Category Archives: the body

following Gillian

GILLIANPhoto:  Pam White

Following Gillian

From the horse’s body

 

Gillian Jagger is one of the extraordinary people I know.  I have been blessed to know her for many years now, and the depth and ferocity of her work, the expansive sky of her mind never cease to move and inspire me.

She recently sent me a link for some new videos that I share here:  Following Gillian and from the horses’s body.

Watch them when you can make some real time for them, because she is inviting you into a world that has nothing to do with clock time, with limitation, with hurry.  Let yourself be moved.

 

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Somatic Experiencing™

f7c8139bb1374a26bbefa69d11eebdf3Painting by Leon Huscha

In Somatic Experiencing®, the traumatic event isn’t what caused the trauma, it is the overwhelmed response to the perceived life threat that is causing an unbalanced nervous system. Our aim is to help you access the body memory of the event, not the story. Like other somatic psychology approaches, Somatic Experiencing® professes a body first approach to dealing with the problematic (and, oftentimes, physical) symptoms of trauma. This means that therapy isn’t about reclaiming memories or changing our thoughts and beliefs about how we feel, but we look at the sensations that lie underneath our feelings, and uncover our habitual behavior patterns to these feelings.

For the past two years, I have been studying Somatic Experiencing®.  I came to it because I was negotiating a big trauma of my own, and because I wanted to expand my Somatic Movement Therapy practice to include Peter Levine’s profoundly rich way of working with trauma.   I plan to complete my training next year.

During this last year of my training, I am offering a FREE introductory SE/Somatic Movement session to anyone who is curious or would like to experience the work to see if it might be helpful.  If you find that you would like continue, I will see clients at a reduced rate until I complete the training next October.  While the work will focus predominantly on Somatic Experiencing®, it may also integrate some elements of Somatic Movement Therapy.

To schedule a session or for more information, please contact me here:   Email Paula

 

ride like a star

Screen Shot 2014-12-18 at 7.27.33 PM

I have become convinced that life, among other things, is a continual process of posturing and re-posturing.  I am currently undergoing a major re-posturing myself.  The horses are helping me.

What I discovered after a visit to a brilliant dentist who specializes in TMJ issues, was that I had suffered a kind of postural collapse over the past two years.  The cause was the trauma of losing a daughter.  It was almost as if the internal structures of organs, fascia, fluids and glands had fallen in on themselves. The first place to fall was my heart, and then other parts were dragged downward and inward.  The TMJ was just a side-effect – painful, but not causal.

Fortunately, I had also been doing some physical research into the endocrine system from a Body-Mind Centering perspective, which I wrote about in Riding from the Glands.  Things got really interesting when I reached the solar plexus area.  From the BMC perspective, the adrenals and pancreas (an organ and a gland) begins to shift our center from earth (coccyx, perineum, gonads) to air and the upper body.  Bonnie describes the pancreas as creating a six-pointed star relationship among the six limbs – head, tail, arms and legs.

So what does that have to do with riding?  As it turns out, everything.  In the drawing above, the darker green triangle represents the relationship of the tail (coccyx) to the arms and hands.  The lighter green triangle is the relationship between legs/feet and head.  Riding with a sense of feeling the connected and inter-relationship of those two triangles was a revelation.

The first thing that I noticed was how I was NOT feeling the relationship between head and feet.  Bringing more weight into my feet and actually opening the bottoms of the feet to create a more spongy connection with the stirrups immediately set up an electric connection that was both horizontal/widening through the feet and vertical/rising through the head.  The surprising and lovely result was to greatly increase the stability in my seat and hands – the other triangle – without bracing. While the glands are physical bodies, they are also intensely energetic, and engaging the specific consciousness of each of these centers can have a profound effect on the body-mind as a whole.  Like turning on the lights.

Back to the re-posturing.  Horses are generous, kind, patient.  They tolerate with greater equanimity than any human I know, our imbalances and distractions, both physical and emotional.  What we can do for them, besides the best care we can afford, is to pay attention to the ways that we are falling out of balance, to make re-posturing a practice.  Posture is a tricky word that can summoning up military images or a “shoulders back and soldier on” kind of mentality.  That is not the kind of re-posturing I am talking about.  What I am looking for in myself and in my clients is something more fluid, more subtle, even mysterious.  A way of undoing and opening that is revelatory and vulnerable.  Give that to yourself, and then to your horse and see what happens.

riding from the glands

 

steffen-peters-ravel-world-cupSteffen Peters and Ravel

040309SteffenSteffen Peters and Ravel

In my ongoing somatic research into the art and sport of riding, I have been watching Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen’s videos on the endocrine glands.  I have had bi-lateral hip replacements, and prior to that was in pretty significant, limiting pain for about twenty years.  As a result.  I am always curious about the relationship of my body – in contact with the horse primarily through my hips – and the horse’s body.

Even with my beautiful new porcelain/titanium hips, I could feel that the old holding patterns resulting from that pain were there, and that I could never seem to fully unravel them.  Over the past year, I have been strongly drawn to re-investigate Body-Mind Centering, the brilliant, transformative work of Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen.  In the videos, Bonnie goes through the glands starting at the root, with the coccygeal body, the perineal body, then the gonads and the adrenals.  She demonstrates how tucking the pelvis, or attempting to straighten the back by curling the tail under,  closes off and deadens the coccygeal body and the perineal body and those chakra centers.  I can often feel that in my riding (or sitting at the computer) I am doing a subtle version of that in a mistaken, habitual effort to protect my lower back.

Instead, in the rising trot, think of an action somewhat like the fluid pumping of the jellyfish:  feel a narrowing of the pelvic quadrants as you rise and a widening of the space between sitz bones and coccyx/pubis as you sit.  Soften down each time in a supported way as you sit.  Engaging the gonadal line  (ovaries or vas deferans) creates an energetic relationship between the head and the feet – a kind of bow and arrow countertension.  So as you rise in the trot, ascend through the head and descend through the feet with an elastic feeling.  Visualize the adrenals adding power and support to both actions.

In my ride yesterday, I consciously integrated all of those actions with my lovely, patient horse Sanne.  The result was astonishing.  His trot had a buoyant, floating energized feeling that I have never fully felt before.  I realized that unconsciously, I had been holding my hips, still in that slightly braced, protective position, even as I tried to loosen and open them.  Working from the glands, moved me away from the musculo-skeletal focus into a more energetically amplified relationship with myself and my horse.  The other thing that I found helpful was to feel how each pelvic half is actually a part of the leg, with the sacrum – a part of the spine – floating between.  This gave me a greater feeling of both balance and freedom in the walk, the trot and the canter.  Applying the jellyfish and the bow and arrow actions in the canter was amazing – I truly felt that I had joined up in my horse’s movement – more air than earth!

I chose the photos above of rider Steffen Peters because I saw in them something I rarely see so clearly and consistently expressed in riders – a beautiful energetic alignment  – as if the chakras are all open, illuminated, engaged. The second photograph perfectly captures the “bow and arrow” feeling in the rising trot – a breautiful relationship between earth and sky!

As I write this, I am reminded of Linda Tellington-Jones’s words during a workshop.  Whenever she would encounter a “problem” with a horse, whether physical or behavioral, she would say, “Isn’t that interesting?”  Those words invoke a sense of curiosity, play and improvisation.  Opening to possibility rather than contracting around a difficulty.  The same has to be true of ourselves.  It would be too easy to become frustrated or impatient with my own limitations as a rider.  Maintaining an attitude of willingness, curiosity and playfulness is my goal for each ride, each rehearsal, each day.