picture-52On my subway ride to teach some Alexander Technique lessons at the American Center for the Alexander Technique in Mahattan, I noticed a man who could not have been more stooped over. As an Alexander Technique teacher I was particularly aware of how he was seated, reading the paper, his head not very far from his knees. His face was quite tense, and had a scowl I suspected was habitual. He seemed to ‘have the weight of the world on his shoulders.’  I was wondering how the extreme compression of his torso was affecting his musculoskeletal, digestive, nervous and circulatory systems. It was affecting his breathing which was rapid and shallow, and given the configuration he was giving his torso the limited breathing was no surprise. It was evident that this was the way he habitually carried himself.

A woman walked by him and slightly brushed his newspaper. If looks could kill, she’d be dead. He scowled at her for a few minutes, even after she had been seated awhile. The combination of tensing, collapsing, compressing, rapidity of breathing and heart rate, and the general unease in his body added to his quick irritation.

The Alexander Technique and doctors

I imagined this gentleman going to a traditional doctor for a check-up, and possibly receiving a clean bill of health. The blood work and all other tests might come back within the “normal” range. An Alexander Technique teacher, however, might not give such high marks on his ‘tests’. An Alexander Technique teacher would notice the slump and concurrent compression and pressures, realizing they might be harmful. After all, Use Affects Functioning. An Alexander teacher would know how to help him. F.M. Alexander himself said that no diagnosis is complete which does not consider interference caused by habitual wrong use. Habitual wrong use. We’re all that guy, to a degree.

Mark Josefsberg-Alexander Technique NYC

Mark@MarkJosefsberg.com

(917) 709-4648