Posts Tagged ‘Chronic Pain’
Chronic Pain – Tension, Strain, Injuries, and Good Posture (Hurting)(Alexander Technique)(Albuquerque)
This ebook, Using the Alexander Technique to End Chronic Pain, is published on this website in a PDF format, and goes into extraordinary detail to help those with chronic pain move with greater ease and coordination.
This ebook is also for sale on all AMAZON websites in a KINDLE format.
Located in Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A. (MOVEMENT THERAPY)
The Alexander Technique makes it possible for people who have chronic pain to move as well as they can with the least amount of muscular effort and most amount of balance.
I’m making the assumption here that you can learn to move better in some ways than you have ever moved, if you are willing to be incredibly kind and patient with yourself, as you gain a different kind of control over your body with the principles of the Alexander Technique. In other words, you learn to move with more balance and ease than you did before you started hurting intolerably.
What I mean is that you learn to move with an acceptance of your limitations with a gentle and focused approach to movement. The founder of the Alexander Technique, F. M. Alexander, had a stroke after he created the Alexander Technique, and used it to rehabilitate himself, and moved better than he did before he had the stroke.
It is possible to move in a way that helps you feel more secure, even as you are constantly hurting, if the person who has chronic pain is willing to go back to being a baby or a child and learn how to move for the first time again. It is an amazing thing to watch a person learn to move and to do so with gentleness and patience and faith, and not try to force themselves to regain or hold onto control over his or her body.
I was a musician, and this is the similar to learning to play a musical instrument with patience and gentleness, and not trying to force yourself to play better and better. Many beginners on a musical instrument are incredibly impatient with not being able to play well at the beginning.
As an Alexander Technique teacher, I usually do not see someone who has chronic pain until they are finished with traditional physical therapy, because even though the Alexander Technique predates physical therapy by about 50 years, the Alexander Technique never pursued becoming part of main stream allopathic medicine like chiropractors did.
So, when someone who has chronic pain comes to me, they have already been doing some work on strengthening their bodies to alleviate their pain. But you cannot stop hurting if you are using your body poorly as you strengthen it. Getting out of chronic pain is almost always about how you do what you do, not just getting it done.
It then becomes my job to help you move with ease and coordination for maybe the first time in a long time, or maybe with ease and coordination for the first time in your whole life. So, I get to help you gain loving control of your body.