Friday, 28 November 2014
Sometimes I too
want quick solutions, instant solutions.
The problem is
that these “express”
solutions don’t last long; they are no more than a mask for the
problem, not a real solution.
The same happens with
postural problems and their “quick fixes”.
Posture is at the base of every discipline.
Every sport or activity you practice has a certain ideal “form” or “posture”
that allows you to perform the activity with the least amount of wear and tear
and the highest degree of efficiency.
But saying, “a good
posture is that in which, when seen from the side, the ear, shoulder, hip and
ankle are aligned,” is merely giving a visual description of the result. This
description does not include the steps of inner organization that allow for the external visible
result.
The postural recommendations
offered in every discipline have their logic. The problem is that we, who don’t
know our own bodies, force ourselves into these
recommended forms by sheer muscular effort. We end up habituating the
requisite form but also the unnecessary tension
of the effort.
How much better
it would be if we could adopt these “postures” with total freedom, and be able
to get out of them with equal liberty!
But… how?
The Alexander
Technique is a “pre-technique”, it is the foundation for all other techniques
and disciplines. The Alexander Technique teaches
you how to organize your body in such a way that you can adopt in the most
natural way any of the “postures” or “forms” recommended by other disciplines.
In fact, after
working with the Alexander Technique your concept
of “posture” changes. It shifts from being something “rigid” or “fixed” into
something mobile and dynamic.
Posture stops
being something you impose from the outside based on “how it should look” despite
the tense muscular effort to hold it, and becomes something that springs from
inside based on “how you perceive the shifting balance of your skeletal
structure” and guided by a clear thought process
which frees the muscles and decompresses the joints.
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Perception, thought, autonomy, freedom -- it's all here. Thank you for your own clear thought process in writing this.
ReplyDeleteThank you Yvette for your kind comment. I'm glad you liked the blog.
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