One difference is that a practitioner is there to give you hands-on feedback....I think you are throwing away something that could be of great value, based on misconceptions.
The fingers would only be in permanent extension if you assume that the extensors never let go. Given how powerful the flexors are, how do you think someone can extend their hand at all with those puny extensors?
My main point is that the resting tonus can be less, and coordination of movement can become transformed in quality. In my own experience, it's not quite true to say, "I'm more relaxed, I can move with greater relaxation." There is a qualitative change.
That was Edmund Jacobson's point who started the relax industry.
Which point? That resting tonus can be reduced, or that there is a qualitative change in movement? From what I've read of Jacobson, there's nothing about organization for action.I thought the ancient Indian culture started the relax industry.
Surely the one follows the other? Yoga could be seen as the original Progressive Relaxation.
Without changing the organization for action, one tends to get tense again quickly once they engage in activity.
I wouldn't say that follows. I would replace 'organization for action' with knowledge of the required coordination (anatomy based), which begins with posture.
Well, the phrase "knowledge of the required coordination" is one distinction from Feldenkrais. In my work, we can only think we "know" the required coordination, and "knowing" the required coordination can only result in inefficient cortical control.
Got an extra third of a second or so? You could use it well by doing nothing. Not doing anything. Not doing the thing you were going to do, and instead doing something different. Or not that either. Your choice. It’s your choice, if you stop your habitual, automatic response and choose. Mind the gap.The thing you want to do is to pause; chill, think. You’re in control. You may want to stay back, notice, observe. On the ‘body side’ of things, see what could be freer. Possibly your neck, your shoulders, your lower back? Just let go. How? By using your mind; your thinking, to send messages to the muscles to let go of excess tension. It’s no big deal. We do it all the time. That’s how we raise and lower our arms. This is very down to earth. Really ordinary if we could stay out of the way. Just pause to stop the stopping of the flow as we pause to stop the stopping of full, natural breathing.If you don’t stop, your habit continues.
Perhaps unique amongst species the human being can gain access, if quite limited, to the pre-noetic. Is this a boon? Or is the ability to meddle with nature a Pandora’s Box? Its role in evolutionary advancement has yet to surface. Its disadvantages are all around us – jutting heads, stooped shoulders, pelvic tilts, poor feet placements not to mention the pains that often come with these.
Does that go for physiotherapists as well? On one level it makes perfect sense on another you've got to wonder what you do with the already acquired poor 'cortical' routine. It would be easy enough to say just forget it but the brain doesn't work that way. It doesn't have the capacity to forget. Like mistakes in piano playing you need to go over them with the correct coordination and know that's what you're doing or the mistake comes back. That is Alexander's inhibiting.
Here's the beginning of a paper I'm just finishing up. I'll probably edit the wording a bit but it's just what we're talking about (prenoetic is subcortical).
Let me get to my punch line first. Okay, my understanding is that the cortex, or ego, or conscious thought process, or whatever you want to call it, is good at forming goals and creating vivid images of what we desire to do. The rest of the brain, most of which evolved before we got thinking, is good at carrying out all the details to get to the desired place.
. It seems like most teachers would describe inhibiting as a way of stopping your habit so that the "right thing does itself" (in F.M. Alexander's words). The conscious skill, the conscious choice, is simply one of stopping. As far as the correct coordination, that takes care of itself.
If we consider an activity such as walking, we acquired that in childhood mostly through play and exploration. It's possible for "right walking" to do itself because we already have enough experience with walking that at some level in the nervous system there is sufficient acquired skill.
You seem to have some very fixed ideas re: precortical. Is that healthy? You certainly seem to be describing body image vs body schema but you seem to be entering into a rehash of the mind/body problem.
That's all very well but how do you know what to stop? i.e. what is the habit?
I disagree. The child walker is buried too deep. You've got to search it out. I's an active process.
What is the fixed part? How does this relate to mind/body?
In one sense you don't know what you are stopping.
You can't even say you are stopping this interference with the primary control because that would imply too much fixation on it. It just happens.
People can control their brainwaves with the help of biofeedback. If you learned to control your brainwaves, can you imagine trying to explain to someone else how to do it?
There aren't adequate words to describe it,
If you found a good Alexander teacher, you would probably be astonished by the spontaneous emergence of graceful walking.
I wouldn't word it by saying "search it out." I would say do systematic exploration and "allow graceful coordination to emerge." Searching implies you know what you are searching for, and as I've said repeatedly, I think we don't know. Thinking we know only gets in the way.
What was the point here supposed to be? That you shouldn't playing piano with palms that face down?
Moving your arm is controlling your brainwaves. You couldn't tell someone how to move their arm but you'd have to tell them to move their arm if that's what you want them to do.
I very much doubt it [graceful walking] with some pretty specific directions. Just as I doubt playing the piano well will happen without some very precise direction and some simple knowledge of physiology.
Find a good Alexander teacher and doubt no longer.