1. Any attempt to write a definition of the
FELDENKRAIS METHOD might be seen as producing a somewhat static description
of a highly fluid and dynamic method. FELDENKRAIS METHOD practitioners/teachers
continually evolve their understanding and practice of the Method and in offering
definitive statements about the work we must not lose our perspective of dynamism
and evolution. This document should be interpreted in this light.
2. Innovation and growth in this field are
valued, especially when based on a solid foundation of understanding, sensitivity
and skill embodied in the Methods' present form. As valid innovations become
accepted in the FELDENKRAIS METHOD community, these standards will be changed
accordingly.
3. This document will be updated at regular
intervals by a committee to be appointed by the Board of Directors for the purpose
of reviewing and making revisions to the Standards of Practice.
Introduction
1. The FELDENKRAIS METHOD assumes that human
beings have transformational potential and that all people, regardless of their
age or condition, have the ability to learn.
2. Moshe Feldenkrais wrote in HIGHER JUDO,
"In a perfectly matured body which has grown without great emotional disturbances,
movements tend gradually to conform to the mechanical requirements of the surrounding
world. The nervous system has evolved under the influence of these laws and
is fitted to them. However, in our society we do, by the promise of great reward
or intense punishment, so distort the even development of the system, that many
acts become excluded or restricted. The result is that we have to provide special
conditions for furthering adult maturation of many arrested functions. The majority
of people have to be taught not only the special movements of our repertoire,
but also to reform patterns of motions and attitudes that should never have
been excluded or neglected."
Section 1:
The FELDENKRAIS METHOD: What it is and what
it does.
1. The FELDENKRAIS METHOD is an educational
system that develops a functional awareness of the self in the environment.
The Method utilizes the fact that the body is the primary vehicle for learning.
2. The FELDENKRAIS METHOD is an approach to
working with people which expands their repertoire of movements, enhances awareness,
improves function and enables people to express themselves more fully.
3. The FELDENKRAIS METHOD directly addresses
the question of how to facilitate the learning that is necessary for organizing
the whole self and recovering excluded and unconsidered movement patterns or
actions.
4. This is done by expanding the self-image
through movement sequences that bring attention to the parts of the self that
are out of awareness and uninvolved in functional actions. Better function is
evoked by establishing an improved dynamic relationship between the individual,
gravity, and society. Feldenkrais, himself, defined function as the interaction
of the person with the outside world or the self with the environment
5. The Method enables people to include in
their functioning, movements and parts of the body unconsidered, forgotten or
excluded from their habitual actions or images of actions. By allowing a person
to learn how their whole body cooperates in any movement, the FELDENKRAIS METHOD
assists people to live their lives more fully, efficiently and comfortably.
6. The improvement of physical functioning
is not necessarily an end in itself. Such improvement is based on developing
a broader functional awareness which is often a gateway to more generalized
enhancement of physical functioning in the context of one's environment and
life.
7. The FELDENKRAIS METHOD is based on self-organization
and self-regulation in learning.
8. The FELDENKRAIS METHOD is expressed in
two parallel forms: AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT and FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION..
9. AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT consists of
verbally directed movement sequences presented primarily to groups. There are
several hundred hours of AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT lessons. A lesson generally
lasts from thirty to sixty minutes. Each lesson is usually organized around
a particular function.
10. In AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT lessons,
people engage in precisely structured movement explorations that involve thinking,
sensing, moving, and imagining. Many are based on developmental movements and
ordinary functional activities. Some are based on more abstract explorations
of joint, muscle, and postural relationships. The lessons consist of comfortable,
easy movements that gradually evolve into movements of greater range and complexity.
There are hundreds of AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT lessons contained in the FELDENKRAIS
METHOD that vary, for all levels of movement ability, from simple in structure
and physical demand to more difficult lessons.
11. AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT lessons attempt
to make one aware of their habitual neuromuscular patterns and rigidities and
to expand options for new ways of moving while increasing sensitivity and improving
efficiency.
12. A major goal of AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT
is to learn how one's most basic functions are organized. By experiencing the
details of how one performs any action, the student has the opportunity to learn
how to - attend to his/her whole self - eliminate unnecessary energy expenditure
- mobilize his/her intentions into actions - learn.
13. FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION is the other form
of expressing the Feldenkrais Method. Just as FELDENKRAIS METHOD practitioners
can guide people through movement sequences verbally in AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT,
they also guide people through movement with gentle, non-invasive touching in
FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION.
14. FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION is a hands-on form
of tactile, kinesthetic communication. The FELDENKRAIS METHOD practitioner communicates
to the student how he/she organizes his/her body and hints, through gentle touching
and movement, how to move in more expanded functional motor patterns.
15. The FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION lesson should
relate to a desire, intention, or need of the student. The learning process
is carried out without the use of any invasive or forceful procedure. Through
rapport and respect for the student's abilities, qualities, and integrity, the
practitioner/teacher creates an environment in which the student can learn comfortably.
16. In FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION, the practitioner/teacher
develops a lesson for the student, custom-tailored to the unique configuration
of that particular person, at that particular moment. The practitioner conveys
the experience of comfort, pleasure, and ease of movement while the student
learns how to reorganize his/her body and behavior in new and more effective
manners.
17. In FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION, the practitioner/teacher's
intention is instructive and communicative.
18. FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION is usually performed
with the student lying on a table designed specifically for the work. It can
also be done with the student in sitting or standing positions. At times, various
props are used in an effort to support the person's body configuration or to
facilitate certain movements.
19. The Method is based on principles of physics,
biomechanics and an empirical understanding of learning and human development.
Section 2:
What the FELDENKRAIS METHOD is not.
1. The Method is not a medical, massage, bodywork,
or therapeutic technique. The Method is a learning process.
2. The FELDENKRAIS Practitioner has no sexual
intent and does not touch the sexual or other intimate parts of a person.
3. Chemical or mechanical aids are not used
in the practice of the FELDENKRAIS METHOD
Section 3:
What a FELDENKRAIS METHOD practitioner knows,
understands and does in practicing the FELDENKRAIS METHOD. The practitioner/teacher:
1. Understands that all actions in the FELDENKRAIS
METHOD are a product of a way of experiencing and thinking as originally developed
by Moshe Feldenkrais, and structured in the curriculum of FELDENKRAIS METHOD
Professional Training Programs. All expressions of the FELDENKRAIS METHOD in
the design and teaching of AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT or in the implementation
of a FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION lesson, represent that way of thinking.
2. Is sensitive to the interdependency of
acting, sensing, thinking, and feeling that constitute human activity, and recognizes
that changes in movement influence all these factors.
3. Understands the rationale, design strategies
and principles of FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION and AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT lessons.
This understanding can be implicit and/or explicit, empirical and/or cognitive.
4. Understands the effectiveness of and can
communicate the basic learning strategies of the FELDENKRAIS METHOD in teaching
AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT, such as: a: orienting to the process of learning
and doing rather than working towards a goal; b: using slow, gentle movement;
c: directing awareness toward sensing differences and perceiving whole inter-connected
patterns in movement; d: allowing the student to find his/her own way with the
lesson; e: directing students to move within the limits of safety by avoiding
pain and strain.
5. Observes and interacts with students from
the initial contact and interview in a manner that leads to the development
of Functional Integration lessons coherent with the principles as stated above.
This means the practitioner/teacher knows how to translate the way students
present their problems into the framework of thinking of the FELDENKRAIS METHOD.
6. Distinguishes between solving a problem
that the student presents and evoking a response designed to create a new way
of thinking, feeling, sensing and moving.
7. Knows the difference between learning to
accomplish a particular skill or function and learning how to achieve new strategies
and possibilities for action in relation to one's intentions in the environment.
8. Uses his/her voice, body, presentation
and presence in relation to the student's, so as to encourage a supportive environment
for learning.
9. Continually reorganizes him/herself in
relationship to perceived changes in the student undergoing AWARENESS THROUGH
MOVEMENT lessons and FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION.
10. Contacts another person through touch in
a manner that is supportive, non-invasive in intention, and non-corrective.
11. Meshes his/her movements with the easiest
directions in which the student moves.
12. Becomes aware when support is given to
the student, when quality of action improves, and when function becomes more
integrated.
13. Alters his/her self-organization in order
to evoke greater feelings of comfort, greater capacity for learning and improved
ability to function in the student.
14. Has the necessary skills to evoke the student's
self-regulating abilities.
15. Determines what movement patterns a person
needs to learn in order to learn a function.
16. Makes distinctions between a more or less
efficiently executed action, becomes aware of the presence of extraneous efforts
and can feel where a student interferes with intended actions.
17. Detects changes in muscular patterns,
skeletal configurations, respiration, and autonomic nervous system signs in
both him/herself and the student.
18. Makes basic distinctions about differences
in muscular tonus throughout the student's body and more importantly, knows
how to find those differences by increasing one's own sensitivity when needed.
19. Is sensitive to the amount of input a student
can receive during each lesson and regulates the intensity and duration of each
lesson accordingly.
20. Can discuss and describe to others what
his/her intentions are or were during a FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION lesson.
21.Organizes FUNCTIONAL INTEGRATION lessons
understanding both the symbolic and bio/mechanical aspects of self-expression
and how they are interwoven.
22. Most importantly, knows how he/himself
or she/herself, learns.
Section 4:
Organizing Processes of the FELDENKRAIS METHOD
1. At the core of the FELDENKRAIS METHOD is
a state of mind that fosters a process of inquiry rather than one that seeks
to define solutions. The practitioner and the student join together to discover
and promote the awareness necessary in order to improve functioning in the student.
2. The following questions are unique coordinates
for the FELDENKRAIS METHOD. When they are all brought together as a constellation
they represent a unique signature of the FELDENKRAIS METHOD. Practitioners teach
the FELDENKRAIS METHOD by translating the answers to these questions into actions,
whether the questions are asked or answered explicitly or implicitly.
3. These questions might never be brought
into language by a FELDENKRAIS METHOD practitioner but rather form a sea of
thoughts which might occasionally bubble to the surface in an articulate form,
and be asked by the practitioner of themselves or another directly. Questions
practitioners/teachers refer to themselves 1. How am I presenting myself in
relationship to my student?
2. What can I do to achieve greater rapport
with my student?
3. What must I do with myself to create the
environment for learning for any lesson?
4. How am I organized to make contact with
another person?
5. How do I organize myself to be able to feel
more sensitively (for feedback)?
6. How am I organized to communicate and to
act (for feedforward)?
7. What can I do to communicate support and
ease with my student?
8. What must I do to evoke a response from
my student without being overly directive?
9. How can I work so that my intention is
clear but not imposed on the student?
10. What feelings are evoked in myself while
working with my student and how is this affecting my actions? Questions related
to observing the student.
Section 5:
1. How can I discover the needs or wants of
my student and how can I arrange myself to address them?
2. How does the student succeed in his/her
life or in any particular actions of importance in life?
3. If the student feels unsuccessful, has he/she
felt successful previously and how did he/she organize themselves to succeed
in the past?
4. What can I sense in the way of differences
about this person that reveals what is needed, e.g., one side compared to the
other, high and low tone, between this person and others, etc.?
5. What can I see, feel or sense that will
allow me to discover for myself and to reveal to my student the pattern of organization
he/she is currently maintaining? And how can I feel and reveal the direction
he/she might be moving towards from their current pattern of organization?
6. What can I feel, see, or sense that will
allow me to move the student in the direction that will evoke greater learning
and increased ability?
7. How can I perceive what is missing or unattended
in the student's self-image as it is revealed in his/her body?
Section 6:
Cognitive questions in the mind of the practitioner/teacher,
that he/she considers.
1. What is the student doing and not doing
to fulfill his/her intentions in life?
2. How can I find what the student wants in
the context of his/her life? What function or functions might be involved?
3. What movement sequences can be organized
around a theme which can create a possible learning experience for the student,
that will help complete what is missing or unattended in their self-image?
4. What kind of lessons are most appropriate
for this person's needs?
5. Is there a major function I would like
to explore with my student and what steps are necessary to embark on the exploration
of that function?
6. What movement possibilities and/or what
functions are developmentally required prior to working with the function we
intend to restore?
7. What can this student learn right now? What
is the time frame for his/her learning and what would be required to deepen
it?
8. What are the distinctions I need to make
and what are the categories and abstractions I might need to form in order to
continue my and my student's learning? |