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Deborah Caplan
as a dancer with the Jean Erdman Dance Company 1951
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How can the Alexander Technique help me?
The Technique offers you a way to streamline
what you do, making your activities less stressful and more pleasurable.
You come to understand how your body can move most efficiently. As you
learn to move more easily, you make surprising improvements in how you
look and feel. As you learn to apply Alexander's principles, you practice
an effective, lasting method of selfcare.
What is the Alexander Technique?
The Alexander Technique is an intelligent way
to solve the common movement problems that cause chronic pain and stress.
It is a way to notice your movement habits, release compression and move
with ease and expansion. A proven selfcare method, it is a set of skills
that you learn to relieve pain, prevent injury and enhance performance.
How is the Alexander Technique different
from other approaches?
- It is not a treatment, such as chiropractic
or massage. Any treatment has its own unique benefits. The Alexander
Technique's unique contribution is a mode of self-management that gives
you independence in maintaining your health. Rather than being solely
a recipient, you learn to soothe your own nervous system, release your
own muscles and balance your own structure. Alexander skills also make
you a more informed, receptive patient when you do need any kind of
treatment.
- It is not a set of exercises such as those you
might learn in yoga, physical therapy, Feldenkrais, Pilates or the gym.
Because the Alexander Technique is a way to heighten awareness of how
you move and to better coordinate your body during activity, it helps
you do specific postures, procedures or exercises with less strain and
more comfort. Since it is a tool to improve your overall coordination,
you become a more intelligent exerciser who can focus effort during
a strenuous challenge. You learn more about the body, and bring that
refined understanding to a class or set of stretches.
What are the Alexander Technique's
benefits?
People who learn the Alexander Technique can
better handle daily stress and develop a long-term solution to chronic
pain and muscular tension. They acquire an enduring way to perceive tensions
as they arise and to restore their own balance.
- Self-care - As the premiere form of self care,
the Alexander Technique helps people prevent injury and recover from
chronic back, hip and neck disorders, traumatic or repetitive strain
injuries, balance and coordination disorders, arthritis and muscle spasms.
It can also be helpful for people with asthma and stress-related disorders,
such as migraine headaches, sleep disorders and panic attacks.
- Skill enhancement - Athletes use the Technique
to help them improve strength, endurance, flexibility and responsiveness.
Performing artists use it to lessen performance anxiety while improving
concentration and stage presence. Public speakers use it to improve
vocal projection and voice quality. Those in business find it enhances
presentation skills and increases confidence.
- Mental health - As your posture and movement
style improve, you look and feel better. As your breathing capacity
expands, you have a greater resource of energy. Physicians recommend
the Alexander Technique to lessen the depression and anxiety associated
with chronic conditions Psychotherapists also refer their patients to
Alexander Technique practitioners. While you unravel muscular tensions,
you may perceive an emotional link to your physical symptom. As body
work can release emotion and provoke deeper understanding of the self,
the Alexander Technique can be a very helpful complement to psychotherapy.
Who studies the Alexander Technique?
People of all types are Alexander students.
They might come to recuperate from an injury or for relief from chronic
pain. They may hear of the Technique from friends, physicians or other
health professionals. Here are some examples of the many who have used
the Alexander Technique to improve their comfort level, professional achievement
and their lives:
performing artists
parents
executives
computer users
the wheelchair bound
What problems and conditions can the
Alexander Technique help me with?
- Stress in daily life - Because the Alexander
Technique helps you change your response to stress, it can help you
relieve or eliminate stress-related conditions. The body's reaction
to threat a fear reflex marked by a tight neck and contracted
body is a natural, adaptive response. But if the body does not
unwind from this contraction and stays in a constant state of emergency,
we pay a physical price. You can learn to re-stabilize and recuperate
from stress with the Alexander Technique: a set of body/mind skills
that helps you release contracted muscles, calm the nervous system and
handle stressors more easily.
- Chronic pain - Chronic pain can be the result
of injury, disease, structural abnormality or muscular tension. Though
the Technique is not a miracle cure for medical conditions, by reducing
the stress response it can often provide a surprising degree of relief.
For conditions that cannot be changed such as rheumatoid arthritis
it can still help the individual release the muscular tension
and fear response that accompany injury or disease.
- Back problems - One of the most effective approaches
to chronic back problems, the Technique can address the underlying cause
and often relieve the condition completely. When there are unchangeable
factors of disease or structure, the Alexander teacher's soothing hands
and helpful guidance enables you whatever your limitation
to reach your full potential for function.
- Arthritis - Studying the Alexander Technique
will help you relieve pain, retain mobility and increase range of motion.
The Alexander Technique teacher helps you see what in your movement
style causes joint compression and might exacerbate your condition.
As you re-educate your overall coordination, the torso muscles support
rather than compress the spine. Reduced compression allows your body
to expand during daily activities and can help reduce pain.
- Postural problems - Many people develop unhealthy
posture and movement habits that become deep-seated patterns of strain.
These habits are typically expressed by tight back and neck muscles
and collapsed stature. With the hands-on guidance of a trained Alexander
Technique teacher, you learn to elicit the primary control an
easy, dynamic relationship between the head and spine. You gain access
to the body's elegant power steering. You learn that finding poise can
help to ease discomfort and streamline movement. With greater fluidity
and stability, you gain confidence and a more positive self-image.
- Asthma and other breathing disorders - Asthma
is the body's respiratory reflex gone awry. Neck muscles tighten, shoulders
yank up to the ears, and the abdominal muscles contract. Sufferers say
the greatest problem is rising panic at an attack's onset the
fear that they won't win the fight for the next breath. These responses
are elements of the startle pattern. With the Alexander Technique, asthmatics
can halt the startle pattern and calm the nervous system, inviting an
easier balance in body and mind. They can control or conquer their symptoms.
Expanded space in the torso and information about how to breathe can
help anyone who wants to improve breathing capacity and, with it, overall
vitality.
- Repetitive strain injury & carpal tunnel syndrome
- The Alexander Technique addresses the cause of these widespread
injuries: lack of postural support and excess joint compression while
working. With the Alexander Technique, you learn to eliminate strain
and perform repetitive movements with ease and comfort. Much of our
current epidemic of repetitive strain injury and carpal tunnel syndrome
could be alleviated if more people learned how to:
- sit upright easily
- do repeated motions with less muscular tension
in the shoulders, arms and wrists
- tap the keyboard and mouse lightly
- attune to their bodies' signals
How do I learn the Alexander Technique?
You learn the Technique from a highly trained professional in a series
of one-on-one sessions. Some teachers offer group classes, but the Technique
is most commonly offered privately. The teacher gives you expert coaching
tailored to your specific needs.
What happens in an Alexander Technique
session?
In an Alexander Technique session, your teacher
instructs you with words and touch to approach movement
differently. Using a mirror, s/he helps you recognize your ingrained patterns
and highlights how your movement style relates to your symptoms. Your
teacher uses a specialized hands-on method to help you release areas of
tension and elicit your body's capacity for dynamic expansion. With this
expert guidance, you learn the skills to replicate that ease and expansion
on your own. Over a course of sessions, you strip away the movement habits
at the root of your discomfort. You acquire a way to guide yourself through
daily activities that stays with you for the rest of your life.
- What do I wear?
You come to your Alexander lesson wearing loose, comfortable clothing.
- What is an Alexander studio like?
The Alexander teacher's studio is a low-tech environment with a
chair, bodywork table and a mirror.
- How long are sessions?
Usually 45-60 minutes, the Alexander lesson is instruction tailored
to your needs.
- What's the point of a lesson?
An Alexander Technique session is an opportunity for you to unwind
and observe how your mind and body work. Your teacher gives you focused,
supportive coaching on how to use your increased awareness to calm your
system and raise your level of functioning.
- What will we do?
Your Alexander teacher observes you doing simple actions, such as
sitting, standing or walking. Using a mirror, s/he helps you see and
sense how your movement style relates to your problem. There are two
aspects to an Alexander lesson:
- Table work - While you lie clothed on a
bodywork table and settle into restful state, the teacher gently
moves your head and limbs, encouraging expansion. S/he guides you
with a unique, informative touch that does not intrude or manipulate,
but suggests soothing release and an enlivened kinesthetic sense.
- Guidance during activity - While you perform
ordinary movements, the teacher gives you verbal, visual and conceptual
cues to help you sit, stand, walk or reach more comfortably. You
consider activities you would like to enhance, such as public speaking,
lifting and carrying, computer work, practicing yoga or a martial
art, playing your favorite sport or even sleeping comfortably. Performers
can choose to work on a monologue, an aria or a dance movement.
If you would like to refine a specialized activity - such
as how you swing a tennis racket, lift a child or play an instrument
- the teacher can help you reduce compression and increase overall
physical support as you do it.
How can an Alexander Technique teacher
help me?
Your Alexander Technique teacher offers personally
tailored instruction with a unique hands-on approach, helping you see
what in your individual movement style contributes to your recurring problem.
As he or she helps you to release muscular tension and restore your body's
original poise, you learn to sit, stand and move with safety, balance
and ease. Your teacher can point out the source of your problem. With
anatomical pictures S/he helps you to better understand the body's functioning.
S/he considers your entire body not just segments and looks
at you as the dynamic creature you are.
Who can benefit from learning the Alexander
Technique?
- Computer users - In the current epidemic of
repetitive strain injury, carpal tunnel syndrome, chronic back pain,
headaches and stress related disorders, many computer users suffer.
While ergonomic design can improve the work station chair design,
monitor and keyboard placement the Alexander Technique enables
you to use your own body's design, even when the work station is not
ideal. By understanding the Technique's basic alphabet of movement,
you can avoid injury and often relieve the agonizing symptoms associated
with computer use.
Your Alexander Technique teacher guides you to:
- sit upright without strain
- prevent spinal compression and muscular
tension in the neck, shoulders and upper back.
- encourage freer range of motion in the joints
and muscles
- tap the keyboard and mouse lightly to reduce
stress on the wrist and carpal tunnel
- attune to your body's signals, heed early
warning stress signs and ward off pain before it escalates
- breathe properly to prevent fatigue and
soothe the nervous system
- restore balance in your back - during and
after work - each day
- Singers, dancers, actors and musicians - Performing
artists study the Technique to reduce performance anxiety, lessen the
likelihood of injury and enhance stage presence. The Alexander Technique
gives them sharp focus, a highly refined sensory awareness, efficient
use of their energy, excellent balance and coordination and an inner
sense of calm.
Some of the renowned actors and musicians who have been using the Alexander
Technique since the beginning of this century are: Julie Andrews, William
Hurt, Jeremy Irons, James Earl Jones, Paul McCartney, Kelley McGillis,
Patti Lupone, Paul Newman, Sting, Maggie Smith, Mary Steenbergen, Robin
Williams, Joanne Woodward, and members of the New York Philharmonic.
- Athletes & fitness enthusiasts - Though
the Technique is a wonderful stress-reducer, you can also use it during
vigorous activities. If you work out, proper form and degree of muscular
tension are just as important as how strenuously or how often you exercise.
By demonstrating principles of efficient movement, the Alexander teacher
offers the fitness enthusiast a way to prevent injury and gain better
results.
Studying the Technique gives you the skills to prevent pain while you
improve breathing, balance and posture. Together, you and your Alexander
teacher can explore how to solve movement problems and optimize your
performance, adding to your achievement and enjoyment. You can apply
the Technique to any activity tennis, golf, skiing, baseball,
horseback riding, basketball, etc.
- Pregnant women - The Alexander Technique has
much to offer women before, during and after childbirth.
- Before pregnancy, you can use the Technique
to unlearn harmful postural habits while improving balance and coordination.
This enables you to manage your body during the changes pregnancy
brings.
- During pregnancy, the Alexander teacher
can help eliminate lower back pain caused by increased weight in
front of the body. The baby's growth limits the mother's internal
space and her organs become compressed. This can result in digestive
problems and shortness of breath. Use of the Alexander Technique
will allow more internal space for both mother and baby. With more
breath and mobility, the mother can stay active. To help the mother
prepare for labor and delivery, Alexander Technique lessons coordinate
breathing and strengthen pelvic muscles.
- During childbirth, the Alexander Technique
can help the mother manage the physical challenges.
- After childbirth, a mother can continue
to use the Technique to help focus on her own self care while nourishing
and caring for her child. Both parents can learn how to manage the
constant lifting and carrying that come with parenthood.
How did the Alexander Technique begin?
The Alexander Technique was developed by F.M. Alexander (1869-1955). As
a young Australian actor, he suffered from a vocal problem that interrupted
his burgeoning career as a Shakespearean actor. Frustrated by this limitation,
he studied his own movement for the cause of his problem. Through a long
process of self-observation and experiment, he evolved a way to restore
full use of his voice. In exploring how to help himself and others, he
discovered the crucial importance of the relationship between the head,
neck and spine. He named this relationship the primary control
because he perceived it as primary in controlling posture, breath and
movement. He developed a way to teach people how to elicit the primary
control in their daily lives.
What are the Alexander Technique's
basic ideas?
Though your body is much more elaborate and subtle than any machine, you
can understand the Alexander Technique's basic ideas by comparing it to
driving a car. You use the mirrors (awareness), the brake (inhibition)
and the gas (direction). As you develop each of these skills and learn
to use them all together, you gain access to your body's power steering
the primary control. Just s you don't have to focus on every detail
of a car's operation, you learn about your body's capacity to respond
and coordinate each of its systems to work together, as an integrated
whole.
- Primary control - The primary control is the
relationship between the head, neck and spine. The quality of that relationship
compressed or free determines the quality of our overall
movement and functioning. When the neck is not overworking, the head
balances lightly atop the spine, the torso expands and breath comes
more easily. We restore the efficacy of the postural reflex a
natural, dynamic force that counters gravity and easily guides the torso
upward. You elicit your body's primary control by developing three interlocking
skills:
- Awareness - Many people don't realize the source
of their limitation, aches or chronic pain. You acquire a powerful tool
when you refine awareness of your habitual tendencies, observe how you
operate moment to moment and understand how your body works best.
- Inhibition - Though we often tend to think we're
not doing enough, Alexander found that our habits of tension and compression
interfere with our body's ingenious design. By catching ourselves as
we move with compression and reducing excess muscular effort, we can
inhibit ó or stop ó compressive habits and stress responses.
We can actually accomplish more by doing less.
- Direction - Each of us has the capacity to visualize
movement and mentally guide the flow of force through the body. Rather
than gunning the motor and muscling our way through an activity, we
can use the mind to direct or envision dynamic expansion
while moving. By doing so, the body's reflexive coordination seems to
handle the action by itself, gracefully and effortlessly.
How long will it be before I see results?
Each lesson will bring new insights that you can apply immediately , and
you will probably feel the effects of your Alexander Technique work within
the first 6-10 lessons. As you continue and your understanding grows,
you will be able to apply what you've learned to a wider range of activities.
Instead of a quick fix with a fleeting effect, you will experience a gradual
change and long-term results.
How long should I take lessons to get
the full benefit?
Like any skill, it takes practice A series of 30 lessons, once or twice
a week for three to six months, is the best way for you to learn the Technique.
Does everyone need the same number
of lessons?
The number of lessons you need depends upon your goals, interests and
physical condition. Some students study for 3-5 months, others continue
taking lessons after reaching their initial goals and continue for years.
Duration of study is up to you.
Do the Alexander Technique's benefits
wear off when I stop taking lessons?
Not if you continue to use what you have learned! While taking lessons,
you reclaim your body's natural sense of ease and increase your understanding
of how you function. This practice enables you to take the mind/body process
wherever you go and apply it to anything you do, such as riding a bike,
sitting through a long meeting, playing an instrument, swinging a racket
or carrying luggage. You can continue to build your skills on your own
after you stop taking lessons.
Since F.M. Alexander was not a physician,
why should the medical field take the Alexander Technique seriously?
Because it works! The Alexander Technique is a proven, safe, selfcare
method to stop pain, muscle tension and stress cause by everyday misuse
of the body.
- Endorsed by physicians and health care professionals
- The Alexander Technique is offered in wellness centers and health
education programs. Medical professionals of every kind recommend the
Alexander Technique for chronic back pain, migraines, repetitive stress
injuries, balance and coordination problems and for the depression and
anxiety that often accompanies chronic pain and stress.
- Endorsed by scientists - Alexander's findings
are supported by behavioral scientists and physiologists including Nobel
laureate Sir Charles Sherrington, Dr. Rudolph Magnus, G.E Coghill, Frank
Pierce Jones and Nikolaus Tinbergen, who noted Alexander's discoveries
in his Nobel Prize acceptance speech.
- An established record of success - Clinical
studies have shown that the Technique modifies stress responses while
improving breathing capacity and posture. In a 1988 study of chronic
pain sufferers, the Alexander Technique was chosen as patients' preferred
method of reducing pain.
Is the Alexander Technique just another
health fad?
Now over 100 years old, the Alexander Technique has a long track record
of helping people with back problems, chronic pain and tension, posture
and movement disorders, asthma, migraines and whiplash. As its wide applications
are understood and its successes continue to multiply, the reputation
of the Technique is growing. Today there are about 2500 teachers worldwide,
with about 700 in the United States.
What are Alexander Technique teachers
like?
Many have come from the performing arts, such as dance, theater or music.
Some are physical therapists, massage therapists or teachers in another
field.
What training is required to be an
Alexander Technique teacher?
AmSAT-certified Alexander Technique teachers
must complete 1,600 hours of training over a minimum of three years in
a AmSAT-approved training program. To assure quality instruction, each
Alexander Teaching Training Program maintains a five-to-one student/teacher
ratio.
Alexander teachers must practice what they teach: the
ability to integrate and streamline their own movement while guiding their
clients toward improved functioning. They acquire this ability from expert
mentors through long hours of intense, focused hands-on training.
Alexander practitioners are trained in careful visual
observation to spot the source of movement problems. They are schooled
in teaching skills that encourage learning in a non-judgmental, supportive
atmosphere. And they are trained in the unique Alexander touch, a complex
combination of kinesthetic receptivity and the subtle suggestion of expansion
and lightness in movement. Additional studies include anatomy, study of
F.M. Alexander's theoretical writings, literature and research by Alexander
scholars and those in related fields.
What is AmSAT?
The American Society of the Alexander Technique is the
largest professional association of board-certified Alexander Technique
teachers in the United States. Its mission is to maintain the integrity
of the Alexander Technique as developed by F.M. Alexander (1869-1955).
AmSAT maintains the nation's highest standards for teacher training,
certification and membership and maintains affiliations with similar credentialling
bodies worldwide. Since its formation in 1987, over 600 teachers have
completed a rigorous training process to earn AmSAT certification.
In addition to providing educational support services
for its members, AmSAT provides information and assistance to the public
in locating qualified teachers:
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Toll-free teacher referral service |
800/473-0620 |
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Mail order service of books |
AmSAT Books |
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Web site |
alexandertech.com |
© 1997 Joan Arnold
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