Consent Preferences

What to Do When the Lesson is Over…

As a Feldenkrais Teacher, I often hear: "I feel great after that lesson! How can I make the improvements last and maximize the benefits?" To support the benefits of a lesson, first consider this: Awareness Through Movement lessons do not end when the movements stop.

For approximately an hour, as we do an Awareness Through Movement lesson, our brain has an opportunity to sample new options. Old, habitual patterns become flexible, and our brain has a chance to learn something new. New neurological pathways begin to develop, which allow for better posture, easier movement, and better organization. But those new pathways are unfamiliar. If you stand up after doing a Feldenkrais lesson, and immediately start rushing around or grab your cell phone, you will miss the potent minutes--or hours-- when the lesson's effects are the easiest to feel, and the most easily integrated.

Your awareness immediately following a Feldenkrais lesson is very powerful, and helps to ensure the lesson's effectiveness. Give yourself sufficient time to feel and take notice of the various changes and improvements in your body. Simply noticing differences and changes in the way you are standing, walking, moving, and feeling will strengthen those new neural pathways. Orient yourself in a non-judgmental way toward your kinesthetic, bodily experience, without analyzing the changes or attaching words or language to your sensations. Do you feel lighter or taller? Does your walking feel different? Has your breathing changed? While you are still in this state of heightened awareness (but now upright and walking around,) can you continue to 'let go' of unnecessary muscular effort or tension? Do you feel a difference in your hip joints? Do your legs feel lighter?

I once received an especially significant Functional Integration lesson from Dr. Feldenkrais. Afterward, I asked him, "How can I keep this feeling?" He said something like, "You can't, but walk around and feel yourself. Feel what is different, and that will help your brain to integrate the improvement."

After doing a lesson, I suggest you try to avoid evoking old habits right away. If you're trying to make room for the new learning, don't rush back to 'normal' life too quickly. Maybe take a short walk or a rest. While doing either, feel where you can relax, especially your jaw, throat, and lower abdomen. Breathing more fully is an indication that your nervous system is at ease.

Any new learning is fragile, especially after a lifetime of sensing, moving, feeling, and thinking in particular, habitual ways. All new learning needs safety, nurturance, and time to become integrated. You will find that if you can treat the time after a lesson as a precious gift, you can potentiate the lesson's long-term benefits. The more you let the new learning 'soak in,' the more likely it will become integrated.

The effects of an Awareness Through Movement lesson emerge and continue to reveal themselves for a day or two afterward. Check-in with yourself occasionally to notice new changes. This will support your new learning and put you on a path of steady improvement and self-discovery.

-David Zemach-Bersin

If you'd like to share this article offline, please use this pdf. 

Close

50% Complete

Two Step

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.