56 alexander technique tips

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56 Alexander Technique Tips Leland Vall www.freeyourneck.com

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56 Alexander Technique Tips

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Page 1: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

56 Alexander Technique

Tips

Leland Vall www.freeyourneck.com

Page 2: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

Description of the Alexander Technique What is the Alexander Technique? The Alexander Technique is a set of ideas that can be described as a discipline for understanding, recognizing and preventing habits of excess tension, especially in relation to posture and movement. How is it taught? The Alexander Technique is taught through gentle, manually guided movement and verbal instructions.

Benefits The Alexander Technique offers a continuous feeling of increased lightness, ease and strength throughout the body. Its ability to remedy specific ailments relates to the amount that you are contributing to those ailments. How to Benefit from the Alexander Technique The Alexander Technique is a tool for self-discovery. Your success will mostly be based on your level of interest and the joy you take in the process of self-discovery that is outlined in the concepts of the Alexander Technique. How long does it take to benefit? The Alexander Technique is not an all or nothing proposition. Benefits come as you learn and specific lasting progress often arrives as a sudden and unexpected realization. The best way to make progress with the Alexander Technique is to be open to the possibility of self-discovery, however and whenever the event occurs. These Tips These tips are organized loosely by concept, but there is no hierarchy of importance. Each tip is meant to suggest the possibility of all the other tips, and all tips are similar in intent. Habit and Change The Alexander Technique suggests that you can break habits of excess tension by recognizing that you have other choices related to movement and posture. To use these tips successfully, any given tip must take precedence over the completion of the task at hand.

www.freeyourneck.com 2 of 13 ©2010 Leland Vall

Page 3: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

Perception

• Experience the world from your back, forward. You might think that you experience the world as if the world is in front of you or maybe as though you are looking through a camera. Instead, think of the camera as if it is behind you. Step into the frame of your experience.

Awareness begins behind you.

• See the wo

• Avoid �tryin

If somethingdon�t haveof feeling.

• Avoid �tryinAllow the lig

• Think a smil

• Think of youNo matter y

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©2010 Leland Vall

Page 4: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

Always Go Up

• Think of your body as an archer�s bow. When bending, instead of pulling yourself down, resist the downward movement just as the bow does when the string is pulled.

• In all cases, avoid pulling yourself down. Only go up.

www.freeyourneck.com 4 of 13 ©2010 Leland Vall

Page 5: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

Major Landmarks of the Body

• The torso includes the entire spine, shoulders, ribs and pelvis. The spine extends to the level of your ears, higher than the roof of your mouth.

• The appendages of the body include the head, arms and legs. The jaw is an appendage of the head.

• The arms attach to the back of your torso, not the front.

• The legs attach to the pelvis at the hip joint.

• The waist is not a joint.

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Top of spine

Page 6: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

Doing Less

• Allow for a softening in the back of the neck. Softening the back of the neck will allow the head to rise as it releases from the top of the spine. Avoid pulling the chin down.

• Allow your ribs

• Allow for spac

• All joints relate

Any insight ga

• Dance above

• Exercise: LyingAllow for spacyour head.

www.freeyourneck.com

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Head releasingforward and up.

Hedo

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to each other in theined about one join

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©2010 Leland Vall

Page 7: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

Doing More

• Point your spine in the direction it is headed as if you are pointing your finger. The spine, not your ribs, supports your torso.

• Think of your spine as lively.

Think of the spine as a fountain or a beam of light.

• Point your shoulders away from each other. Think of your shoulders as traveling in opposing directions, but neither forward nor back.

• Think of your legs as reaching to the floor from the bottom up. When standing, imagine that your legs just barely reach the floor.

• Exercise: Lying Down Point your spine, shoulders, elbows and knees. Place a book under your head.

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Page 8: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

Dynamic Opposition Article, Fitness and the Alexander Technique Article, Golf and the Alexander Technique

• Proper use of the body is marked by dynamic oppositional relationships. The head goes forward and up in relation to the torso going back and up in relation to the legs going forward d

• Think of your spine as a central tent pole p

• Think of your spine as a spring. The curves in the spine cause it to act as a

• Every part and region of the body can be devery other part or region of the body. This is the idea of a lively, internally dynamipoise, presence and athleticism.

• Think of your body as a wave no matter the

• Allow for the roundness of arches within yoArches are dynamically active structures athem. There are natural arches in your feetand spine. All your bones are curved and tin combination. There are no straight lines and legs also form multiple arches as they arches throughout the images in this bookl

• Think of the body as always getting larger inward. Avoid drawing the body in on itself.

www.freeyourneck.com 8 of 13

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©2010 Leland Vall

Page 9: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

• Think of the back of the heel and the back of the head as always going away from each other.

• Exercise: LeanLook for what down.

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ing Against a Wall is going back and up

9 of 13

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and what is going forward and

©2010 Leland Vall

Page 10: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

Movement Legs, Feet and Walking Article, Six Tips on Walking Video, Three Lessons on Walking

• Leave your pelvis behind your legs.

• Leave your torso behind your head.

• The arms are emissaries of the torso. Avoid reaching so far that your arms pull on your torso. Instead, move your torso so that you can reach without distorting your back. The arms derive much of their strength from the torso. Distortion or lack of clarity in the torso causes arm weakness.

• When walking, keep your weight over your standing leg until your new foot is on the ground. Place each foot down lightly while also leaving your torso over the rear leg. Walking exercise Link

• As the leg swings forward, leave the hip behind. • Avoid taking your feet off the floor in order to put them on the floor.

When people want to feel more grounded, they often shuffle their feet or otherwise pick them up off the floor. Recognize instead that if your foot is on the floor supporting your weight, there is nothing more you have to do in order to connect it more firmly to the floor. It is already there. Similarly, to feel more grounded, avoid shifting in place.

• Think of the ground as rising up toward your feet. Let the ground fill your feet as if you are catching a ball.

• Leave your feet on the ground when the ground is within their reach.

www.freeyourneck.com 10 of 13 ©2010 Leland Vall

Page 11: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

• How to Bend Video, Three Tips for Bending

1. Leave your feet on the floor as if you are standing throughout the

movement. 2. Bend at the knees, hips and ankles. 3. Avoid pulling on your head.

• Using Chairs: Move

1. Pretend the c2. Remain stand

fall into the c3. Remain up fo

happening intoward the c

• Using Chairs: Rising

1. Avoid pulling2. Without short

your hip joint3. Press the floo

• Sit on chairs as if th

When you are stanare sitting, you are

www.freeyourneck.com

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itting in a Chair ind you. et until you reach the chair. Do not

vement (as if the movement is avoid pulling yourself down

per body, rotate your torso around are supporting your weight. u are standing.

legs. standing on your legs. When you e chair.

3 ©2010 Leland Vall

Page 12: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

Breath & Voice Breath Article, Improve Your Breathing

• Breathing is improved with the reduction of premature inhalation and gasping or, in other words, inhaling before the end of the exhalation.

• Enjoy your exhale.

Take pleasure in your exhale, don�t rush it. You can�t miss your next inhalation; it always comes at the end of your exhale, no matter when that is.

• Observe your breathing as if you are watching ocean waves. Try to simply be an observer in the process of breath. Without effort, notice the movement throughout your entire torso.

• Allow your ribs to soften so that they can swing with your breath and in relation to your pointing spine.

• How to Breathe

Most problems in breathing come from gasping and otherwise rushing the inhalation before the end of the exhalation. Improve your breathing by learning to enjoy your exhale, allowing it to lengthen, and by gaining a perfect confidence in the eventual arrival of your next inhalation.

• Abbreviated Exercise for the Permanent Improvement of Breathing:

1. Throughout the exercise, observe your own breathing as if you are looking at another person or a natural process like ocean waves.

2. Observe that there is constant internal movement throughout your entire torso, front and back and all around.

3. Notice that with each exhalation there is a softening in the abdomen and a falling in the chest.

4. Enjoy your exhale and allow it to linger with perfect confidence in the eventual arrival of your next inhalation.

5. Proper breathing is marked by a lengthened and easy exhalation with a reflexive and silent inhalation.

www.freeyourneck.com 12 of 13 ©2010 Leland Vall

Page 13: 56 Alexander Technique Tips

Voice • Think of your voice as rising up and over your head, instead coming

from under your chin. Alternatively, think of your voice as coming out of the top of your head as if it were the bell of a horn.

Your voice rising up from behind you and over your head

• Let the sound of your voice escape from your body; avoid holding it

back.

• Avoid all use and change in your throat as you speak. Speak as though your throat has nothing to do with your voice.

• As you speak, allow for liveliness in your lips and the tip of your tongue.

• Allow sound to arrive; avoid making it.

• Speak as if you do not control your breath.

Avoid breathing to speak. Speak as if breath is ever present and in constant supply.

Leland Vall, M.AmSAT is a certified Alexander Technique instructor based in New York. He is the author of The Secret to Using Your Body and he teaches individuals and groups how to improve posture and to breathe, move, sit and stand with greater ease and strength. Find out how to feel better every day and for the rest of your life at www.freeyourneck.com.

www.freeyourneck.com 13 of 13 ©2010 Leland Vall