Alexander Technique as a treatment for mental illness

re-printed from Times Online UK,   written by Naomi Shragai

In our culture today the connection between physical and emotional problems is gaining currency. Surprisingly, the best answer to coping with the stresses of life is by using a hands-on approach that straightens the body. This technique can help in balancing moods, changing behavioural patterns and managing life’s challenges.

To most people the Alexander Technique is a method of improving posture or relieving backache. However, the emotional and psychological benefits have convinced many to continue lessons long after their aches and pains have disappeared. Hilary, a 38-year-old barrister from North London, gained enormous psychological benefits from having lessons in the technique.

Her psychiatrist had referred her to me after a two-week admission at The Priory Hospital for a psychotic, manic episode. Therapy and medication had had minimal impact on her subsequent depression, and both she and her psychiatrist were willing to try anything that might help. When I first met Hilary, who is married with a four-year-old son, her depression was so severe that she could not even engage in a 50-minute therapy session. Instead, I suggested three Alexander Technique lessons a week until her mood stabilised.

Hilary says she was suffering extreme depression at the time. “I was completely non-functional,” she recalls. “My son, Peter, was three months old and I had to leave him with a full-time nanny to look after him. I wasn’t doing anything except trying not to kill myself.”

The effects of the technique in balancing her mood and helping her to think rationally were powerful. “Before, I had ten years of antidepressants and therapy to some effect, bringing some stability. Using the Alexander Technique helped me to achieve a degree of healing that wasn’t possible with just talk therapy and pills. For me, the technique became a lifeline. I felt calmer from the first lesson.”

The Alexander technique is a way of re-educating the body towards balance and alignment. In individual lessons, a qualified teacher helps the student to recognise faulty muscular use and poor posture through gentle touch and guidance (see panel, facing page). There is an emphasis on lengthening and widening the back, and freeing the spine to achieve a more co-ordinated movement.

With the aid of the teacher’s hands, the student learns to release and lengthen muscles that have been shortened over time because of stress and misuse. But how can stopping unnecessary muscular tension heal emotional wounds? Unconscious experiences, such as unhealed traumas, unexpressed feelings and painful memories can be pushed into the body where they are not free to be dealt with in the mind. These tensions might turn into physical symptoms and ailments, but can also lead to mental illness, such as depression and anxiety.

Frederick Alexander, the founder of the technique, taught that how we use our bodies has an extraordinary effect on our ability to accurately perceive the world around us, as well as our emotional and physical health.

“I had been holding fear in my muscles” Hilary says the technique helped her to cope with emotional scars from her childhood. “One experience I had is that I would just let the fear out of my body. I would lie on the treatment table and I would just let it flow out. I had been holding it in my muscles. So, with lessons over time, the world seemed like a less scary place. I had less fear. I look back now and realise that this fear made me perceive anything anyone did to me as a threat. As a result, I was basically confrontational all the time, with everyone.

“Of course, at the time I couldn’t see it. As my balance improved, my perceptions softened and with less fear came less confrontation. I was better able to connect with reality.

“With balance in your body, you feel less vulnerable, more able to cope. A good example of that is my son’s crying. When I started Alexander lessons, Peter’s crying was the sound of m failure as a mother. It was heartbreaking to me. Obviously, a child’s crying is not that, but I had made it all about me, using it to condemn myself. With the Alexander Technique I was able to reassess the situation – it’s just the sound of a baby’s crying. It didn’t pierce my heart. A feeling of stability replaced the fear and self-loathing.”

For Hilary, the physical space gained in lessons in lengthening and widening the body translates to a mental space available for thinking and reflecting.

Another Alexander Technique student, Sally, a 50-year-old mother of two and a theatrical agent from Central London, initially came to see me for psychotherapy for family problems. Further into the therapy we agreed that it might be beneficial to use the technique. Sally says: “Whatever is thrown at me now, my spine supports me. I feel that I can hold myself physically and emotionally. I no longer see my brain in my head, I see my mind and body completely co-ordinated. I’m much more balanced, more selective in what I say.

“I used to rescue everybody. That was my role in life. That was the norm. I’d get up in the morning and I’d rescue people. The armour was on and I went into battle because that was the only thing I knew. It’s very different now. I’m looking after myself, I think I’ve come out of it much more selfish. What I didn’t know was that if you look after yourself, you’re going to be so much better with other people.”

Anne, 39, a single woman from North London, had attended psychotherapy sessions for nearly seven years for depression. Although the insight she gained was essential for her to make sense of her life, she felt frustrated when her depression recurred at stressful times.

“For me, the Alexander Technique was more helpful for depression than therapy,” she says. “With good posture and balance you are more able to withstand the physical and emotional knocks that life throws at you. A feeling of a lightness and ease in standing and sitting replaces the sense of being held together by tension and fragmented body parts. With lessons, my body started to feel less fragmented, more cohesive, and with that cohesion came a new clarity of thought.”

These three women had psychotherapy sessions alongside the technique, but all benefited from their improved body use. It helped them to translate the insights gained in psychotherapy into changed behaviour.

Another student, Tim, 52, a single professional man from South London, who also suffered depression, says the technique even helped him to contain suicidal thoughts. He describes how lessons left him with a heightened sensitivity to feelings, as well as a greater capacity to hold and think about these rather than being overwhelmed by them. He says: “You feel yourself getting into gear, but you don’t actually end up driving.” Making the neurological connection Missy Vineyard, who runs a training course for Alexander Technique teachers in Massachusetts and is the author of the book How You Stand, How You Move, How You Live, describes the lessons as learning how to consciously stop unwanted behaviour at a neurological level. She believes that the technique teaches conscious inhibition by activating the pre-frontal cortex, the area of the brain responsible for impulse control.

Lucy Brown is a professor of neurology and neuroscience at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York and a student of the Alexander Technique. She is committed to understanding the technique’s neurological and psychological links.

According to Professor Brown, studies suggest that the technique activates those parts of the brain involved with cognition, learning and emotions. She says: “It is reasonable to speculate that areas of the pre-frontal cortex would be activated under the circumstances of a lesson and long-term learning from the technique.” While further research is needed to establish exactly how the technique produces these benefits, people’s experiences speak for themselves.

Students of the Alexander Technique will confirm that the mind is not just located in the brain, but in the muscles, cells and organs throughout the body. The writer and novelist Aldous Huxley, a student of Frederick Alexander’s, knew these truths all too well. In writing about Alexander’s work, he said: “If you teach an individual first to be aware of his physical organism and then to use it as it was meant to be used, you can often change his entire attitude to life and cure his neurotic tendencies.”

(The names of the students have been changed.)

THE LOWDOWN

What is it? The Alexander Technique was developed by the actor Frederick Mathias Alexander around 1900. He believed that correct alignment of the head, neck and spine would alleviate back pain, breathing disorders and stress-related conditions. He claimed the technique frees the neck of muscular tension. It also allows the head to move forward so that it balances lightly at the top of the spine, which encourages the back to lengthen and widen, giving the body freer movement.

Suitable for Treating neck and back pain, poor posture, migraines and arthritis. It is increasingly accepted as useful for treating chronic problems such as arthritis, Parkinson’s disease. What little good-quality research there is suggests that there could be some merit for these claims.

author: Naomi Shragai is a psychotherapist and teacher of the Alexander Technique in North London. She is a member of the UK Council for Psychotherapy, the Association of Family Therapy and the Society of Teachers of the Alexander Technique

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Jamee Culbertson

Healing Tao and Alexander Technique Instructor

JC_Red

Winter 2010 Schedule:

Hello friends,

The following is my Winter 2010 schedule offering Alexander Technique lessons and workshops:

Where? Winchester and Concord Massachusetts

Private Lessons (All lessons are by appointment only.)

When?
Thursdays and Tuesdays in Winchester, MA
Fridays from 2pm to 8pm in Concord, MA

How Much? Private lesson? Semi-private? Call me for my rates. 617-290-7102

On the Web:

*Note* the Back Pain Study published in the British Medical Journal:

This study stated that 579 patients with chronic or recurrent low back pain were treated with either Alexander Technique lessons, exercise or massage. 144 of them had 6 Alexander Technique lessons and 144 of them had 24 lessons.  Results  The results showed that lessons in the Alexander Technique reported the number of days with back pain was lower after lessons and the quality of life improved significantly. Lessons in the Alexander Technique remained effective one year later as well.  Conclusion: One to one lessons in the Alexander Technique from a certified teacher have long term benefits for patients with chronic back pain.

For more info About Jamee please click here

Watch some videos on the Alexander Technique on Jamee’s YouTube channel.

Here is one for example:
The Alexander Technique in the Corporate Atmosphere

Other videos:

The Alexander Technique in Tai Chi and Gardening

The Alexander Technique and Playing Piano

The Alexander Technique at Music School

Follow Jamee on Twitter: www.twitter.com/jameec

and on Facebook: www.facebook.com/jamee.culbertson

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Victoria Beckham - Celebrity News - Marie Claire PA Photos

She’s been wearing towering stilettos her whole life – but Victoria Beckham fears her love of lavish footwear may leave her with a hunchback look as she gets older.

Instead of ditching the heels in favour of a nice pair of flatties, however, Victoria has turned to the Alexander Technique, a famous regime which can help strengthen core muscles and re-align the spine.

Friends in LA recommended Victoria try the Alexander Technique after recent upset about her photos displaying a round-shouldered look.

A source explained, ‘Victoria has been working hard on getting a straight back and correcting her terrible posture‘.

It seems years of bad postural habits have ‘caused her bones to be improperly aligned, with her muscles, joints and ligaments taking more stress than they should’.

The regime appears to be doing the trick. Said the source, ‘You can tell that something is working as the years of Victoria’s shoulders being slumped are now over‘.

Many actors and dancers practice the correction regime in an attempt to improve movement and eliminate bad postural habits, which can be picked up over the years.

Actress Juliet Stevenson hailed the method as ‘miraculous‘ while novelist Aldous Huxley claimed it cured him of ‘neurotic tendencies‘.

Even Lenny Henry and Anthea Turner have had practitioner courses in the technique, which is said to drain stress and tension from the muscles, ease back pain and improve breathing problems. It also boosts physical endurance and flexibility, with claims it can improve women’s fertility.

Victoria, who is already said to be ‘walking straighter,’ is hoping for a double whammy of results for her twice-daily, post-gym efforts.

The designer also suffers problems with her feet. Recent reports say the workaholic mum-of-three refused a painful-sounding bunionectomy operation because the medical procedure would have left her out-of-action for weeks.

Re-printed from marieclaire.co.uk

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Hillary Swank, Actor
Hugh Jackman, Actor
Victoria Beckham
Daniel Radcliffe, Actor
Marilyn Monroe, Actor, Icon
John Dewey, American Educational Philosopher
Aldous Huxley, Author
George Bernard Shaw, Playwright
Jane Brody, Journalist
John Houseman, Producer, Director, Actor
Robertson Davies, Author
Frederick Perls, Originator of Gestalt Therapy
Moshe Feldenkrais, Originator of The Feldenkrais Method
Professor Nikolaas Tinbergen, Winner of Nobel Prize for Physiology/Medicine

Kevin Kline, Paul Newman, John Cleese, Joanne Woodward, Jeremy Irons, Keanu Reeves, Maggie Smith, Robin Williams, Sir Colin Davis, Paul McCartney, Sting, Joel Gray, Howard Stern…

Some of the many institutions where it is part of the curriculum:
American Dance Festival
Juilliard School
London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art
Royal Academy of the Dramatic Arts
New York University
Hunter College, NYC
Circle in the Square, NYC
Boston University
American Conservatory Theatre, San Francisco
Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute
The Acting Studio, Inc., NYC

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Upcoming Alexander Technique

and Related Workshops


Introductory Workshop for the American Guild of Organists

When: Sunday, November 15 from 2-4 PM

Where: First Parish Unitarian Universalist Church, 2 Westford Street, Chelmsford MA.

The Posture of Consciousness:
The Alexander Technique and Iron Shirt Chi Kung ~learn More
~learn more > click here for AT and  > here for IS

Instructors: Jamee Culbertson and Marie Favorito

When: Saturday, December 5th  9:30am to Noon

Where: 440 Somerville Avenue, Somerville, MA

Fee: $80.00

6 Healing Sounds and the Phoenix Chi Kung ~learn more
Instructors: Marie Favorito and Jamee Culbertson

When: Saturday, December 12th  9:30am to Noon

Where: 440 Somerville Avenue, Somerville, MA

Fee: $80.00

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While the Alexander Technique is more often misunderstood as a means to improve posture it is actually much deeper then that. Yes, one’s posture will often improve but that is a result of learning the technique. This technique addresses the ‘Self’.  Who is the one standing anyway?  There is more information on that in other articles on this blog. Take a look around and enjoy.  Your comments are welcome!  In the meantime here is a short list of experiences that people often have after having some lessons:

People can expect to feel:

Taller
Lighter
Grounded
Liberated
Connected
A sense of relationship

Improvements are noted in:

Coordination
Eyesight
Listening ability
High blood Pressure
Posture
Voice resonance
Breathing
Depth of sleep
Overall cheerfulness
Mental alertness
Resilience against outside pressures
Refined skills in the playing of a musical instrument

People can expect to:

-Have verbal and sensitive hands-on guidance
-Feel supported towards desired changes in patterns of movement and perception
-Experience the indivisible nature of mind and body
-Learn skills to reduce physical, emotional, and mental tension and fatigue, whether carried over from the past or over concerns for the future
-Have ‘experiential learning’ and understanding
-Experience a new inner pacing

From the ATI website:

Olympic level athletes have similarly used the Technique to improve their performance as have leading golfers and business people. Medical studies have shown the Technique to be as effective in lowering blood pressure as the normally prescribed beta-blocking drugs. Other studies have shown significant improvement in respiratory function.

The common factor in all these aspects of life is that how we are using ourselves – the way we do things – affects the results we get. The Alexander Technique is a means of improving that use. It has been called a “pre-technique” which people can apply to furthering their own special skills and activities.. It is also essentially a preventative technique with which we can learn to improve and maintain our health.

The individual is the focus of the Alexander Technique. We are all unique, with different bodies, different experiences and different problems. We go about the process of change in different ways and at different rates. For these reasons what happens in a lesson depends very much on the needs of the student at the time. But basically you will learn an attitude of not trying to gain your ends at any cost and at the same time how to prevent your present harmful habits that cause unnecessary stress and restrict your capabilities.

Obviously, since what you are changing are patterns built up over many years, a permanent change will not be brought about overnight. However, the person who learns to stop and take time, to think constructively about how he/she uses him/herself in everyday life will find that this simple procedure can have far reaching results.

Although the Alexander Technique has therapeutic value, the effects are not brought about by treatment or manipulation.  Your own learning process will bring about an increased awareness of the freedom to change. Further information about the Alexander Technique is best gained from a teacher near you as your changing experiences through lessons are the only real way to understand what is possible.

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written by Jamee Culbertson, Dan Arsenault and David Arsenault

(Editor’s note: Contributions to this story come from three authors. In order to spare some confusion, the names of the authors are used prior to each paragraph.)

(Dan): The irony is not lost on me. When I got the phone call from my sister-in-law Laurie that my brother David had been in a bad car accident, I was just getting ready for an Alexander Technique lesson with my teacher, Jamee Culbertson. It was the eve of the Thanksgiving holiday, the start of a four-day weekend. I’m sure I was not an apt pupil at that lesson, but, on my way out, Jamee offered to see David as soon as he was well enough.

(David): I had a car accident on November 25, 1998. I broke both my hips and shattered my right kneecap. While I was recovering at home I had a visiting nurse and a physical therapist but it was obvious to those who knew me that I was really uncomfortable, not in any undue pain but my body no longer seemed to fit very well. My brother told me he knew someone who did something called the Alexander Technique, and he thought it might help. I met Jamee two weeks later and began lessons. From the first few minutes it was clear to me that this was helping me a great deal. Like many people who have had massive trauma, I felt deli-cate and tense, as if I was trying to hold myself together by brute force. The lessons have taught me to find the time and to allow myself the room to move freely. Jamee would frequently talk about making some room in the joints and allowing me to find my proper place.

(Jamee): When I first went to see David he was at home in a hospital bed recovering from his injuries. I wanted to approach him easily and gently at first without much overt movement until I found out what his limitations were. He had had surgery on both hips and his right knee and there remained a consid-erable amount of hardware inside keeping him together to aid in the healing process. He suffered temporary nerve damage in his left leg, which left him unable to flex his foot very far. While we were saying our hellos, I assessed just how I wanted to approach working with him in the most cooperative way. The head of the bed was up against the wall so I couldn’t put my hands directly on his head and neck right away. There were movable brackets on both sides of the bed but it seemed the most unobtrusive to begin at his feet. I pulled up a chair and began at his left side making contact with David through his feet. There was no inter- ference in David’s ability to access his postural reflex, what F.M. Alexander calls the primary control, “…that which governs the working of all the mechanisms and so renders the control of the complex human organism comparatively simple…it depends upon a certain use of the head and neck in relation to the use of the rest of the body…” (quoted from The Use Of the Self, pp. 59-60). The Primary Control is a first and primary movement that allows for a freedom of movement throughout. Head-neck reflexes are the central mechanism that orients us to our environment. It is “…the primary relation upon which all more ultimate relations depend.” (Frank Jones, Body Awareness in Action pp. 60). David first noticed a lengthening along his left side as a sigh of relief came over him. He moved to stretch a bit and discovered that he could flex his foot farther than he could before.

(Dan): After passing the life or death stage there is a natural tendency to rely on the wisdom of the medical professionals. While I knew what benefit David could derive from Alexander lessons, I’m sure David would have been highly circumspect about doing anything that his medical team did not know about and approve. The key here was an enlightened physical therapist.

(David): I told my physical therapist what I was learning at the lessons and she approved heartily. She had heard of the Technique and knew it to be beneficial. She thought that in conjunction with doing the prescribed exercises the Technique would allow me to use myself
to my best advantage and allow my recovery to proceed faster.

(Jamee): David was finding a great deal of relief in the lessons. The first report was more mobility with his left foot, a decrease in his pain medication and finally, a good night’s sleep! David has a growing understanding of what Alexander called “Inhibition,” an awareness of indirect action, a decision to cease giving permission to habitual unconscious reactions. “In the presence of a stimulus to move, inhibition facilitates lengthening of the spine and adds to the efficiency of the movement. Too quick a response will shorten muscles in the neck and prevent the lengthening of the spine.” (Frank Jones Body Awareness in Action pp. 149.) Inhibition has allowed David to learn to bring conscious choice into his response to the stimulus created by his desires. At first we worked with his reaction to the pain he was experiencing so that his reaction to the pain would not make his overall experience worse. “The Alexander Technique is the only method of improving human use and functioning which teaches an indirect method of consciously preventing interference with one’s best use and functioning and is the only method where its teachers consciously use these principles at the same time they are teaching the Technique to others.” (Quoted from the ATI Professional Development Committee report on the ATI web site, www.ati-net.com.)

(David):
Around Christmas I was allowed to stand, and at the end of January I began to learn how to walk again. The Technique was very helpful in these early stages. In the beginning walking was very awkward. My legs did not feel as if they belonged to me and would obey very few commands. I had a walker at first and crutches a week later, but even in this sort of condition the Technique helped. I needed to be conscious all the time of my position and how I wanted to move. Jamee and I discussed the rare opportunity that presented itself in learning how to walk almost from the very start but with an adult sensibility and the Technique to apply. It was mid-March when I traded in my crutches for canes. We kept doing lessons all along and by the time I could stand a little straighter on my canes I was ready to do so. Although most of my lesson happens with me reclined we always focus on the kinetic aspects of the Technique and as I became more kinetic it helped more and more. This last week I have been able to discard my last cane, I had been walking with one cane for the last month. At all these stages there has been improvement in my posture and in the way I use my hips to move. As I learn to control my muscles again and as the strength comes back into them it becomes ever more important to apply the things I have learned. I get both lazy and occasionally stupid and forget to apply what I know, but fortunately there is a price to be paid almost immediately so I tend to remember more often.
I am about half way through my recovery now, but I hope I am only starting to learn the Alexander Technique. As I continue to grow stronger and better I hope to apply what I learn to improve how I use my body. I am an amateur actor so I hope to be able to apply some of the Technique to my work on stage. I am in a fall production so we shall see how well I have learned. There are so many things to try to remember when one is on stage that the Technique will have to be well ingrained. I am also a piledriver and I hope to get back to work around Thanksgiving if the doctor gives the O.K. This will be the real test for me. The type of construction work I do can be very demanding, but I feel certain that I will be able to do it again.
I am waiting somewhat impatiently to see how the Technique will affect the way I per-form both on stage and at work, but also how it will be when I really am recovered. I hope that I can learn to do things wholly and with better focus so I can enjoy the act in each case for itself. We shall see.

(Dan): It goes without saying that David’s trauma was not his alone. His wife, Laurie has, understandably, had a lot to deal with over the last several months. From bedpans to ‘helpful’ relatives, from finances to somehow finding the strength to continue. Laurie has also been taking Alexander lessons with Jamee. It has been of equal benefit to her, I believe, although in a much different way. Laurie, I think, sees the Technique as a treat for her body and soul. She typically can’t wait for her next lesson.

(Jamee): During Laurie’s first lesson she said with tears in her eyes, “This is the first deep breath I’ve had in weeks!”
They continue to be apt students and are making their way through this challenging time together.

Jamee Culbertson is a Practitioner of the Alexander Technique, Certified by Alexander Technique International.  She is past Chair of Alexander Technique International, (ATI). Jamee has a private practice in Concord, Massachusetts and teaches throughout the United States and Canada. You can reach her by email: : atlessons@verizon.net or by phone: 617-290-7102

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Roanne Weisman, author of ‘Own Your Health’

shares how the Alexander Technique helped her recover from a stroke.

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