Learning Feldenkrais Exercises at Home
In April I wrote a sort of year’s wrap-up of my initial Feldenkrais efforts (Feldenkrais would be considered work that should last a lifetime; a year into this, I’m just a beginner). I’d earlier written an overview describing the practice, and before that, Mobility Doesn’t Always Mean Movement, a commentary on how a joint mobility program, while important, may not be enough.
Most of us are too busy, and while a few may be interested enough to search out local assistance, it’s likely you haven’t gotten that far. You might be able to carve out an hour to give this a try if I make it real easy. So let’s try this: I’ll find a basic, free mp3 download with voice instructions; you’ll download the file, lie down on the floor on your back and go through the motions the instructor suggests. If you get a hint of possibility in the outcome, move on to step two: several related lessons selected to achieve a specific purpose.
You’ll start with small movements you’ll do several times; then the movement will get a little larger or will change in some way that calls upon other muscles to assist.
One thing I found useful with this work is to visualize the skeleton moving rather than the muscles at work. We’re used to muscle action, and in a way that’s hindering our global movements, especially if we do any isolation exercises in the gym. Wipe the slate: Think bones, how the joints move and pull the bones along.
This is an hour-long lesson from the Open ATM Project (free Awareness Through Movement lesson downloads, recorded in live class sessions). Right-click on the following bolded link to save it to your computer as an mp3 file for your iPod, or simply click to play: Tracy Godek teaching The Spine as a Chain.
While that’s downloading, here’s a visual before you get started, Anat Baniel presenting an Introduction to Feldenkrais Movement Awareness Class.
Anat has a new book, Move into Life: The Nine Essentials for Lifelong Vitality, that I’d say provides the best overview of the Feldenkrais work for the general public, anyone who’d like to get the benefits but has no desire to go any farther in the study. I highly recommend the book, with one caveat: It’ll only be useful if you’re willing to do the exercises. Reading them is interesting, but useless for providing change.
Now let’s just say you gave the lesson above a try and think there might be something in there for you. What comes next in learning Feldenkrais at home?
Over at Kinesophics.ca, Lynette Reid offers her free recordings under what she calls the Do It Yourself ATMs. If you don’t see the audio files when you land at the link, you may need to register and log in… all free. You could just start at the top of the list and work your way down, or you might pick and choose to suit your needs.
There are some of you get a bug to try a few sessions at home, but don’t want to go fishing around the ‘net for the free stuff. Just tell me what to buy and I’ll follow the instructions, right? Okay, gotcha. Just buy one of these:
Feldenkrais for back pain, Ryan Nagy, eleven lessons, $27.00 (top item on page)
Feldenkrais for ribs and spine, Josef Dellagrotte, six long lessons, $47 (can be purchased separately)
Feldenkrais for shoulders, Seth and Laura Paris, four lessons, $38.00
Feldenkrais for stress relief, Lavinia Plonka, three lessons, $15.99
Don’t fret over choosing wrong. There’s huge carryover from lesson to lesson, regardless of the focus of the lesson set. Pick one and click the Buy button.
Other than Anat’s book above, I’d steer clear of trying to read more. Most of the written Feldenkrais material is difficult to read, and honestly, as with our gym training, it’s in the doing where something happens. Just the same, if you’re a reader and want more lessons, here’s a terrific link full of written Feldenkrais ATM lessons.
Tips as you get started:
- Close your eyes while you’re doing this. There’s far too much distraction in the world around us to be attentive to this with open eyes.
- Imagine the joints and bones moving, not the muscles working.
- Make everything effortless. If you’re working at moving, you won’t get the benefits.
- Use small movements – tiny… tinier yet – and do them slowly. If your movements are small and slow, make them smaller and slower. Coordination is learned in the small, tiny, smooth motions.
- Work in the painless range. You’re trying to teach your brain easy, comfortable, pain-free motion. Reminding yourself where there’s pain is the polar opposite of your mission here.
- The beginning of the movement is where you want to attend. Smooth out the beginning and the end will increase on its own.
- Here’s Moshe Feldenkrais on how to learn this method.
You’ll notice there are rest periods in the verbal instructions. These are to allow your, uh… organism… to assimilate whatever new range of motion or fullness of movement that’s been learned. It’s also a good idea to stop on your own if you get tired before the instructor gives the rest cue, if your mind wanders or if you get frustrated. Rest for a minute, relax… get gentle and try again as effortlessly as possible.
Once hooked, find yourself a local practitioner. You can do this alone, but most will make faster, better progress with some guidance. There’s a directory at the Feldenkrais Guild’s website. Note: There are a couple of other similar groups; apparently there was a split in the Guild in the ‘90s. If you find a local practitioner doing Feldenkrais work who isn’t listed in the Guild’s directory, he or she could still be legit.
For a glimpse at a different class and a brief discussion, here’s one of the top trainers from the Manhattan Feldeknrais Institute of NY, David Zemach-Bersin. You’ll see the work used on a young girl with movement problems from birth – the method is also used successfully with stroke victims and patients with other serious medical issues such as multiple sclerosis and cerebral palsy.
I’m told there are over a thousand different Awareness Through Movement (ATM) and Functional Integration (FI – this is hands-on instruction done by a practitioner) lessons. You can go for years without repeating, and I’m telling you something: Those elder years will be better for your efforts in movement awareness.







on June 25th, 2009 at 7:57 am
Laree, with your experience now, what would you think best for the average backyard lifter (with the usual whining shoulders and hips)?
Keith’s Unbreakable, the Z-Health R-Phase DVD or a weekly Feldenkrais lesson? We have someone locally charging £8 ($13).
Cost-to-benefit ratio is a factor, time not so much (at least, until I get myself a new job).
on June 25th, 2009 at 6:11 pm
Whew! That’s a hard one! Can I cheat?
Okay, I’ve been pondering, and this is what I think.
If you have obvious issues, such as one foot turned out, a knee caving in, a hip high or a shoulder elevated AND if you’re able to commit to a corrective program, I’d go with Keith Scott’s unbreakable ebook.
For a whole body mobility wake-up call, I think I’d go with the Z-Health R-Phase because it will get you there faster — you’d start the entire body work upon receipt of the dvd and manual.
Now then. I’ve gone the corrective exercise route — very dedicated, daily, even two or three times a day for some stuff — and it helped a great deal, fixed a bunch of stuff.
And I’ve done extensive joint mobility work, from stuff I learned off blogs and YouTube, to Scott Sonnon’s dvds and Eric Cobb’s Z-Health products.
Neither of those two options would have taken me anywhere near as far as the Feldenkrais work has — not even close.
So my cheat option would be either Keith’s program or Z-Health, PLUS doing one of those free Feldenkrais download classes a couple of times a week. At some point, you’ll probably get to a place where you want some direction, but until then, the downloads and your living room floor should serve you perfectly.
Feldenkrais works on a different level, and it takes a lot longer to mine it. For example, your weekly class would be wonderful — you’ll love it — but you’ll only get four in per month. It’ll feel great and you’ll get tremendous benefits, but at that rate, it’ll be a slow process.
on June 27th, 2009 at 4:01 pm
I keep returning to the same places that need work. I think that’s a signal to take the route through Keith to start with – get myself back to “ground zero” with regards to mobility. Throw the free Feldenkrais, and see how far I can get.
After reading Mike T Nelson’s blog I get the impression the Z-health would be so much more beneficial with a trainer (due to the precision of movement) and there just isn’t one close enough to me right now.
Thanks for the great advice, I’ll see where it takes me and then send you the feed back.
Getting pain free is easy – staying that way for any length of time is the hard part.
All the best to you and Dave,
Warren
on July 9th, 2009 at 11:54 pm
First mini-update!
Okay, so I hesistated with the purchase of Unbreakable. I know that Mike, Eric and Bill are putting out “Assess and Correct” soon so I thought I’d wait and compare.
In the meantime, I tried out the suggestion in your recent post:
http://davedraper.com/blog/2009/07/08/joint-mobility-vs-joint-coordination/
And it worked a treat on my shoulders. It would seem my body has managed to un-learn quite a bit.
I also did some digging for my nagging hip flexors (which weren’t going to wait any longer!) and happened upon this Z-Health clip:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_wmg_jGvuuA
Sold.
on April 29th, 2010 at 9:03 am
hi laree,
i wanted to let you know that the openatm project
is moving to http://openatm.org. All the ATM
lessons can be found there.
The links in this article to the tracy godek lessons will stop working soon. it would be great if you could update them to the new site
thanks.
falk
on April 29th, 2010 at 12:39 pm
Thanks, Falk. I’ll take care of that now.
on September 2nd, 2010 at 9:53 pm
Falk
I love the open atm website except that a slight description would be hugely helpful as sometimes I might want to be on my back the whole time and you might see a title that appeals to you and you start off on your back than ten minutes into the lesson they say ok, kneel on one knee or something of the like and i’m like are you kidding. Not that I will never do that. Or sometimes i have a head ache and they ask you to lift your head several times and thats the last thing i want to do. Just a brief description of what it involves would be great.