The Physics of Feldenkrais: Part 2: No Strain, No Gain
The Physics of Feldenkrais: Part 2: No Strain, No Gain
The Physics of Feldenkrais: Part 2: No Strain, No Gain
John C. Hannon
The topic of posture, and how the individual uses
their body is central to most bodywork and
movement therapies and approaches. This new
series of peer reviewed papers will explore the issues
around this core topic from a particular perspective.
The reader is invited to participate by
communicating with the author, or the editor, with
comments, ideas and constructive criticism.
Alternative viewpoints will be published in future
issue of the Journal of Bodywork and Movement
Therapies.
Editor
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Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies (2000)
4(2),114^122
# 2000 Harcourt Publishers Ltd
Abstract In the last issue, which was the rst of this series, the Principle of Least
Eort was introduced. (Use the least eort necessary to achieve the maximum in
eciency). Two sitting self-awareness explorations were presented to help deepen this
understanding and to encourage a visceral comprehension of another principle:
Control follows awareness. This issue features additional clinical examples and an
explanation of several terms of art in bodywork: stress, strain, translation and
rotation. These words help to stake out the territory of bodywork. There are only ve
forms of strain and only two basic movements in any form of bodywork. We shall see
the practical advantages of understanding the concepts these words carry. Clinical
results may be enhanced with improved physical safety to both the therapist and client.
Secondly, a sure grasp of the technical meanings of these words is essential for delving
further into the treatment applications of the Principle of Least Eort. # 2000
Harcourt Publishers Ltd
114
Fig. 1 Work is the product of force moving through distance. Notice that less force is needed
when there is little resistance.
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Hannon
Reducing friction in the body
occurs in many ways; slippery
cartilage is oiled with synovial uid,
tendons slide in slippery sheaths,
muscles contract with bursae
reducing drag against the
neighboring tissues. All these
moving parts are organized around
skeletal joints. Joints permit easy
movement in certain directions but
not others.
Our discussion separated actions
as if each form of strain occurs
without the others; in most
instances, some combination of
these forms of strain is applied
simultaneously. It staggers the
imagination to consider the
permutations of these ve forms of
strain used in the morning, when
entire populations, still half awake,
manage to cleanse themselves for the
new day.
Let us consider two more terms
before exploring clinical
applications of strain: translation
and rotation. Translation describes
movement taking place in a single
plane; an example would be sliding
kitchen drawer in and out. Rotation
refers to movement about an axis. In
a marvelous structure such as the
human body, you often will see both
forms of movement occur at the
same time. For example, jut your
lower jaw outwards from the skull
while turning your head. Here the
mandible slides forward along the
plane of the upper palate while the
head turns about the pivot of the C2
vertebra's odontoid process. In knee
exion, the two movements of
rotation and translation occur
simultaneously during much of the
range. The axis of rotation moves
during this part of the range; each
position of the movement having its
own instantaneous axis of rotation.
The rst installment of this series
included two exercises. (See Volume
4:1, p29). In the rst exercise, the
feet were translated forward and
backward upon the oor. Ideally,
this translatory movement involved
Torque
.
.
.
.
Bending
.
.
.
.
Knot tying
Folding clothes
Skin rolling techniques
Bending and unbending nger joints
116
Fig. 3 Slide your foot forward and backward while sitting comfortably. Sit comfortably with
your feet at on the oor. Slide the right foot forward and back. Attempt to make the eort as
easy and simple as possible.
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Hannon
Fig. 5 Lewit's sitting coordination rotate and reach test. (A) correct; (B) faulty. Note the feeling
of elegant graceful strength seen in the rst gure and the hunching of the shoulder and neck; the
abby tone of the back and abdomen in the second gure. Not only does the second posture look
impoverished, it fails to follow the Principle of Least Eort and puts the person at risk of injury
due to the adverse strains placed across the dierent tissues of the body.
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Hannon
side-bending such that the ear drops
towards the shoulder. If such a
movement occurs often enough, it
may become habitual. If such a
habit should become too persistent,
there may be clinical utility in
reintroducing the client to a dierent
movement pattern.
Here is one way. The client lies
comfortably supine with the head
and neck supported such that the
scapular elevators and
sternocleidomastoids relax. The
head is rolled by the therapist's hand
from side to side with the hand
resting on the middle of the
forehead. The hand remains in a
plane tangential to the globe of the
head (Fig. 8). We can see that the
hand translates through space but it
rotates and side-bends the head by
Fig. 8 Rotation versus rolling of the head. There are many movements which may be introduced
to a client's head. Here are two. (A) When the head is rolled by a translatory movement of the
therapist's hand, there is much side-bending which accompanies the rotation. (B) When the head
is rotated about the odontoid of the axis vertebra, side-bending is held to a minimum with the
resulting feeling of the head moving but remaining in the same volume in space. Due to the great
number of extero-receptors in the head, the client often feels extraordinary sensations when this
maneuver is performed precisely with little eort to distract the client from their inner sensations.
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Hannon
and maintain our health and
perhaps improve our sensitivity.
This illustrates our other Principle,
Control Follows Awareness.
Feldenkrais (1972) felt that `if you
know what you are doing, you can
do what you want'. Perhaps we can
use some of the ideas and
explorations presented here to oset
that other piece of wisdom, `you
don't know what you don't know.'
Acknowledgements
The author wishes to thank Anat Baniel,
Feldenkrais1 Trainer, whose
remarkable skills and interest were
instrumental in encouraging the long
REFERENCES
Adler SS Beckers D Buck M 1993 PNF in
Practice: An Illustrated Guide.
Springer-Verlag, Berlin
Cyriax J 1982 Textbook of Orthopaedic
Medicine, volume one Diagnosis of Soft
Tissue Lesions. Bailliere Tindall, London
Feldenkrais M 1972 Awareness Through
Movement. Harper and Row, New York
Janda V 1983 Muscle Function Testing.
Butterworths, London
Kapandji IA 1987 The Physiology of the
Joints, volume 2: Lower Limb. Churchill
Livingstone, Edinburgh
BOOK REVIEW
Book review
Cranial Sutures
Mark Pick
Eastland Press Seattle,1999,
ISBN 0-939616-29-7
In this superbly illustrated text
Mark Pick focuses on the
morphology of the cranial sutures
and oers a series of extremely
detailed palpation protocols for
evaluation of their status. Indeed the
development of the practitioner's
palpatory skills is a primary
objective of the book, along with the
imparting of a clear understanding
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Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies (2000)
4(2),122
# 2000 Harcourt Publishers Ltd
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