Showing posts with label Anticipation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anticipation. Show all posts
Sunday, 4 June 2017
The Blessing and the Curse of Movement Habits
Habits are learned and stereotyped responses: set movements that once triggered get replayed verbatim regardless of context or appropriateness.
Habits are necessary; they save us from wasting time and energy in preparing new responses to the ever-changing, kaleidoscopic circumstances we exist in. Habits allow us to anticipate changes and be ready to respond accordingly.
And herein lays their problem.
Some of my now set-responses were originally new responses. They were successful responses at the time, so I chose to repeat them again and again, each new success convincing my system that this was a real keeper. Since it appeared like I’d be using these patterns repeatedly, I let them fall into my subconscious so they could become my automatic responses in all similar situations. The habituation of certain responses was a smart time and energy saving strategy.
Once a response becomes automatic I stop consciously observing and calibrating its efficiency (and sometimes even its effectiveness) vis-à-vis my ever-changing circumstances. What began as a good idea, a clever response, or a quick fix to a specific event, has morphed into the be-all-and-end-all of my response repertoire. The habit has become embedded in my neural repertoire in the form of trigger-happy synapses. The constant repetition of certain movements shape my body according to their logic; I embody my habits with my muscles, my bones and all my connective tissues.
These automatic responses thus become not only the hidden framework upon which I build my actions, reactions, and routines, but also upon which my shape is modelled and portrayed to the world. As the world responds and reacts to my self-projection, I receive feedback that confirms this is who I am, and voilà my self-definition begins to get set.
Moveo ergo sum. I move, therefore I am.
Hidden becomes the key word here. As the saying goes: out of sight, out of mind. Automatism makes me blind to my habits, I become dominated by them, I start confusing them with my self-definition: this is the way I do things. The problem with my habits is that they limit my freedom of choice, they default me to act always in the same way, whether I want to or not.
Can I be any other way?
I want to believe so. The framework of my habits is hidden only as long as I don’t start the process of discovering and uncovering them. My habits are the only option until I realize there are other options. I could perhaps learn to choose and build new responses...
Sunday, 31 August 2014
Hello! Welcome to the blog. How are you?
I mean it, and the answer should be important to you. Take a few seconds of outer and inner stillness to check how you are right now
(physically, mentally, emotionally) and to decide if you’re well disposed to
reading this blog.
This
is a blog about the Alexander Technique in its relation to changing
habitual reactions (physical, mental, emotional).
The purpose
of this blog is for you to experiment with different ideas about how to do
things differently, o how not to do them entirely.
My name is Victoria Stanham, and I’m a teacher of the Alexander Technique. I
spend most of my days investigating and experimenting with the ideas I share in
this blog.
My
objective for today is for you to have a new
experience with attention management. I’d also like to offer you at
least one new idea of how to organize your thoughts
that is directly applicable to changing habits with the hopes that it
may answer a question you have on the subject.
If you’re
interested, take a minute to clarify your question. Make it concise and clear.
As
you continue reading, check regularly what effect it is having on your degree
of physical, mental or emotional tension. Try to note if what you’re reading makes you nervous, angry,
calm, confused, or whatever.
Take
also note if you’re attention wanders off topic, and you start reading in automatic mode, without
processing the new information. If this happens to you, stop, breathe and bring
your attention back to the present action. If your attention insists on
wandering to another topic, re-evaluate if it’s worthwhile to keep reading or
if perhaps you should be taking care of that nagging business on your mind.
The ability to monitor
our attention and our bodily reactions to stimuli in our surroundings is at the
foundation for our success (or lack thereof) in any attempt to change a habit.
A
habitual reaction follows this sequence:
1.
I perceive a stimulus (conscious or subconsciously).
2.
I respond with an automatic action that requires no conscious thought.
Sometimes
this is good and useful. Thank goodness we don’t have to reason our way through
every single action we undertake daily. That would be exhausting and very
inefficient!
But
sometimes, we realize that our way of reacting is causing us trouble, and we
may want to change it. This, we soon realize, is not easy because habits are
strong and “comfortable” (however detrimental they may be to our wellbeing).
So, in order
to be successful in our enterprise, we need to learn
to stop before we react, and thus give ourselves time to decide what
response we truly want to give.
The problem is
that we are not always aware of the stimuli that trigger our automatic reactions,
and we only realize we’re reacting in our undesired way when we’re already more
than half-way down the road.
The solution
to this problem is to learn to perceive the signals
that indicate we’re already preparing a response.
Our
responses to stimuli start way before we become consciously aware of them. Our
brains are constantly anticipating, building our responses based on previous
experiences of similar stimuli.
Anticipation
manifests itself as a state that is simultaneously physical, mental and
emotional. It is perhaps easier for us to note this preparatory response in our
bodies (changes in heart-rate, breathing rate, muscle tension, skin or gut
sensations, etc.).
As
we learn to become aware of these anticipatory reactions, we start to have the
possibility of changing them.
And in order
to become aware of these anticipatory responses, we
need to become more aware of our bodies.
How does one go about doing that?
This is where the help of a guide becomes invaluable. If you’ll accompany me, I’ll be
happy to show you the roads I’ve already walked.
So,
in brief, the new reaction that we want to establish would follow this
sequence:
1.
I perceive the stimulus (consciously or subconsciously).
2.
I perceive my anticipatory reaction… and let it go.
3. I remember my purpose.
4.
I re-evaluate my response options.
5.
I decide on one response.
6.
I execute my choice, all the time keeping my greater purpose present and
monitoring my response.
You’ve
reached the end of today’s blog. It’s now your time to evaluate.
Has
your quesiton been answered?
See you next time.
Victoria
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