New York City and Bodies

I just returned from NYC, studying with some of my colleagues and as I walked around the city I noticed the diversity in bodies and movement. There is this beautiful commingling of emotions, postures, clothing and identification of persona. I have to wonder what the stories are for all these lovely folks who all seem to be going somewhere, most with a sense of urgency in their body to “get there”.

The posture and tensing that I see is so evident because of wanting to “get there”, I feel myself emerging into the same energy, and I have to remind myself to soften, calm, to bring my awareness to my body, my feet on the ground, the space above my head. Something changes in my sensual awareness; I start to see, hear, and smell with a different more enhanced experience. Before I started to notice myself in the space I was in and the space around me; I felt pulled or separate from my sensations, all because I was wanted to get ahead of myself to “get there”. I am only driven by the self-induced “urgency” to be somewhere other than where I am; and, I am not in the process of enjoying this incredible city and the people who are here in the space with me. Does the awareness of my body expand my attention to really see and be a part of this fabulous city? Do I have more ease in my head, neck and shoulders, less tightening in my back and knees and more oxygen is coming in because I am breathing!

Try it yourself, next time you are in the grocery store, instead of being pulled by the “urgency” to get to the butter, cheese, lettuce. Be with yourself in the present of just walking, taking in the smells, the sights and the sounds that surround you, your feet on the floor, the space above your head. Does something change, do your muscles ease and calm along with your thoughts? How long can you be “present”…before the “urgency” creeps back in and your shoulders ride up to your ears…it is challenging! Have fun!

Moving Medicine for Arthritis Pain and Stiffness

How does movement help arthritis pain?

1. The fluid in the synovial membrane warms through movement and lubricates and nourishes the joint

2. Range of Motion (ROM) through all the joints helps prevent stiffness and loss of motion

3. The way you move your joints is important to not further tense or tighten the space between the bones

4. Taking a warm, not hot, shower before working with your ROM movement helps learn more about using your joints in a healthy ways

Sign up for my blog and learn more ways to help relieve arthritis pain…you don’t have to suffer!

Exerpt from the Arthritis Foundations study on alternative therapies:

Low back pain

This category had the most studies – 75 in all, featuring more than 11,000 patients testing 14 therapies. Acupuncture and massage each received 5, yoga scored 4 and relaxation therapy, osteopathy and the Alexander technique scored 3. The Alexander technique teaches people to move, sit and stand with less strain and more ease.    2/1/2013 (“Some Alternatives Work for Arthritis”)

Dr Steinman, Harvard MD talks about pain and the Alexander Technique

Is it my responsibility to take care of my health?

Calming the nervous system

Calming the nervous system

This is a question that continues to surface as our medical community changes from what it once was.  It used to be that we turned all our power over to the doctor and did very little to educate ourselves about our bodies, or thought much about how we felt, how we moved, walked, sat, etc.; however, we are changing, we want to be involved and responsible for our health.  After all, we are the one inside our bodies;  we can change our approach and be proactive in our healing.

When clients come to me with back pain, sometimes chronic, they have no idea that they can change a few things that greatly improve their movement and the pain subsides or goes away.  Seeing their life change because of this new way of thinking is so moving and satisfying. Basically they heal from their own “power” or direction!

How can this happen?  As one of my clients put it:

“I am susceptible to chronic pain and it can flare up from either physical or emotional tension; when I change my thinking and learn to “let go” of the tension” and be conscious and responsible for my actions; things improve.  The Alexander Technique is aiming at non-doing, and the physical component that can tighten muscles also compresses the spine…we learn to elongate the spine...I call it                         

EDUCATION THROUGH SELF-CARE! 

It is “my job” not the doctors or the pharmacologist
to take care of my health.

Learning about our bodies

Learning about our bodies

 
The Alexander Technique gives more “bang for the buck”! “

R. Winn, Culpeper, VA