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Movement Therapies Outlined: from AHealthyMe.com
By Linda Chrisman
- Definition
Movement therapy refers to a broad range of Eastern and Western
movement approaches used to promote physical, mental, emotional,
and spiritual well-being.
- Purpose
The physical benefits of movement therapy include greater ease
and range of movement, increased balance, strength and flexibility,
improved muscle tone and coordination, joint resiliency, cardiovascular
conditioning, enhanced athletic performance, stimulation of circulation,
prevention of injuries, greater longevity, pain relief, and relief
of rheumatic, neurological, spinal, stress, and respiratory disorders.
Movement therapy can also be used as a meditation practice to quiet
the mind, foster self-knowledge, and increase awareness. In addition,
movement therapy is beneficial in alleviating emotional distress
that is expressed through the body. These conditions include eating
disorders, excessive clinging, and anxiety attacks. Since movements
are related to thoughts and feelings, movement therapy can also
bring about changes in attitude and emotions. People report an increase
in self-esteem and self-image. Communication skills can be enhanced
and tolerance of others increased. The physical openness facilitated
by movement therapy leads to greater emotional openness and creativity.
- Description
Origins
Movement is fundamental to human life. In fact movement is life.
Contemporary physics tells us that the universe and everything in
it is in constant motion. We can move our body and at the most basic
level our body is movement. According to the somatic educator Thomas
Hanna, "The living body is a moving body-indeed, it is a constantly
moving body." The poet and philosopher Alan Watts eloquently
states a similar view, "A living body is not a fixed thing
but a flowing event, like a flame or a whirlpool." Centuries
earlier, the great Western philosopher Socrates understood what
modern physics has proven, "The universe is motion and nothing
else."
Since the beginning of time, indigenous societies around the world
have used movement and dance for individual and community healing.
Movement and song were used for personal healing, to create community,
to ensure successful crops, and to promote fertility. Movement is
still an essential part of many healing traditions and practices
throughout the world.
Western movement therapies generally developed out of the realm
of dance. Many of these movement approaches were created by former
dancers or choreographers who were searching for a way to prevent
injury, attempting to recover from an injury, or who were curious
about the effects of new ways of moving. Some movement therapies
arose out of the fields of physical therapy, psychology, and bodywork.
Other movement therapies were developed as way to treat an incurable
disease or condition.
Eastern movement therapies, such as yoga, qigong, and t'ai chi
began as a spiritual or self-defense practices and evolved into
healing therapies. In China, for example, Taoist monks learned to
use specific breathing and movement patterns in order to promote
mental clarity, physical strength, and support their practice of
meditation. These practices, later known as qigong and t'ai chi
eventually became recognized as ways to increase health and prolong
life.
There are countless approaches to movement therapy. Some approaches
emphasize awareness and attention to inner sensations. Other approaches
use movement as a form of psychotherapy, expressing and working
through deep emotional issues. Some approaches emphasize alignment
with gravity and specific movement sequences, while other approaches
encourage spontaneous movement. Some approaches are primarily concerned
with increasing the ease and efficiency of bodily movement. Other
approaches address the reality of the body "as movement"
instead of the body as only something that runs or walks through
space.
The term movement therapy is often associated with dance therapy.
Some dance therapists work privately with people who are interested
in personal growth. Others work in mental health settings with autistic,
brain injured and learning disabled children, the elderly, and disabled
adults.
Laban movement analysis (LMA), formerly known as Effort-Shape is
a comprehensive system for discriminating, describing, analyzing,
and categorizing movements. LMA can be applied to dance, athletic
coaching, fitness, acting, psychotherapy, and a variety of other
professions. Certified movement analysts can "observe recurring
patterns, note movement preferences, asses physical blocks and dysfunctional
movement patterns, and the suggest new movement patterns."
As a student of Rudolf Laban, Irmgard Bartenieff developed his form
of movement analysis into a system of body training or reeducation
called Bartenieff fundamentals (BF). The basic premise of this work
is that once the student experiences a physical foundation, emotional,
and intellectual expression become richer. BF uses specific exercises
that are practiced on the floor, sitting, or standing to engage
the deeper muscles of the body and enable a greater range of movement.
Authentic movement (AM) is based upon Mary Starks Whitehouse's
understanding of dance, movement, and depth psychology. There is
no movement instruction in AM, simply a mover and a witness. The
mover waits and listens for an impulse to move and then follows
or "moves with" the spontaneous movements that arise.
These movements may or may not be visible to the witness. The movements
may be in response to an emotion, a dream, a thought, pain, joy,
or whatever is being experienced in the moment. The witness serves
as a compassionate, non judgmental mirror and brings a "special
quality of attention or presence." At the end of the session
the mover and witness speak about their experiences together. AM
is a powerful approach for self development and awareness and provides
access to preverbal memories, creative ideas, and unconscious movement
patterns that limit growth.
Gabrielle Roth (5 Rhythms movement) and Anna Halprin have both
developed dynamic movement practices that emphasize personal growth,
awareness, expression, and community. Although fundamentally different
forms, each of these movement/dance approaches recognize and encourage
our inherent desire for movement.
Several forms of movement therapy grew out of specific bodywork
modalities. Rolfing movement integration (RMI) and Rolfing rhythms
are movement forms which reinforce and help to integrate the structural
body changes brought about by the hands-on work of Rolfing (structural
integration). RMI uses a combination of touch and verbal directions
to help develop greater awareness of one's vertical alignment and
habitual movement patterns. RMI teacher Mary Bond says, "The
premise of Rolfing Movement Integration... is that you can restore
your structure to balance by changing the movement habits that perpetuate
imbalance." Rolfing rhythms is a series of lively exercises
designed to encourage awareness of the Rolfing principles of ease,
length, balance, and harmony with gravity.
The movement education component of Aston-Patterning bodywork is
called neurokinetics. This movement therapy teaches ways of moving
with greater ease throughout every day activities. These movement
patterns can also be used to release tension in the body. Aston
fitness is an exercise program which includes warm-up techniques,
exercises to increase muscle tone and stability, stretching, and
cardiovascular fitness.
Rosen method movement (an adjunct to Rosen method bodywork) consists
of simple fun movement exercises done to music in a group setting.
Through gentle swinging, bouncing, and stretching every joint in
the body experiences a full range of movement. The movements help
to increase balance and rhythm and create more space for effortless
breathing.
The movement form of Trager psychophysical Integration bodywork,
Mentastics, consists of fun, easy swinging, shaking, and stretching
movements. These movements, developed by Dr. Milton Trager, create
an experience of lightness and freedom in the body, allowing for
greater ease in movement. Trager also worked successfully with polio
patients.
Awareness through movement, the movement therapy form of the Feldenkrais
method, consists of specific structured movement experiences taught
as a group lesson. These lessons reeducate the brain without tiring
the muscles. Most lessons are done lying down on the floor or sitting.
Moshe Feldenkrais designed the lessons to "improve ability...
turn the impossible into the possible, the difficult into the easy,
and the easy into the pleasant."
Ideokinesis is another movement approach emphasizing neuromuscular
reeducation. Lulu Sweigart based her work on the pioneering approach
of her teacher Mabel Elsworth Todd. Ideokinesis uses imagery to
train the nervous system to stimulate the right muscles for the
intended movement. If one continues to give the nervous system a
clear mental picture of the movement intended, it will automatically
select the best way to perform the movement. For example, to enhance
balance in standing, Sweigart taught people to visualize "lines
of movement" traveling through their bodies. Sweigart did not
train teachers in ideokinesis but some individuals use ideokinetic
imagery in the process of teaching movement.
The Mensendieck system of functional movement techniques is both
corrective and preventative. Bess Mensendieck, a medical doctor,
developed a series of exercises to reshape, rebuild and revitalize
the body. A student of this approach learns to use the conscious
will to relax muscles and releases tension. There are more than
200 exercises that emphasize correct and graceful body movement
through everyday activities. Unlike other movement therapy approaches
this work is done undressed or in a bikini bottom, in front of mirrors.
This allows the student to observe and feel where a movement originates.
Success has been reported with many conditions including Parkinson's
disease, muscle and joint injuries, and repetitive strain injuries.
The Alexander technique is another functional approach to movement
therapy. In this approach a teacher gently uses hands and verbal
directions to subtly guide the student through movements such as
sitting, standing up, bending and walking. The Alexander technique
emphasizes balance in the neck-head relationship. A teacher lightly
steers the students head into the proper balance on the tip of the
spine while the student is moving in ordinary ways. The student
learns to respond to movement demands with the whole body, in a
light integrated way. This approach to movement is particularly
popular with actors and other performers.
Pilates or physical mind method is also popular with actors, dancers,
athletes, and a broad range of other people. Pilates consists of
over 500 exercises done on the floor or primarily with customized
exercise equipment. The exercises combine sensory awareness and
physical training. Students learn to move from a stable, central
core. The exercises promote strength, flexibility, and balance.
Pilates training is increasingly available in sports medicine clinics,
fitness centers, dance schools, spas, and physical therapy offices.
Many approaches to movement therapy emphasize awareness of internal
sensations. Charlotte Selver, a student of somatic pioneer Elsa
Gindler, calls her style of teaching sensory awareness (SA). This
approach has influenced the thinking of many innovators, including
Fritz Perls, who developed gestalt therapy. Rather than suggesting
a series of structured movements, visualizations, or body positions,
in SA the teacher outlines experiments in which one can become aware
of the sensations involved in any movement. A teacher might ask
the student to feel the movement of her breathing while running,
sitting, picking up a book, etc. This close attunement to inner
sensory experience encourages an experience of body-mind unity in
which breathing becomes less restricted and posture, coordination,
flexibility, and balance are improved. There may also be the experience
of increased energy and aliveness.
Gerda Alexander Eutony (GAE) is another movement therapy approach
that is based upon internal awareness. Through GAE one becomes a
master of self-sensing and knowing which includes becoming sensitive
to the external environment, as well. For example, while lying on
the floor sensing the breath, skin or form of the body, one also
senses the connection with the ground. GAE is taught in group classes
or private lessons which also include hands-on therapy. In 1987,
after two years of observation in clinics throughout the world,
GAE became the first mind-body discipline accepted by the World
Health Organization (WHO) as an alternative health-care technique.
Kinetic awareness developed by dancer-choreographer Elaine Summers,
emphasizes emotional and physical inquiry. Privately or in a group,
a teacher sets up situations for the student to explore the possible
causes of pain and movement restrictions within the body. Rubber
balls of various sizes are used as props to focus attention inward,
support the body in a stretched position and massage a specific
area of the body. The work helps one to deal with chronic pain,
move easily again after injuries and increase energy, flexibility,
coordination, and comfort.
Body-mind centering (BMC) was developed by Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen
and is a comprehensive educational and therapeutic approach to movement.
BMC practitioners use movement, touch, guided imagery, developmental
repatterning, dialogue, music, large balls, and other props in an
individual session to meet the needs of each person. BMC encourages
people to develop a sensate awareness and experience of the ligaments,
nerves, muscles, skin, fluids, organs, glands, fat, and fascia that
make up one's body. It has been effective in preventing and rehabilitating
from chronic injuries and in improving neuromuscular response in
children with cerebral palsy and other neurological disorders.
Continuum movement has also been shown to be effective in treating
neurological disorders including spinal chord injury. Developed
by Emilie Conrad and Susan Harper, continuum movement is an inquiry
into the creative flux of our body and all of life. Sound, breath,
subtle and dynamic movements are explored that stimulate the brain
and increase resonance with the fluid world of movement. The emphasis
is upon unpredictable, spontaneous or spiral movements rather than
a linear movement pattern. According to Conrad, "Awareness
changes how we physically move. As we become more fluid and resilient
so do the mental, emotional, and spiritual movements of our lives."
Eastern movement therapies such as yoga, t'ai chi, and qigong are
also effective in healing and preventing a wide range of physical
disorders, encouraging emotional stability, and enhancing spiritual
awareness. There are a number of different approaches to yoga. Some
emphasize the development of physical strength, flexibility, and
alignment. Other forms of yoga emphasize inner awareness, opening,
and meditation.
- Precautions
People with acute injuries and chronic physical and mental conditions
need to be careful when choosing a form of movement therapy. It
is best to consult with a knowledgeable physician, physical therapist,
or mental health therapist.
Research and general acceptance
Although research has documented the effects of dance therapy,
qigong, t'ai chi, yoga, Alexander technique, awareness through movement
(Feldenkrais), and Rolfing movement, other forms of movement therapy
have not been as thoroughly researched.
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