikao Usui (1865–1926), a Japanese Buddhist, developed Reiki in 1922 after a 21-day meditation retreat on Mount Kurama. Usui opened his first Reiki clinic in Tokyo in March 1922. In the early 1970s, nurse Dolores Krieger and healer Dora Kunz developed Therapeutic Touch, which became widely taught in nursing schools. The term “biofield” was proposed during a meeting convened by the U.S. National Institutes of Health’s Office of Alternative Medicine (now the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, or NCCIH, since 2014).

How It’s Practiced

Energy healing modalities vary widely but share common elements. Sessions typically last 20–60 minutes. The recipient remains fully clothed, either lying on a treatment table or seated. In Reiki, the practitioner places hands on or above specific positions on the body, using a series of hand positions to channel and balance energy. The recipient remains relaxed and passive during a Reiki session, while the practitioner places hands on or above the body.

Qigong, an ancient Chinese practice, combines movements, meditation, and controlled breathing to cultivate and balance the body’s qi. Unlike hands-on modalities, Qigong can be practiced solo as a movement discipline. Pranic Healing, developed by Master Choa Kok Sui, harnesses prana to promote healing without physical contact—practitioners work within the energy field surrounding the body.

Other forms include acupuncture (inserting fine needles at specific meridian points), Healing Touch (a collection of techniques compiled in the 1980s), chakra balancing, and shamanic healing practices. Practitioners often report sensing temperature changes, tingling, or energy movement during sessions.

Energy Healing Today

In the 2012 National Health Interview Survey, more than 1.6 million U.S. adults reported seeing an energy healing practitioner in the past 12 months. Therapeutic Touch is practiced in more than 100 U.S. hospitals and clinics and taught in 75 countries. Energy healing is increasingly offered in integrative oncology centers, pain clinics, hospices, and wellness retreats. It appears on class schedules at yoga studios, meditation centers, and spiritual festivals.

Seekers encounter energy healing through one-on-one sessions with certified practitioners, group classes teaching self-healing techniques (especially Reiki Level I and Qigong), weekend intensives, and multi-day retreats. Some modalities require formal training and lineage-based initiation (Reiki attunements); others are accessible to anyone willing to learn. Recorded guided meditations and online courses have democratized access, though hands-on mentorship remains the traditional transmission method.

Systematic reviews suggest potential benefits for outcomes such as pain and anxiety, though reviews frequently highlight methodological limitations and a scarcity of high-quality randomized controlled trials with robust sample sizes. Recent efforts by NCCIH and the Consortium of Academic Health Centers for Integrative Medicine have introduced rigorous clinical trial guidelines to evaluate these modalities systematically.

Common Misconceptions

Energy healing is not a replacement for medical care. It is a complementary practice. Responsible practitioners do not diagnose disease or advise patients to discontinue prescribed treatments.

The mechanisms are not fully understood. The biofield was defined as “a massless field, not necessarily electromagnetic, that surrounds and permeates living bodies,” but there remains no consensus on its definition, and different perspectives shape its conceptualization. Mainstream science rejected “vitalism” (the idea that living matter contains a life force) because it doesn’t fit into known laws of physics.

Evidence is mixed and evolving. While some studies show measurable effects, research quality varies. Cochrane reviews have noted that aggregating results across studies often fails to demonstrate significant effects due to the inconsistent state of the evidence. This is an active research area, not settled science.

It is not religion. Though many modalities arose from spiritual traditions and practitioners may hold spiritual beliefs, energy healing techniques themselves are secular methods that can be learned and applied regardless of religious affiliation.

How to Begin

For hands-on experience, seek a certified Reiki practitioner or Therapeutic Touch nurse through professional associations (Reiki.org, therapeutictouch.org). Many offer introductory sessions at accessible rates. For self-practice, Reiki Level I courses teach basic techniques over a weekend and include attunement. Qigong classes—widely available at tai chi schools, community centers, and online—require no initiation and can be learned progressively.

Reading: Dolores Krieger’s Therapeutic Touch: How to Use Your Hands to Help and to Heal (1979) remains a foundational text. For Reiki, consult The Reiki Sourcebook by Bronwen and Frans Stiene. For understanding the biofield from a scientific perspective, explore research summaries published by NCCIH.

Approach with curiosity and discernment. Ask practitioners about their training, lineage, and scope of practice. Notice what you feel, but remain grounded in critical thinking.

Artists & teachers in this practice

Franziska BehlertFranziska BehlertMeditation TeacherJaclyn AlbergoniJaclyn AlbergoniMeditation TeacherRaquel RibeiroRaquel RibeiroMeditation TeacherJerri DoranJerri DoranMeditation TeacherPasha LyndiPasha LyndiMeditation TeacherNicky HartelNicky HartelEnergy HealerLiz NerlandLiz NerlandYoga TeacherToon MuylaertToon MuylaertMeditation TeacherJoanna MillerJoanna MillerMeditation TeacherSandy MagramSandy MagramMeditation TeacherMaitreyaMaitreyaSound HealerDr ToniDr ToniEnergy Healer

Related terms

reikiqigongchakrapranabiofieldtherapeutic touch
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