Sue, a cranial ostheopath of thirty five
years experience, had some very interesting comments about
the psycho-physical benefits of being supported by air. During
an ATM lesson she had found that placing her foot on a ball
leaning against the wall was wonderfully helpful. This had
immediately eased the excruciating pain in her pelvis which
she had experienced when placing the foot directly on the
bare wall. (The pain had taken her straight back to a traumatic
road accident over twenty years previously.) Lying on the
air-table had a similarly beneficial effect on Sue. She observed
later:
“It was definitely to do with the softness which suddenly
opened things up: You are not resisting because you are not
resisted. That enables something to happen and that’s
when you suddenly go “Oh, it doesn’t hurt any
more!”
What I see in the air work is that it allows the freedom
of one’s system to integrate with itself instead of
reacting (to the wall or the feeling of threat)... It’s
the yielding which enables you to escape the reactive pattern.
If you have impingement from outside, you are aware of what
is impinging and that puts you into the external dialogue.
Working with air one is dialoguing with oneself. It made
me aware how little I have done that in my life, or should
I rather say how constant the external dialogue is and how
much one moves to the pressure of the external dialogue.
One of the most important things I learned from that: If
something is the truth, it applies to every level of being.
So if what one is feeling in one’s physical system
is how much one opposes what is met in life, that is probably
also the case in other areas, whether it’s interaction
in relationships or something else.
I always feel light and free and invigorated after a Functional
Integration session. But this time [on the air-table] I felt
much more open. It’s just no barriers! – Oh,
it’s not a loss of sense of the skeleton, but I’m
not impinged by the concrete form. I feel very like I could
bounce around. Free as a cloud, that sort of thing. ... So
it’s all much more open – in all directions.
One’s awareness is not so restricted. It’s as
if one could project outwards”.
See Resources for an article on Functional Integration
as Dialogue entitled: “Feldenkrais Learning in the Light
of David’s Dialogue Model”
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