This kind of evidence of 'direct' benefits is of such importance to
people - we all know that they are not of great scientific value, or
(as far as the technique is concerned) really of much relevance, but
they make such a difference to levels of confidence and commitment, I
feel that we are justified in seeking them out and providing them where
genuine and appropriate.
Sandra
I'm interested in these videos - applying mindfulness to pain /
unpleasant sensations is not AT, but is a relevant and useful set of
strategies my students and I are coming across quite frequently in all
sorts of treatment / therapy contexts, and we sometimes include them in
a lesson, if appropriate. It might indeed be helpful applied to chronic
itching - I've heard it said that it is worse than pain, though that
must be hard to prove!
Sandra
On 14 February 2012 22:15, Sandra <sandra....@talktalk.net> wrote:
> ... suggested that if she thinks the potential overall benefit of the Technique
> to her life is worth committing to, without great expectations about direct
> effects on her skin condition, then she should consider giving it a go.
I learned a something aboutt trawling the internet for anecdotal
evidence of cures for my RSI so I had a look about eczma.
As I had never heard much about it in the AT world I looked in the
yoga world. It looks like there are very few cases of people getting
any change with it. There were a few people saying Bikram (hot) yoga
aggravated it and one saying yoga gave a definite improvement. But the
vast majority just said that stress can aggravate it so de-stressing
may be of some help, which is the AT line too I think. I didn't see a
single report of a teacher saying they regularly helped students.
> I'm interested in these videos - applying mindfulness to pain / unpleasant
> sensations is not AT, but is a relevant and useful set of strategies my
> students and I are coming across quite frequently in all sorts of treatment
> / therapy contexts, and we sometimes include them in a lesson, if
> appropriate.
I would recommend learning self-hypnosis for learning to quickly
directly calm the nervous system way down to the point where sensory
processing starts changing. I have seen a hypno-therapist demonstrate
handling pain by calming and visualisation to distance himself from
the pain.
This is usually much faster than learning any mindful meditation
discipline buddhist or not. I dont think AT teachers should try to
teach hypnosis or mindfulness meditation, it's not what they are
trained for and it is against many AT principles (even though it works
well!).
It's not the done thing in AT but I often wonder if a teacher can
induce super deep relaxation with their hands - well I know some do -
but not in regular lessons. It would be interesting if you tried that.
If the itching could be suspended it might might help them see that
the unpleasantness is comprised of basic signals that are processed
through perceptual filters - and using deep relaxation these filters
can be changed.
This is the stuff of hypno-therapy and all sorts of 'healing'
modalities. It maybe a long shot. Things learned by trying can have
all sorts of extra benefits too.
best of luck,
Keith.
On 15 February 2012 14:03, Ruth Rootberg <rroo...@comcast.net> wrote:
> ... What I thought the question
> was, and what interests me is, where does the Alexander Technique come in?
> How does it/can it interface with this particular condition? I hope Sandra
> is getting the information she needs to carry on with her student.
Mainly I hope the student finds some way to get some help with eczma.
When I was using AT to help rid myself of RSI I found very few AT
teachers had any knowledge of areas with some overlap to their own.
When I gave up AT due to lack of money I eventually found my way to
other things but am still unimpressed by no-one having been able to
direct me towards them.
This comes from AT being viewed as 'not a therapy'. In general good
therapists are interested in the health of their client and will send
people on to methods they feel may be more beneficial than their own -
and they try to be aware of related methods.
But when the pupil is seeking AT for therapeutic benefits they may
well see it differently. I guess I was rather naive in thinking that
if there were others ways my AT teachers would know about them.
regards,
Keith