Posts tagged posture
Basic flexion #5, knees to elbows

Unknown to knowing

This lesson experiments with the chin to the knee, the forehead, the nose, the lips. Getting good at shapes, angles, and pressure will help you recover a mobile ribs and spine. I’m including a follow-on lesson this week. The folding diagonals lesson is a little more athletic as you learn to use the big muscles in the trunk.

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Heel circles, 39 min

Doing vs. Being

Use Feldenkrais lessons to develop deep listening skills, the kind where you don’t interrupt the speaker—which is you, in this case! Wait, wait, wait, and then ask, is there any more? I’m here, I’m listening. Imagine giving yourself this gift of attention!

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Magic back lesson, 39 min

Creative acts

Here is Edward Bear, coming downstairs now, bump, bump, bump, on the back of his head, behind Christopher Robin. It is, as far as he knows, the only way of coming downstairs, but sometimes he feels that there really is another way, if only he could stop bumping for a moment and think about it.

— A. A. Milne

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Part 1: Super light arms, lengthen whole self, 40 min

Learning and Smiling

One of my favorite quotes by Moshe Feldenkrais is:

“One has to set about learning to learn as is befitting for the most important business in human life; that is, with serenity but without solemnity, with patient objectivity and without compulsive seriousness. Clenching the fists, tensing the eyebrows, tightening the jaw are expressions of impotent effort. It is possible to succeed in spite of these faults only at the expense of truly healthy joy of living. Learning must be undertaken and is really profitable when the whole frame is held in a state where smiling can turn into laughter without interference, naturally, spontaneously.”

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Low back on a blanket, 28 min

Why Humans Stop Learning

I have been thinking all week about why artificial intelligence is artificial and how humans learn new skills in the context of our deeply ingrained sense of self.

At some point, and for many reasons, humans will stop differentiating patterns. Instead, we think, “This is good enough. I’ll just put up with this pain/dysfunction/challenge forever.” The narrative is set.

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Shoulders slide across ribs like a sphinx, 30 min

On Sitting up straight

It’s not wrong to slump over for a while, it’s just tedious. To stop doing that pattern, I get on the floor and remind myself that I can move my shoulders and ribs in other, better, more dynamic relationships.

In a similar vein, I’ve recently been telling my clients to do Feldenkrais after getting off the couch in the evening. Going straight to bed without doing fifteen or twenty minutes of movement in your spine is a recipe for disaster.

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