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EXERCISE IN AWARENESS
The Feldenkrais Method®
Emphasizes Knowledge of the Body and Safer, Efficient Movement
by Liz Brody
Special to the Times
Staying fit into the millennium may mean working out
less for your money. That's because after doing an ATM class, your
body will move as smoothly as the slide of a debit card.
But ATM in this case stands for Awareness Through
Movement®, and the classes are part of the Feldenkrais Method,
which many say makes exercise as easy and efficient as automatic
banking.
Brought to this country in the 1970s by its originator,
Moshe Feldenkrais, a Ukrainian-born physicist and engineer plagued
by a knee injury, the method has long been a professional secret
among dancers, actors and musicians.
But recently the fitness community has gotten hep
to the benefits, and a few on the front lines are serving up Feldenkrais
as the latest physical elixir. "We like to stay on the cutting
edge," says Karen Joy, general manager of Fitness for Her!
In San Diego, one of the health clubs around the country now offering
ATM classes alongside step and sculpt.
Basically, Feldenkrais is an educational approach
that teaches students to become aware of their bodies and move as
seamlessly as possible. For an actor, that can mean getting into
character more convincingly; for an Olympian, shaving the winning
second off a sprint, for a stroke patient, learning to walk again.
As for the rest of us, it could be just what the trainer
ordered. Rather than a replacement for those calorie-blasting workouts
that rev the engines, Feldenkrais is the oil that can perfect your
performance and stop you from getting rusty over time. "Many
people quit exercising because they hurt themselves," says
Andrea Wiener, president of the Feldenkrais Guild®, an organization
that regulates its member practitioners. "This method helps
you both prevent and recover from injuries, and enjoy what you love
to do more."
Frances Fisher doesn't need convincing. "Feldenkrais
has taken the struggle out of exercise," says the actress,
who used ATM exercises to keep her energy flowing on the set of
"Titanic" during long days of filming in a corset.
"Before I did this, I found myself walking around
like these guys at the gym who have a lot of muscle but can't lift
their arms. With the Feldenkrais, I'm not thinking about making
my muscles stronger. I'm aware of how my skeleton is moving in space
and how my muscles and nerves are responding, so my body is much
more relaxed, responsive and flexible. As I get older, I'm more
interested in flexibility because flexibility is youth."
There are two ways to study the method. With Functional Integration®,
a practitioner works on you privately, gently guiding your body
into improved ways of moving as you sit or lie down, fully clothed.
The ATM lessons, which you take in group classes or practice at
home with tapes, help you make the same kinds of discoveries on
your own through thousands of movements-some so subtle that observing
them is like watching paint dry.
Both Functional Integration and ATM lessons (many
students do only one; others combine the two) are based on the idea
that each of us inevitably develops unhealthy movement habits through
years of going about life on automatic pilot, overusing the body
in repetitive ways and nursing old injuries. Feldenkrais teaches
you how to notice these stressful patterns and replace them with
more comfortable, efficient ones, so that, as one practitioner put
it, you're not using the force of chewing a steak to eat a cream
puff.
In a way, the education is like receiving a Thomas Guide to your
body that shows you in detail how you normally move and then lets
you find alternate routes to avoid an accident down the road.
Having that full body map, practitioners say, is important because
when a knee gives you problems or a shoulder aches, your whole system
is affected. Pauline Sugine, co-owner of the Center for Physical
Health in Los Angeles, describes working with Martina Navratilova:
"I showed her that as the result of an injury to the right
ankle, when she moved her head to the right, even just her eyes,
she stopped breathing," says Sugine. "In tennis, if you
look in one direction and a part of your body freezes, even subconsciously,
then you lose the connection. It's sort of like driving with a flat
tire. Not only is your tire flat, but if you keep driving, more
things go wrong."
Through Functional Integration, Sugine kinesthetically
reminded Navratilova how to look right and breathe at the same time,
getting her whole body, including the ankle, in top form again.
The beauty of Feldenkrais is, you don't have to understand it intellectually.
"Whether you get it on a conscious level or not, your nervous
system is picking it up," says Sugine. "It's like we're
smuggling the information in."
Advocates of Feldenkrais say such movement education
has been the missing link in fitness as we know it-which is why,
after 25 years of pounding the pavement, many of us are limping
toward burnout.
"The Western approach to athletic training is
almost exclusively based on overload and compensation," says
Ken Largent, director of Movement Facilitation in Portland, Ore.,
who works with many athletes. "The Feldenkrais approach looks
at movement from a neurological standpoint. So, for example, it
looks at how effective you are in using the least amount of effort
to accomplish your ends. This is almost the opposite of the concept
we've all been working under-not that it's superior, but it is necessary.
There is a yin and yang. What we need is the fullness of both."
Frank Wildman, past president of the Feldenkrais Guild
and director of the Movement Studies Institute in Berkeley, goes
even further. "The routine, boring exercises people do don't
take into account the human ability for self-reflection and awareness,"
he says. "This is what Feldenkrais offers. We're after physical
intelligence."
Wildman explains that we've come to view the body as a machine,
measuring our workouts in numbers, clocks and weights. However,
when you watch someone like Michael Jordan, what's really beautiful
is not how high he jumps, but the way he slips in so many points
without seeming to try, his amazing coordination, his elegance and
grace. "Feldenkrais teaches you to pay attention to the quality
versus the quantity of motion," he says. "It expands your
physical imagination."
This, of course, is why performers love the method.
When, after years of weight lifting, Fisher needed to play a stripper
in a film, she went to choreographer Kim Blank, who uses Feldenkrais
in her coaching. "Frances was very strong and muscular,"
says Blank, "so I'd start her on the floor with an ATM exercise
showing how the pelvis connects to the spine and the sense of fluid,
undulating movement appropriate to a stripper doing a routine. And
then we went on to the choreography."
Fisher says this work helped her access an inner,
organic sensuality while giving her body a more elongated look.
"It's a great tool for getting into any character," she
adds.
And that's true whether you're an actress, athlete-or nowhere close
to being either.
Ultimately, Feldenkrais is a way to explore yourself
and build the kind of inner fitness that lets you jump into any
situation-whether it's playing a film role, learning a sport or
going for a job interview. "Feldenkrais helps you act connected
and there's something so inherently satisfying about that,"
says Blank. "When you move with grace and ease, you can't help
but feel joy. There's a sense of calm, a sense of being more grounded."
Who wouldn't want to cash in on that?
Copyright, 1998, Los Angeles Times. Reprinted by permission.
"Feldenkrais
Worth the Search, Fans Say" / San Diego Union-Tribune
"Felden-what?" / Lawrence Wm. Goldfarb
"The
Feldenkrais Method" / Dalia Sofer, Health Map Magazine
"All
the Right Moves" / Elizabeth
Kaufman, American Way Magazine
"Yoga
& Feldenkrais"
Taught by Kevin Kortan
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