Five year-old George and a three-year old
William taught me most about how to use the air balloons
in a playfully experimental manner. When rolled to and fro
while lying on their belly on an egg both boys would spontaneously
extend their arms whenever they went forward and closer to
the floor. At those moments the children’s condition
(cerebral palsy), which normally kept the affected arm tightly
glued to the chest, seemed to have no power any more.
When lying with their back on a ball, they quickly learned
to open the front of their chest while arching the back and
extending both arms overhead without fear of pain. And indeed
there was no pain.
Straddling an EGG ball as if it were a horse – all my
small eggs had horses’ faces drawn on them at that time – was
a great substitute for expensive therapeutic riding lessons.
While setting up the undulating movement of a horse’s
back the practitioner is able to gently guide a child’s
pelvis and spine from more or less dysfunctional organisation
into something more comfortable and efficient.
William is now eleven years old. Over the years he has seen
me from time to time and at present is coming more regularly
again. His progress is worth describing in a little more detail.
“I really surprised myself”
(Learning
to live with cerebral palsy) William, my youngest assistant
in the pioneering “Feldenkrais
on Air” project
William was a sweet three year old toddler
when he arrived in my practice. Hydrocephalis had made surgery
necessary after birth (to create an artificial channel allowing
excess fluid to drain away from his brain). Cerebral palsy
had been diagnosed and the medical prospects were not good.
Had it not been for his mother’s intuitive knowledge
that her son was not doomed to a shadow existence and her
determination to help him in every possible way to disprove
the medical forecast, this might have become a self-fulfilling
prophecy.
She had decided to try the Feldenkrais approach instead of
hurting William by pulling the spastic left arm away from
his chest, as she had been instructed to do every day.
Since he had been badly traumatised in his early days the
little boy at first saw me as another threatening adult.
It took quite a while to gain his trust. Playing together
was fine; but all I could do initially was to let myself
be guided by William’s vivid flights of imagination
while patiently waiting for the moment when he would no longer
shy away from my hands.
Brightly-coloured EGG balls played an important part in our
games; they became spaceships, fire engines, rafts, horses,
and so on. One day when William was galloping on such a pretend-horse
over an Indian-infested prairie (carefully supported by me
from behind) he suddenly turned round and exclaimed: “ Ilana,
you are actually touching me!” That was a breakthrough.
From then on he simply entrusted himself to my hands as if
that was the most natural thing in the world. Letting his
left arm move out into space in order to grasp something
with his “bad” hand soon became equally natural.
On one occasion he was chasing across the prairie standing
in a chariot (a board that I was moving carefully forward
and back on several rollers) whipping his horse (an oval
ball), directing it right and left by make-belief reins.
I was looking on admiring his growing balancing skills (William
had been plagued by real problems with balance and orientation
in space), but ready to jump and catch him should he fall.
However the little chap was too fast for me when he quite
unexpectedly leapt into the air and – to my great surprise
and relief – landed on the back of the horse. I will
never forget his delight as he exclaimed: “I really
surprised myself”, adding after a moment’s reflection: “I
thought I couldn’t do it, but I knew I wouldn’t
fall off!” Those few words spoke volumes about his
growing confidence. His self-image began most noticeably
to evolve in a positive direction after that triumph.
At age
eight William switched from pretend-horses to the real thing.
One day I accompanied him to the stable (where he has been
taking riding lessons ever since) and could hardly believe
my eyes: I saw in William one of the most fearless, competent,
and sensitive little riders I have ever observed, trotting,
cantering, and galloping. His body was completely at one
with the horse’s body, and there seemed to be
no reason to fear for his safety.
Now aged eleven William still loves coming for his “Feldenkrais
magic” because it always relieves the stiffness which
keeps building up in his body with the stress of school and
everyday life. Usually choosing to lie on the air table as
the most comfortable and pleasant support for him, he is
now working on learning to use and thereby strengthen his
left hand. Comments like: “I will have to live with
this illness, but I can still do something to make things
easier for myself” show the phenomenal degree of maturity
this child has achieved.
(William features prominently in the article “Feldenkrais
Learning in the Light of David Bohm’s Dialogue Model” and
also in the video/DVD documentary “Supported by Air”,
see Resources) |