Happy New Year!! Reno Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement classes will resume on Tuesday, Jan 6, not on Saturday Jan 10, as posted earlier. The corrected Holiday schedule is posted in the previous blog.
Thus the first class of 2015 will be held on Tuesday January 6 at Midtown Fitness, 10 am, followed by the resumption of Thursday 5:30 pm at the Reno Buddhist Center, and then the Saturday afternoon class on January 10, at Midtown Fitness at 3 pm.
We will begin a real energetic direction together for the New Year, continuing on our journey toward greater self awareness, health and wellbeing, effective, efficient, and comfortable movement, as we create better internal connections between our brains and our bodies. These intentions improve our vitality, our feeling of self-worth and our relationship to the world around us. They open our hearts and minds and heal what needs healing.
Meanwhile, have a safe, comfortable, fun and happy New Year!
And please note, if you are on my email list, watch for my New Years message in a few days! It will contain information and Feldy tips you will want to know and use! Or you can sign up for the newsletter on this page. In any case, I'll see you soon!
Best wishes and love,
Carole
• Feldenkrais Method® classes and private sessions are a powerful way to move and feel better, regain self-confidence and relieve pain. • Feel better in your entire body - shoulders, back, knees, hips, legs, feet and more. • improve balance, mobility and posture, alignment, improve arthritis, spinal disc degeneration, MS, scoliosis, stenosis; recover from injury, illness, stroke, delay/avoid surgery and heal faster. • The only ongoing Feldenkrais in Northern NV since 2009.
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Sunday, December 28, 2014
Friday, November 21, 2014
Holiday Schedule for Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement Classes
Year End ATM Classes - we had a 5th great year of Feldenkrais classes in Reno!
I hope this isn't too confusing! There are 5 schedule updates for Nov-Dec-Jan.
1) There will be no class on Thanksgiving, Nov. 27 at the Reno Buddhist Center (RBC).
2) There will be no class Thurs. Dec. 4 at the Reno Buddhist Center, AND
3) No class Saturday Dec. 6 at Midtown Fitness. I will be in the Bay Area Feldenkrais and Buddhist retreat during this time. (NOTE: The Tues 10 am class at Midtown Fitness will not be affected and will continue as usual.)
4) The last class of 2014 will be held at Midtown Fitness (MTF), Saturday 3 pm on December 20.
5) Classes will resume on Tuesday Jan 6, 2015 at Midtown Fitness. The Reno Buddhist Center Thurs 5:30 pm classes will begin January 8, and the Saturday 3 pm class will begin January 10 at Midtown Fitness. All 2015 classes will be at the same times and places as 2014. Other than holiday idiosyncrasies, no changes.
If you have any questions, please email me at renofeldenkrais@aol.com or call me. I may offer make up classes next week for TG and the following week to replace the Dec. 4th class, so stay in touch.
Happy Thanksgiving and I look forward to seeing you soon!
Best wishes,
Carole
Carole
Sunday, September 14, 2014
Free Feldenkrais Class Noon MON. 9-15, OLLI Redfield Campus, South Reno
Want to try an Awareness Through Movement class Noon tomorrow, Rm 223, OLLI Redfield?
Here is your chance!
I am teaching a free Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement class at Osher Lifelong Living Institute at the Redfield Campus off Mount Rose Highway, members only. It is upstairs in Room 223 and everyone is welcome. There will be demonstrations, lots of information, handouts and a Question/Answer period.
You can come and watch or you can participate in the class. Whatever makes you happy!
So if you've been wondering what a Feldenkrais ATM class is like, or if my teaching schedule of Tues. am, Thurs. pm, or Sat. afternoon hasn't worked for you, here is an opportunity to come and see what you think, first hand!
Bring a mat or a blanket if you want to participate. And don't be late! Hope to see you there,
Best wishes,
Carole
Here is your chance!
I am teaching a free Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement class at Osher Lifelong Living Institute at the Redfield Campus off Mount Rose Highway, members only. It is upstairs in Room 223 and everyone is welcome. There will be demonstrations, lots of information, handouts and a Question/Answer period.
You can come and watch or you can participate in the class. Whatever makes you happy!
So if you've been wondering what a Feldenkrais ATM class is like, or if my teaching schedule of Tues. am, Thurs. pm, or Sat. afternoon hasn't worked for you, here is an opportunity to come and see what you think, first hand!
Bring a mat or a blanket if you want to participate. And don't be late! Hope to see you there,
Best wishes,
Carole
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
Feldenkrais class 3 pm Sat. Aug. 30 at Midtown Fitness - YES!
HELPING YOU FEEL BETTER EVERY DAY!
Yes indeed, there WILL BE a Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement class on Saturday, August 30th, during the Labor Day weekend, at Midtown Fitness, 600 S. Center St., in Reno, NV at 3 pm.
Efficient movement, balance, comfort and health are needed more than ever during long weekends!
If you are coming to your first class, bring a blanket or comforter, water, please contact me, and come at least 15 minutes early to meet with me before class. Details are found on the right hand side bar of this blog.
Awareness Through Movement classes are fun, wonderful for your brain and body, and truly help you be more effective in all your daily activities, doing the things you love, living life more fully, optimizing everything you do. The only ongoing Feldenkrais classes in the state of Nevada, since 2009. Please join us for a class!
Yes indeed, there WILL BE a Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement class on Saturday, August 30th, during the Labor Day weekend, at Midtown Fitness, 600 S. Center St., in Reno, NV at 3 pm.
Efficient movement, balance, comfort and health are needed more than ever during long weekends!
If you are coming to your first class, bring a blanket or comforter, water, please contact me, and come at least 15 minutes early to meet with me before class. Details are found on the right hand side bar of this blog.
Awareness Through Movement classes are fun, wonderful for your brain and body, and truly help you be more effective in all your daily activities, doing the things you love, living life more fully, optimizing everything you do. The only ongoing Feldenkrais classes in the state of Nevada, since 2009. Please join us for a class!
Thursday, August 14, 2014
An Alternative to Drugs and Surgery for Pain and Movement Limitations
Avoiding Surgery with the Feldenkrais Method
You don't have to put up with pain. And if this surprises you, then this is the personally empowering non-surgical, non-drug option you haven't tried yet.
Please contact me for more information about group classes and private lessons. If you are in pain, you owe it to yourself to explore this simple, affordable and accessible approach to movement improvement.
Note: this photo is believed to be a prototype for an album cover, 'Carcass - Surgical Steel.' Photographer unknown.
Monday, July 7, 2014
Improve bending, rotation, movement of spine, shoulders, hips!
This week's Reno Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement Class:
COORDINATING THE SIDE FLEXORS
Our focus this week is to improve your side-bending in various positions, working on the side flexors, improving your connection to, awareness of and range of movement in your ribs, shoulders, hips and spine. All our movement, of course, done in the mindful, attentive and slow language of Feldenkrais that your nervous system understands.
Sound like a lot? It is! And it is important. We use side bending in all of our rotation, for example, turning to look behind us walking or sitting, while driving our car, while riding horses. Rotation is critical in our being comfortable while we sit at our desks, in a movie, even at dinner.
With better side flexion, we can recover and maintain a healthy, powerful pelvis to support our important daily activities and the wonderful things we love to do -- from long, leisurely summer evening walks, to hiking, kayaking, equestrian activities, GOLF, or tennis -- just about everything you do.
If you have questions about Awareness Through Movement® or Functional Integration® or classes and private lessons, please contact me using the form in the upper right hand corner of this blog. Be sure scroll down the page and watch the youtube video clips about the Feldenkrais Method® on the right side bar if you haven't seen them before.
Classes are held every week in Reno on Tues mornings 10 am, Thurs. evening, 5:30, and Saturday afternoons at 3 pm. See my schedule on the right side bar for details. Comfortable, efficient movement is within your reach!
COORDINATING THE SIDE FLEXORS
Our focus this week is to improve your side-bending in various positions, working on the side flexors, improving your connection to, awareness of and range of movement in your ribs, shoulders, hips and spine. All our movement, of course, done in the mindful, attentive and slow language of Feldenkrais that your nervous system understands.
Sound like a lot? It is! And it is important. We use side bending in all of our rotation, for example, turning to look behind us walking or sitting, while driving our car, while riding horses. Rotation is critical in our being comfortable while we sit at our desks, in a movie, even at dinner.
With better side flexion, we can recover and maintain a healthy, powerful pelvis to support our important daily activities and the wonderful things we love to do -- from long, leisurely summer evening walks, to hiking, kayaking, equestrian activities, GOLF, or tennis -- just about everything you do.
If you have questions about Awareness Through Movement® or Functional Integration® or classes and private lessons, please contact me using the form in the upper right hand corner of this blog. Be sure scroll down the page and watch the youtube video clips about the Feldenkrais Method® on the right side bar if you haven't seen them before.
Classes are held every week in Reno on Tues mornings 10 am, Thurs. evening, 5:30, and Saturday afternoons at 3 pm. See my schedule on the right side bar for details. Comfortable, efficient movement is within your reach!
Sunday, June 29, 2014
Awareness Thru Movement class this Sat. 3 pm ONLY July 5 canceled
Just a reminder that there will be no Saturday 3 pm class at Midtown Fitness on the July 4-5th weekend. See you next Saturday, July 12. When coming to your first class, contact me and come 15 mins early. Happy, safe 4th of July!
Carole
Carole
Friday, June 27, 2014
Better Peripheral Vision Can Prevent Falling
Hi everyone! Here is a re-post of the short peripheral vision exercise from my recent newsletter (that focused on why Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement lessons may improve brain function).
After an injury, surgery or when we are afraid of falling for any reason, people of all ages will begin leaning forward and bending their necks to watch what is in front of them on their path in an effort to avoid anything that might cause them to mis-step and fall. The irony is that the very way we attempt to protect ourselves from falling actually increases the likelihood that we will, by introducing instability into our posture and movement. Here is a solution to work with that will create more skeletal stability and empowerment in your walking.
Improve Peripheral Vision
Instead of looking down to avoid falling, we can practice directing our vision outward toward the horizon and consciously include/expand our peripheral vision to include a greater field. This prevents you from taking the head and neck forward, a movement that ironically predisposes the body to move into a falling position! Thus by bending the neck downward, you are more likely to be create the outcome you are trying to avoid.
This exercise will also assist in relaxing your neck and diminishing tension associated with eye strain or spending too much time in front of the computer. To sign up for my newsletter, come to classes and to find out more about learning to use the Feldenkrais Method to improve all your activities, please contact me directly through the contact form in the upper right hand corner of this web page.
Learn to expand your visual field (consciously using your eyes) while relaxing your neck:
1. Look straight ahead and notice your visual field and what you see comfortably.
2. Turn your head slowly from side to side a few times and notice the range and the quality of the movement.
3. Now allow your visual field to increase so that you have more peripheral vision. Notice that your visual field has expanded and you can see more with less effort.
4. Continue to keep this expanded visual field and turn your head slowly from side to side noticing how this changes the range and ease of the movement.
5. Consciously practice expanding the visual field whenever you feel tension in the neck and eyes.
After an injury, surgery or when we are afraid of falling for any reason, people of all ages will begin leaning forward and bending their necks to watch what is in front of them on their path in an effort to avoid anything that might cause them to mis-step and fall. The irony is that the very way we attempt to protect ourselves from falling actually increases the likelihood that we will, by introducing instability into our posture and movement. Here is a solution to work with that will create more skeletal stability and empowerment in your walking.
Improve Peripheral Vision
Instead of looking down to avoid falling, we can practice directing our vision outward toward the horizon and consciously include/expand our peripheral vision to include a greater field. This prevents you from taking the head and neck forward, a movement that ironically predisposes the body to move into a falling position! Thus by bending the neck downward, you are more likely to be create the outcome you are trying to avoid.
This exercise will also assist in relaxing your neck and diminishing tension associated with eye strain or spending too much time in front of the computer. To sign up for my newsletter, come to classes and to find out more about learning to use the Feldenkrais Method to improve all your activities, please contact me directly through the contact form in the upper right hand corner of this web page.
Learn to expand your visual field (consciously using your eyes) while relaxing your neck:
1. Look straight ahead and notice your visual field and what you see comfortably.
2. Turn your head slowly from side to side a few times and notice the range and the quality of the movement.
3. Now allow your visual field to increase so that you have more peripheral vision. Notice that your visual field has expanded and you can see more with less effort.
4. Continue to keep this expanded visual field and turn your head slowly from side to side noticing how this changes the range and ease of the movement.
5. Consciously practice expanding the visual field whenever you feel tension in the neck and eyes.
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
How Feldenkrais helps your brain work better.
Hi Everyone!
Students often ask me what is the mechanism that makes the Feldenkrais Method such an important vehicle in improving our physical functioning--and sometimes even more important--in the functioning of our brain? Today the answers are found in neuroscience.
We have confirmed the observations that Dr. Feldenkrais made nearly 70 years ago as he saw his students, clients, and patients respond to the modalities known today as Functional Integration (FI) and Awareness Through Movement (ATM). We have the technology to measure and track activity in the brain and can see which activities enhance our brain function. We can verify that working mindfully with attention while doing non-habitual movement produces specific reactions in the brain, reactions that are good for us in every way - not only in our movement.
To explain this a little further, below is an interesting article from the Feldenkrais Journal. It explains more about brain function and why doing ATM lessons produces the kind of response in the brain that we want -- for better movement, cognition, vitality and life. At the very end of the article, you will also find a micro-ATM that lets you explore your peripheral vision and discover how our mindful attention can even expand what we see. It's pretty cool.
I hope to see you soon! Happy Spring and Summer! Carole
______________________________________________
FLEXIBLE BRAIN - by Fiona Morris Upward, GCFP.
Flexibility in the brain can be described as the ability to find new pathways that interconnect, so that a change can be observed. How can we view this change in the brain function? Neuroscientists have been able to apply modern technology to discover which parts of the brain are ‘lighting up’ with information: either efferent nerve function (messages going outwards), or afferent nerve function (messages coming into the brain) with new signals registering on the cerebral cortex. Awareness Through Movement® lessons can deliver both improved flexibility for our bodies and also the stretching of the mind to sense, feel, discover and apply the new idea of learning with ease and attention to detail.
The key is in attention to the details; and the brain can sort quite a lot of signals in an orderly way when we are relaxed, happy, and not under the pressure to perform or to do more or to be better. Awareness through Movement lessons support each individual’s functional ability for improvement inviting a relaxed, sensing brain that is more apt to be open to change.
Dr. Feldenkrais was curious about how we as human beings can learn and change and so demonstrate higher function. In his Method, each person in an Awareness Through Movement lesson is given verbal guidance to explore this idea of change.
In his book, The Master Moves, Dr. Feldenkrais poses the question: ‘What sort of learning is important? You find an incredible thing. Once you look at it very closely you find that the learning that enables you to do the thing you know in another way, and one more way, and then three more ways, is the learning that is important. And when you see learning in that light, you find that a whole world of important things is open to us.’
In an Awareness Through Movement lesson each person learns to attend to him/herself in a new way and this ‘attention’ may be the link that triggers the brain to become more flexible.
Daniel J. Siegel writes: ‘The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex is thought to play a major role in working memory…and the focusing of conscious attention…The middle prefrontal regions are part of a ‘team’ that work together as a functional whole to link widely separated areas to one another. They have important integrative functions that help coordinate and balance cortical activity of thought and feeling with the lower limbic, brainstem, and bodily areas’ functions.’ Awareness Through Movement lessons are designed to promote flexibility in these integrative functions and thereby allow improved functional ability. This is why Dr. Feldenkrais emphasizes that openness to learn is of such paramount importance. There is the possibility that as one improves one’s awareness and learning through movement, the brain’s flexibility will also improve.
Moshe Feldenkrais, The Master Moves, Meta Publications, 1984, p 19.
Daniel J. Siegel, The Developing Mind: How Relationships and the Brain Interact to Shape Who We Are The Guildford Press, NY, 2012, Second Edition pp 18-19.
Students often ask me what is the mechanism that makes the Feldenkrais Method such an important vehicle in improving our physical functioning--and sometimes even more important--in the functioning of our brain? Today the answers are found in neuroscience.
We have confirmed the observations that Dr. Feldenkrais made nearly 70 years ago as he saw his students, clients, and patients respond to the modalities known today as Functional Integration (FI) and Awareness Through Movement (ATM). We have the technology to measure and track activity in the brain and can see which activities enhance our brain function. We can verify that working mindfully with attention while doing non-habitual movement produces specific reactions in the brain, reactions that are good for us in every way - not only in our movement.
To explain this a little further, below is an interesting article from the Feldenkrais Journal. It explains more about brain function and why doing ATM lessons produces the kind of response in the brain that we want -- for better movement, cognition, vitality and life. At the very end of the article, you will also find a micro-ATM that lets you explore your peripheral vision and discover how our mindful attention can even expand what we see. It's pretty cool.
I hope to see you soon! Happy Spring and Summer! Carole
______________________________________________
FLEXIBLE BRAIN - by Fiona Morris Upward, GCFP.
Flexibility in the brain can be described as the ability to find new pathways that interconnect, so that a change can be observed. How can we view this change in the brain function? Neuroscientists have been able to apply modern technology to discover which parts of the brain are ‘lighting up’ with information: either efferent nerve function (messages going outwards), or afferent nerve function (messages coming into the brain) with new signals registering on the cerebral cortex. Awareness Through Movement® lessons can deliver both improved flexibility for our bodies and also the stretching of the mind to sense, feel, discover and apply the new idea of learning with ease and attention to detail.
The key is in attention to the details; and the brain can sort quite a lot of signals in an orderly way when we are relaxed, happy, and not under the pressure to perform or to do more or to be better. Awareness through Movement lessons support each individual’s functional ability for improvement inviting a relaxed, sensing brain that is more apt to be open to change.
Dr. Feldenkrais was curious about how we as human beings can learn and change and so demonstrate higher function. In his Method, each person in an Awareness Through Movement lesson is given verbal guidance to explore this idea of change.
In his book, The Master Moves, Dr. Feldenkrais poses the question: ‘What sort of learning is important? You find an incredible thing. Once you look at it very closely you find that the learning that enables you to do the thing you know in another way, and one more way, and then three more ways, is the learning that is important. And when you see learning in that light, you find that a whole world of important things is open to us.’
In an Awareness Through Movement lesson each person learns to attend to him/herself in a new way and this ‘attention’ may be the link that triggers the brain to become more flexible.
Daniel J. Siegel writes: ‘The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex is thought to play a major role in working memory…and the focusing of conscious attention…The middle prefrontal regions are part of a ‘team’ that work together as a functional whole to link widely separated areas to one another. They have important integrative functions that help coordinate and balance cortical activity of thought and feeling with the lower limbic, brainstem, and bodily areas’ functions.’ Awareness Through Movement lessons are designed to promote flexibility in these integrative functions and thereby allow improved functional ability. This is why Dr. Feldenkrais emphasizes that openness to learn is of such paramount importance. There is the possibility that as one improves one’s awareness and learning through movement, the brain’s flexibility will also improve.
Moshe Feldenkrais, The Master Moves, Meta Publications, 1984, p 19.
Daniel J. Siegel, The Developing Mind: How Relationships and the Brain Interact to Shape Who We Are The Guildford Press, NY, 2012, Second Edition pp 18-19.
Sunday, April 20, 2014
Pelvic floor class starts Apr 24 at the Reno Buddhist Center.
UPDATE: The 6 wk Pelvic Floor Class Starts this Thursday, April 24, at 4 pm.
We improvised and came up with this new start date that worked for more people, me included. If you still want to sign up, just come at 3:45 this Thursday and that will be fine.
The nature of this class is that you get a really good understanding of what and how to do the lessons, so that you can do them at home successfully at the end of the 6 weeks. The effort may be life-long, but the work can be done at home, in your car, in the grocery line, in a movie and so on! Success means renewed capacity, and you will get that from this class.
Doing the work will help the usual issues, plus low back pain, spinal conditions, scoliosis, hip joint pain, pre or post hip replacement, etc. I will also teach you how to sit comfortably and update your self use! If you have questions, contact me via the upper right hand corner contact form, or via renofeldenkrais@aol.com.
See you Thursday!
Carole
Thursday, April 3, 2014
6 week Pelvic Floor Class - sign up now!
Hi Everyone! The 6 wk PELVIC FLOOR CLASS begins again - great work for balance, breathing, scoliosis, low back pain, riding, walking/hiking and vital energy (and, of course, all the more well-known pelvic organ conditions).
The pelvic floor class starts next Thursday April 10 at the Reno Buddhist Center, 4 pm. We will decide together about scheduling into the future, days and times, etc. so contact me NOW to sign up. Be sure to be there if you want to be in on the scheduling process. Minimum sign up 7 students, maximum 15. If you are new, plan to at arrive no later than 3:40. See you soon!
------------------------------
The class is highly recommended for people who have issues with pelvic organ function, pelvic structure concerns, SCOLIOSIS and lower back pain, problems with balance or breathing.
Specifically pelvic floor work can dramatically improve incontinence, ED, constipation/IBS, many urogenital issues and can be critical in recovery from certain pelvic surgeries. But for best results the work should be begun prior to surgery.
Generally, working with the pelvic floor introduces a groundedness and balance to the whole skeleton system, which when combined with Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement sequences, reestablishes function throughout the system that will help you regain and sustain a higher level of functioning system-wide.
Because it is so helpful, I prefer that everyone attend 1 or more regular Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement® classes before beginning the Pelvic floor class. You must contact me and arrange to meet with me 20 mins early for preparation prior to your first class.
Bring water, a towel, blanket/comforter and wear layers. You may contact me via email if you have other questions.
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
The Subtle Movement of Breath in the Body
This
week's Feldenkrais® Awareness Through Movement® lesson is a quiet exploration of the subtle movements of
breath in the body. We begin to see and feel how our breath supports and connects to other
movement functions as we discover each small and delicate response to breathing in and out. The movement sequence is done on the back, front, lying on both sides, and in sitting. The results include an easier and more spacious sense of breathing in the chest, lungs, and torso, much more movement in the ribs and shoulder girdle and a feeling of lightness in the whole body.
This is an exquisite example of the way in which work with our attention to via the simple organic movements of our bodies creates a deep grounding with life and joy. It is a derivation of Lesson 4 by Dr. Feldenkrais in his book, 'Awareness Through Movement.'
See the Class Schedule in the Right Side Bar for details of times and places.
This lovely photo is from Anatomy in Motion.
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Pelvic Floor Workshop #3, Mar. 30
Just a brief heads-up to announce that our 3rd Feldenkrais Pelvic Floor/low back pain workshop is now scheduled for March 30 at Midtown Fitness, in Reno, from 12-noon to 3 pm. It is completely different material from the previous workshops and will be lots of fun and practical use.
I will post more info about it this weekend. Please sign up as soon as possible if you want to get in. The first 2 PF events were sold out within 10 days. There are only 20 spots available, and 9 people have already signed up since last night's email. The workshop is an excellent support for equestrian activities and for scoliosis management.
Have a great week! Carole
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Why Feldenkrais? Great reason! Move it or lose - please read on:
The need for movement increases as we age. However, the actual amount of movement we get is far more likely to decrease drastically, the older we get. And not surprisingly, the results of an increasingly sedentary lifestyle are extremely debilitating, as the article below explains.
You might be interested in the important reasons to get yourself into shape to move more, by decreasing your sitting time and increasing the things you enjoy and love: walking, gardening, hiking, riding bikes or horses. Feldenkrais will make it possible to do nearly everything more comfortably and stably. Remember Spring is just around the corner.
I hope you will investigate Feldenkrais as your pathway to engaging in life again, getting more movement, as you sit less. The great advantage will be that you can use everything you learn in both Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement classes or individual Functional Integration lessons in everything you do.
My priority has been to make Feldenkrais accessible and affordable for people in the Reno-Tahoe-Carson-Minden-Gardnerville area. I have offered the only ongoing Feldenkrais classes and lessons in this area since 2009. Please contact me if you have questions. Best regards, Carole
You might be interested in the important reasons to get yourself into shape to move more, by decreasing your sitting time and increasing the things you enjoy and love: walking, gardening, hiking, riding bikes or horses. Feldenkrais will make it possible to do nearly everything more comfortably and stably. Remember Spring is just around the corner.
I hope you will investigate Feldenkrais as your pathway to engaging in life again, getting more movement, as you sit less. The great advantage will be that you can use everything you learn in both Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement classes or individual Functional Integration lessons in everything you do.
My priority has been to make Feldenkrais accessible and affordable for people in the Reno-Tahoe-Carson-Minden-Gardnerville area. I have offered the only ongoing Feldenkrais classes and lessons in this area since 2009. Please contact me if you have questions. Best regards, Carole
(HealthDay News) -- Too much sitting has been linked to increased risk for health problems such as heart failure and earlier death. Now, a new study finds older adults who sit too much are more likely to be disabled -- regardless of their exercise habits.
"Sedentary behavior is its own separate risk factor [for disability]," said study researcher Dorothy Dunlop, a professor of medicine at the Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine. She evaluated the exercise habits of more than 2,000 men and women, aged 60 and above, and their ability to perform normal everyday activities.
"Regardless of how much time they spent in moderate physical activity, the more time they spent being sedentary, the more likely they were to be disabled," Dunlop said.
However, another expert wonders if the relationship may occur in the opposite way -- that the more disabled people are, the more sedentary they are due to inability to exercise.
The study was supported in part by the U.S. National Institute for Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases. It was published online Feb. 19 in the Journal of Physical Activity & Health.
Dunlop and her colleagues evaluated responses given to the U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. The men and women answering the survey wore accelerometer devices to measure their activity on at least four different days between 2002 and 2005.
Few met the guidelines of getting moderate activity for 2.5 hours a week, Dunlop said. Only about 6 percent met that goal, and the other 94 percent did not, the study found.
On average, the men and women spent nine hours a day being sedentary during waking hours. About 4 percent reported being disabled. Disability was defined as having much difficulty (or inability) in performing activities of daily living, such as getting out of bed, dressing and walking.
For each additional daily hour of being sedentary, the odds of disability rose about 50 percent, Dunlop said. For instance, a woman aged 65 who was sedentary for 13 hours a day was 50 percent more likely to be disabled than a woman who was sedentary for 12 hours, she explained.
What is it about sitting? Dunlop can't say for sure, but said experts think that sitting for an extended period causes muscles to burn less fat and blood to flow more sluggishly. Idle muscles and sluggish blood flow can contribute to high blood pressure, heart disease, swollen ankles and diabetes.
Dunlop's study found a link, not a cause-and-effect relationship.
The connection may actually go the other way, said Andrea LaCroix, a professor of epidemiology in family and preventive medicine and director of the Women's Health Center of Excellence at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine. She recently found a link in her own study between higher amounts of sedentary time and higher risk of death in older women.
In the new study, however, the disability may be driving the inactivity, she said. "The more disabled people are, the more sedentary, because they are unable to exercise," LaCroix said.
Among the study's limitations, she noted, was that it looks only at a snapshot in time -- four days of tracking over a few years. A better approach would be to follow people over time and see if being sedentary leads to disability, said LaCroix, who is also an affiliate investigator at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, in Seattle.
The take-home message, study author Dunlop said, is that older adults, regardless of how much they exercise, should decrease their sedentary behaviors. So, she's still encouraging exercise. But if that's difficult, decreasing sitting time is another goal.
How to do that? Stand up when you talk on the phone, she suggested. Park in a far-away space at the mall or market when you shop. At work or home, walk around a bit when you get up for coffee or water, she advised. Walk to nearby errands instead of taking the car. If you're able, take stairs, not elevators. You can use a pedometer to track your activity.
Monday, January 27, 2014
Feldenkrais Pelvic Floor Workshop Pictures.
The Power and Movement Center of Our Bodies!
Learning to use ourselves in stable, supportive, reversible ways is the most important aspect of understanding our skeletal structure. Here are a few pictures from yesterday's Pelvic Floor workshop, which addressed and presented the pelvis as the initiator of movement and center of balance and grace.
The Reno Feldenkrais Integrative Movement and Health Pelvic Floor workshop, January 26 - it was a great group and many many aspects of the application of this work were explored. A strong and balanced pelvic floor pertains to so many things, balance, movement function, breathing, uro-genital function, strengthening the body in scoliosis, overall stability, equestrian activities, running and hiking, to name a few.
This was the second of 3 pelvic floor workshops, each a stand alone experience and resource. Each has been sold out well in advance. If you are interested in attending workshop 3 (date not set yet), please contact me.
Thursday, January 23, 2014
The Feldenkrais Method - David Zemach Bersin
Working with the Whole Self
Another succinct and lovely explanation from the Feldenkrais Institute of New York, to help you understand how the Feldenkrais Method and principles empower and create change in mind and body. This, of course, leads to measurable improvement in our general feeling of wellbeing, our joy in living.The Feldenkrais Institute - Working With The Whole Self from SixDay Productions on Vimeo.
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement lesson Jan. 21-25
MOVEMENT and VITALITY
Class Schedule:
Tues at Midtown Fitness 10 am; Thurs at Reno Buddhist Center 5:30 pm; and Saturday at Midtown Fitness 3 pm, in addition to Sunday's Sold out Pelvic Floor workshop.
This week's Feldenkrais lesson is a slow, lengthening, comfortable, large rolling lesson that is also rib opening, shoulder loosening, hip integrating. It feels FABULOUS, balances the whole skeleton and relieves pain. The lesson is a child development lesson that brings movement and center of gravity in the direction of the pelvis. The rolling comes at the end and is very gentle.
We had a wonderful class this morning and look forward to seeing students Thursday and Saturday! If you are coming to your first class, please contact me and come 15 minutes early. Bring a comforter/blanket, water and wear layers. This lesson will give you a great feeling of what movement was when we were younger, more free and unselfconscious.
Class Schedule:
Tues at Midtown Fitness 10 am; Thurs at Reno Buddhist Center 5:30 pm; and Saturday at Midtown Fitness 3 pm, in addition to Sunday's Sold out Pelvic Floor workshop.
Monday, January 20, 2014
Getting The Most Benefit from Your Feldenkrais Class or Workshop!
What you need to know and do to have a great Feldenkrais® experience in your Awareness Through Movement (ATM)® classes, workshops and at home.
- The most important thing to know about ATM lessons is that deep and lasting change comes from your ability to sense and follow movement as you do it. This is how tension is released, not from ‘doing’ the movement 'right' or achieving any special form or position.
- There is NO ‘RIGHT’ way or form, other than working with your attention, going slowly, and keeping the movements comfortable and small, gradually allowing the size of the movement to grow as you find your way. NOT doing anything that causes pain is RIGHT.
- We begin by doing each movement in a small, slow way. Explore the feeling; see how your muscles and skeleton respond to the movement, listen to verbal direction. Experiment. Enlarge the movement gradually, as your body becomes accustomed to it. If you find it uncomfortable, visualize the movement, imagine doing it, in your minds’ eye.
- Every time you repeat a movement, look for simpler, easier and less effortful ways of moving. There are many ways to do every movement. Explore several different possibilities, see what is comfortable for you, what feels natural, and what feels good.
- Give yourself the time and emotional room to discover movement that is comfortable for YOU, even when you visualize. Discovering how you move, what your movement patterns are, is fundamental to your making deeper changes connections to yourself. This will awaken your brain so that it can learn, and will release tension and stress.
- The smaller and slower your make your movement, the more you will feel. You learn to make finer and finer discriminations with your nervous system each time you move with attention and awareness. Visualizing movement in your imagination is a very powerful brain activator--you use the same neural pathways as you do when you move; your mental activity while visualizing is actually equal or greater than in movement, and really makes your neurons fire.
- If you practice sensing and moving at home, do it only as long as you are interested in it. Stop if your attention wanders too long or if the movement becomes boring to you. Automatic movement is of no benefit to your brain. Only when you are working with attention and interest will your neurons fire, will you develop new capacity.
- Non-habitual movement and sensing is learning in the most complete way possible. Sensing with attention activates your proprioceptors, the sensory mechanisms in your ligaments and tendons around every joint. Your body will subconsciously make better movement choices as you accumulate more ability to sense and track your movement from inside yourself.
- Visit renofeldenkrais.blogspot.com to view the youtube clips and for detailed information about the Feldenkrais Method®. Email me at renofeldenkrais@aol.com if you have questions.
Carole Bucher, BA, GCFP/T
www.renofeldenkrais.blogspot.com
renofeldenkrais@aol.com, 775-240-7882
Friday, January 17, 2014
SELF DISCOVERY - The art of shouldering
Most of us carry the weight of the world on our
shoulders, sometimes to an extreme degree. The consequences are immobility
such as frozen shoulder, stiff necks, back pain of all kinds, knots between the
ribs, under the shoulder blades, and even tight pelvic conditions because of
the stressed muscles connecting the upper and lower back. When I saw this
beautiful image by Kirstine Reiner
on one of my favorite art sites, it really spoke to me, especially it's
title: "Unknown Territory." Here are a few thoughts
relating to your shoulders and to Feldenkrais:
The Art of Shouldering:
Mysterious, elegant connections exist between shoulder and ribs, shoulder and spine, shoulder and pelvis, and most often, shoulder and neck. People are almost always astonished to feel and learn about these connections first hand in Functional Integration sessions, the individualized aspect of Feldenkrais. Contact me for information about one-on-one lessons and how they integrate with the other aspect of Feldenkrais, Awareness Through Movement classes. I hold classes in Reno at Mditown Fitness, 600 S. Center St., on Tues. morning, 10 am; at the Reno Buddhist Center, 820 Plumas at Taylor, on Thurs. evening at 5:30 and at Midtown Fitness again on Saturdays at 3 pm.
Feldenkrais empowers you to discover the real meanings of self care and sustainability.
Monday, January 13, 2014
The 2nd of 3 Pelvic Floor Workshops, Sun Jan 26 noon-3 pm - SOLD OUT
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