Moshé Feldenkrais was born in Russia in 1904 and emigrated to Palestine at
the age of 13. Like many innovators, he came to his field by a circuitous
route, weaving together numerous influences. As a young man, he was an
excellent athlete, a soccer player and self-taught in jujitsu. He did
construction work and tutored problem students while attending night
school preparing to study physics. He had an early interest in hypnosis
and translated Emile Coué's book on autosuggestion into Hebrew.
In Paris,
Feldenkrais earned his doctorate in physics at the Sorbonne and assisted
Joliot-Curie. During his university years he met Kano, the originator of
judo, and trained with Kano's students to become a high ranking black belt
and well-known judo teacher.
In 1940, when the
Germans were about to enter Paris, Feldenkrais fled to England where
during the war he worked on antisubmarine research, trained paratroopers
in self-defense techniques, and authored books on judo. On slippery
submarine decks he aggravated an old soccer injury to his knees, and began
the extended work on himself which rehabilitated his knees and led to his
discoveries about movement education. After he publicly presented his
ideas, people sought his help with their problems. For several years he
was an amateur somatic practitioner, first in England and later in Israel
where he had returned to work as a scientist. In the mid-1950's
Feldenkrais gave up his career in physics and devoted himself fully to his
work with people. In the late 1960's, in Tel Aviv, he trained his first
group to become practitioners of his method and subsequently completed one
and one half trainings in the United States. He wrote four books on his
method and much of his other teaching is preserved on thousands of hours
of audio and video tapes.
Moshé Feldenkrais
originated two interrelated, somatically based educational methods. The
first method, Awareness Through Movement, is a verbally directed, body
movement technique designed for groups or work with oneself. The second
method, Functional Integration, is a nonverbal, manual contact technique
designed for people desiring or requiring more individualized attention.
Awareness Through
Movement lessons incorporate active movements, imagined movements and
various forms of directed attention. A typical lesson lasts about
forty-five minutes and combines a few dozen movements that are
thematically organized around a functional action. Lesson themes may
include developmental movements such as rolling, crawling, and standing
up; functions such as posture, walking, reaching or breathing; systematic
explorations of the kinetic possibilities of joint and muscle groups; and
experiments in somatically-based imagination and perception related to
subtle cognitive aspects of motor functioning.
These lessons are
not "physical exercises" such as calisthenics, although may involve
gymnastic actions; they are somatopsychic explorations which foster
improvements by: a) utilizing latent, unexpressed competencies; b)
breaking up habitual patterns; c) increasing self-awareness; and d)
facilitating new learning through systematic, exploratory functional
variations. Initial movements are often very small with an emphasis on
ease, comfort, and perception. Gradually students becomes aware of how
their musculature, skeleton—indeed, their entire selves—are involved as an
inextricable whole in every action. From small, slow beginnings, larger
movements emerge entailing greater complexity, power and speed. The result
is learning to move with greater efficiency and satisfaction, and improved
well-being.
Awareness Through
Movement lessons often evoke a state of deep relaxation.
Unlike a typical
exercise class, students are not necessarily told where the movements are
leading or shown what they look like; thus, what is learned arises
organically and as a surprise, and allows for necessary individual
differences in both learning path and final outcome. Sometimes only one
side of the body is physically worked at a time but the other side is
enacted mentally; that is, in the imagination. This mental practice
refines kinesthetic sensitivity to the point where muscular impulses and
patterns are clearly felt and differentiated with minimal mobilization.
Throughout the lesson, students are guided to integrate and apply newly
discovered skills in other functional activities and domains of life.
The individual
lessons of Functional Integration are based upon the same logic as
Awareness Through Movement. They are used with a broad spectrum of people,
from those with discomforts and physical limitations due to neurological
or musculoskeletal problems, to athletes and performing artists. Although
it possesses significant medical and therapeutic benefits, Functional
Integration is neither medical nor therapeutic in its philosophical
foundation and methodology; it is learning-based, primarily nonverbal, and
directed at enhancing the functionality, efficiency, coordination, grace,
and self-possession of a person's movement. Lessons are done with the
student lying on a soft but firm work table, or standing, or sitting. The
practitioner gently touches or moves the student in a variety of ways to
facilitate the student's awareness and stimulate organic learning and
vitality. Each move in the lesson is part of a communication that
Feldenkrais likened to dancing or conversation. Through touch, the
practitioner partially discloses or hints at a functional motor pattern,
and the student responds with subtle, novel neuromuscular cues. Gradually,
the student self-assembles mostly at a subconscious level a new
neuromuscular organization of movement that translates into an altered
active performance. At the end of a session the practitioner helps the
student to integrate the learning in every day life through related
movements based upon the lesson's functional theme and follow-up
suggestions.
Within a broad
educational context Moshé Feldenkrais was a movement science pioneer who
focused especially on the perception of the sensory-motor organization
that underlies human behavior and learning. This includes but is not
limited to:
Feldenkrais spent a
lifetime exploring and revealing the inexhaustibly rich, multidimensional
world of human movement.
Feldenkrais died in
1984, leaving a small group of highly trained practitioners who have
continued his methods. In recent years the Feldenkrais Method has greatly
expanded and has become well-known for its success with orthopedic and
neurological problems, and respected in the theater and dance words for
use in performance training. Many people have sought the aid of
Feldenkrais practitioners to ameliorate muscular and joint problems, to
improve balance, coordination and breathing; and to enhance personal
growth. By working with the whole person, Feldenkrais practitioners
promote self-esteem and learning skills. Today the Feldenkrais Method is
known in more than twenty countries with nearly 2,000 practitioners
worldwide.
International
Feldenkrais professional organizations, or Guilds, own the service marks
for use of the terms, Feldenkrais Method, Functional Integration and
Awareness Through Movement. The FELDENKRAIS GUILD accredits qualified
Feldenkrais practitioners, practitioner trainers and professional training
programs.