Alexander Technique Articles:
'The Personal Account':
A personal account of a three year Alexander
Technique teacher training course.
Part 6 - What happens if you Stop Barking up the Wrong
Tree?
From here on I realized that the work is much
more about helping people to recognize, then stop repeating
and therefore reinforcing the wrong habits. I also started
to understand why Alexander wrote about end gaining. Having
spent a large part of my training being reasonably oblivious
to my habits, I started to take more notice and realize when
my body started its usual contortions. The “Do you know
you’re about to…?” questions were less frequently
asked.
In the practical work at the school I noticed when my intentions
became hell bent on achieving an end result, and saw the connection
with corresponding physical habits; physical habits the teachers
had been encouraging me to take notice of since the day I’d
arrived. I had to own up to the fact that end gaining had
almost complete control over all my actions, and I had been
barking up the wrong tree whenever I resorted to it. Even
though all my habits had led me to pain, frustration and misery,
I had been convinced that the same set of end gaining habits
that had got me into that mess could get me out of it.
As soon as I go into this end gaining mode, I notice that
my head starts to swing back, and quite often, when I am doing
something demanding, it has already swung back and locked
tight, trapping and crushing my neck. Sometimes I realize
at this stage but if it goes a step further I become aware
that I am also arching my back, I’m bracing very stiffly,
and I’m holding my breath. It is still a huge temptation
to just go straight for the end result, but if I go down that
road, the rest of what comes with that habit will return.
Others can see immediately, but one needs to really experience
this to understand what it means.
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