Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeIndyHands on for recognition

Hands on for recognition

By LUKE VOOGT

Geelong history writer Shirley Strachan will this month launch her book about influential local osteopath, Tom Bowen, celebrating the centenary of his birth.
He developed The Bowen Technique, an internationally recognised form of osteopathy that uses gentle manipulation of muscles and tissues to remediate physical imbalances identified during consultations.
Also a practitioner of Mr Bowen’s methods, Ms Stachan described him as a therapeutic genius who never earned the recognition he deserved.
“I could see there were a lot of historical problems surrounding Tom Bowen and that got me interested,” she said.
Primarily self-taught, Mr Bowen ran a practice for 20 years from 1959.
Ms Stachan said he treated more than 250,000 patients, including up to 56 a day, despite lacking formal training.
Mr Bowen was highly regarded among professional practitioners who came to watch him work, she said.
“He just had an innate natural ability.”
Ms Strachan said Mr Bowen “became a victim of the registration process” when he failed to satisfy the requirements of new regulatory legislation which was introduced in 1978.
During his registration exam he was forced to demonstrate his methods on a chair rather than a person, she said.
“That sort of testing put him at a real disadvantage.”
Mr Bown died three years later.
Ms Strachan conducted and transcribed about 50 interviews for her book between December 2014 and 2015, with the help of Ron Phelan, who conducted two interviews for the anthology.
Mr Phelan, a teacher-practitioner of Bowen therapy, was instrumental in co-ordinating a monument for him in West Park in 2002.
Ms Strachan is now completing a PhD on Bowen therapy, which will also complete his full biography.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

From the archives

17 years ago 20 February, 2009 A company is investigating potential for a wave power plant off the region’s coastline. Western Australia-based Carnegie Corporation is in talks...

Pickleball opens up

More News

The power of creativity (and robots)

Jolyon James’ stage show Robot Song centres on the story of a young autistic child, Juniper, struggling to find her place in the world. A...

Guitar legend amps up for tour

Nathan Cavaleri comes to Geelong this weekend as part of a 18-show tour of his new album Live at the Wheaty. Hailed as a blues-rock...

Grove cements top spot

Ocean Grove cemented its place at the top of Section 4 Mixed with a commanding 6-0 win over second placed Surfcoast Torquay in Tennis...

Community calendar

Austrian Club Geelong Alpine music featuring Alpen Musikanten, Sunday 22 February, noon-5pm. Tickets $20 ($15 members). Meals and drinks available. ■ Irmela 0435995 200 Book sale Uniting Grovedale,...

Grubbers land recruiting coup

Ocean Grove has pulled off a stunning recruiting coup with Gary Rohan set to wear the red and white this Bellarine Football League season. Rohan,...

Boy arrested over stabbing

Geelong Crime Investigation Unit detectives have arrested a boy following a stabbing in Geelong’s Little Malop Street yesterday afternoon. It is alleged a boy stabbed...

Why Australia’s Favourite Regional City is Leading the 2026 Jobs Boom

Geelong has been building momentum for years, but a turning point has arrived. Once seen as a city with potential, it now stands at...

Cleaning up litter

People can help keep the region’s beaches, foreshores and marine environment clean during the upcoming Clean Up Australia Day. Clean-up events will...

Convoy for kids

Hundreds of trucks will take to Geelong’s streets this weekend to raise money for families impacted by childhood cancer. The 11th annual...

Celebration of life in the north

A new exhibition delving into the heart of Norlane will open at Platform Arts this weekend. Led by artists Laura Alice and Yuhui Ng Rodriguez,...