A great example of our body’s schema…
Imagine learning jazz for the first time — fingers clumsy, searching for that elusive
swing. Or practicing tai chi, where trying harder to relax only makes you more tense.
Or recovering from an injury, your body no longer moving the way it used to.
These challenges share a common thread: the brain’s unconscious map of the
body, known as the body schema. It tracks where each part is in space, how they
move together, how much tension we habitually hold — shaping how we move, feel,
and interact with the world, all beneath our awareness.
For most of us, this map grows rigid over time. Habitual tensions and fixed patterns
begin to feel “normal” — even when they’re causing pain or holding us back.
The good news? This map is far more changeable than we realize, and the doorway
in may be simpler than anything you’ve tried.
Your body schema is constantly being redrawn through neuroplasticity. Research shows this happens even using a tool for an extended amount of time changes your body schema; tennis players incorporate their rackets into
their body map; musicians do the same with their instruments.
But the same plasticity that allows expansion also allows the accumulation of
interference — habitual tension, excess effort, patterns practiced so thoroughly
they’ve become invisible, baked into the map itself.
This is why most people who try to “fix” their movement hit a wall: they’re layering
new patterns on top of a map already full of accumulated noise.
I use a simple demonstration at the start of my work with people, called IMA — from
the Japanese word for “now.”
Scan your body for a moment. Find somewhere — anywhere — that feels a little
easier, a little less held than the rest. Not relaxed. Just… relatively easier.
Something just shifted, didn’t it? You didn’t do that. You allowed it.That’s the difference that changes everything. When you turn attention toward ease
rather than hunting for problems, your nervous system reads it as a signal that
conditions are safe enough to reorganize. The map updates itself.
The Alexander Technique is rooted in these principles — and the good news is that change is possible. As we grow more consciously aware of our bodies and how we are naturally designed for effortless, efficient movement, we can begin to reshape our learned schema. This is the work: returning to ease, reclaiming your innate intelligence of movement, and discovering what becomes possible when your body is no longer working against itself.
Taken from an article by:
Mio Morales