«Healing Crisis»: A Marketing Tool and Monopoly on Tradition

In this article we examine a phenomenon actively used in the marketing of Russian Reiki schools — the so-called «healing crisis». And separately we look at a specific example of how the only verified lineage in Russia ends up locked behind a paid barrier.

What Is a «Healing Crisis»

The term «healing crisis» (healing crisis, cleansing crisis) is widely used in alternative medicine and energy practices. It is supposed that after a session or initiation a person may experience: fatigue, aggravation of old symptoms, emotional peaks, temporary worsening — all interpreted as signs of «deep work» and «accumulated toxins releasing».

In official medicine there is a related concept — the Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction. This is a real, documented phenomenon: during antibiotic treatment of some bacterial infections, mass bacterial die-off causes a brief toxin release and temporary worsening. This is a specific, biochemically explicable mechanism.

Transferring this concept to energy practices is a metaphor without a mechanism. There is no verified process explaining a «healing crisis» after a Reiki session or initiation.

Marketing Inversion: «A Crisis Means the Initiation Was Bad»

The classic «healing crisis» logic in Reiki: if you felt worse after initiation or a session — that is normal, it means Reiki is working deeply. This logic is non-falsifiable: both improvement and worsening are interpreted as confirmation of the method’s correctness.

However, there is also an inverted version of this narrative, used by some Russian Reiki masters for marketing: if you had a healing crisis after initiation — it means the initiation went wrong, and it was not real Reiki.

This logic works elegantly as a competitive tool:

  • A person had a difficult experience after initiation by another master → they are told: «that’s because that initiation was wrong»
  • The person comes for a «correct» initiation → pays again
  • If difficulties arise after the second initiation → they are now interpreted as «deep work» or again as «consequences of the previous wrong initiation»

Absence of Consent: Violation of Basic Safety Principles

In some materials, both free and paid, a position is promoted that consent from a student or client is not needed before initiation or a Reiki session — the master knows what is needed and acts «for the good».

This directly violates several fundamental principles:

  1. Informed consent — a basic principle of medical ethics, psychotherapy, and any body-oriented practice
  2. Do no harm — if a person does not know what will be done to them, they cannot assess risks, especially with a psychiatric history, trauma, BPD, PTSD
  3. Boundaries of therapeutic relationships — any teacher-student or practitioner-client relationship implies a power asymmetry

The Inamoto Paradox: The Only Verified Tradition Is Locked Behind 95,000₽

Hyakuten Inamoto (Komyo Reiki Do) has one of the most verified and shortest lineages from Mikao Usui:

Mikao Usui → Chujiro Hayashi → Chiyoko Yamaguchi → Hyakuten Inamoto

Three steps from the source. Publicly documented. Inamoto teaches openly and conducts seminars.

But here is the problem: access to this methodology in the Russian Reiki community is only through a professional master training programme costing 95,000 rubles.

  • The only publicly known bearer of the Inamoto methodology in Russia — one specific master
  • Access to the methodology — only through a paid closed course
  • Before payment, you cannot verify whether what is taught corresponds to the real Inamoto methodology
  • Inamoto himself conducts seminars — but abroad, physically and financially inaccessible to most Russians

In other words: Hyakuten Inamoto is channelled through one intermediary, and the intermediary sets a monopoly price for access to the tradition.

What to Do If You Are Already Inside Such a System

  1. Acknowledge the structure — the fact that you paid money and received value from it does not mean the system has no problems. Both things can be true simultaneously.
  2. Study primary sources — Hyakuten Inamoto’s books are available in English. Frank Arjava Petter publishes research on Usui’s original Japanese materials.
  3. Separate practice from school — daily Reiki practice (self-treatment, the 5 principles) does not require being tied to a specific master.
  4. Consult a verified psychologist — if you find you are emotionally dependent on a master or school, this is a topic for psychotherapy.

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