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The Alexander Technique is a study of freeing response that is taught by studying one's own mannerisms of posture. It takes its name from F. Matthias Alexander ( 18691955), a former Shakespearean recitalist, who first observed and formulated its principles during 18901900. F.M. Alexander trained teachers of his Technique from 19311955. The Technique is often considered to be the "grandfather" of many later somatic methods, such as Feldenkrais, Rolfing, Hellerwork , etc.


Alexander Technique
This article is part of the branches of CAM series.
CAM Classifications
NCCAM: Mind-Body Intervention
Modality: Self-care
Culture: Western

1 What it is

Alexander Technique is an educational discipline practiced to prevent the physical decline caused by habituated mannerisms. Learning it trains sensory discrimination, empirical psychophysical self-observation and experimentation ability, along with ease of movement. The medium of study is one's own sense of kinesthesia or proprioception, which is the sense used to internally calibrate one's own bodily location, weight and to judge the effort necessary for moving. The founder's original intent was to apply the scientific method to more completely carry intention into factual action. His objective was to make experimentation and training deliberately repeatable, and to learn in a way that would allow indefinite improvement.

2 The needs it addresses

Learning about kinesthetic proprioception and your own responses is valuable for many positive reasons. Alexander Technique is a practice for body/mind unity available for those at any fitness level. Using less effort to get more results is efficient, feels easier, looks more graceful and frees up unintentional overcompensation. Learning about moving easier with conscious awareness is a basic operating manual for life. People often ignorantly move themselves how they guess their bodies are constructed, unnecessarily stressing their body's anatomical design prematurely. Without knowing how to observe themselves to pleasurably continue learning, people instead cultivate inflexibility and resistance to change. Over time, the price of ignorance and increasing inflexibility can be pain, boredom and reduced capacity.

Alexander Technique teachers believe that humans have a built-in proprioceptive blind spot, because people design habits to adapt to repetition. Adapting is mostly a learning advantage, but has a serious drawback. The drawback is that habits disappear as they adapt to run in the background, allowing new adjustment to a constant level of familiar excitement. The advantage is additional habits can be added onto previously designed habits. The disadvantage means people can forget what habits they have designed because they can no longer sense they are doing those previously learned habits. Also, there is usually no provision made for stopping habits, even if a habit is originally intended to be temporary. Our sensory system becomes flooded from accommodating too many contradicting habits. From these habitual contradicting mannerisms, our natural sensitive capacity for calibrating motion becomes dull and untrustworthy.

How our kinesthetic sense becomes untrustworthy from adapting to needless overcompensating is built into many innocent situations. For instance, if person often carries a purse on their forearm, they will later find themselves holding up their arm when the purse is not on it. A child imitates the twisted posture of an admired grown-up. A self-taught student may unknowingly adopt useless and later problematic mannerisms. Misunderstanding a teacher's directions, a student may repeat what the teacher knows is unnecessary, but the teacher allows the mistake to go by because the student is trying to learn. If someone is afraid while learning, adapting can mean they will most likely continue doing the skill mixed with fear reactions. If someone has healed from a temporary injury, a subtle wincing in anticipation of pain can be automatically continued indefinitely, even though pain is gone.



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