Flexibility in Five Minutes a Day
Author: Robert Rickover
Date Posted: July 26, 2006
In her book, “Life and Death in Shanghai”, Nien Cheng describes
her life in China during Mao’s Cultural Revolution. Because she
and her late husband had worked for a foreign firm, her home and
all her possessions were confiscated by the Red Guard, her daughter
was tortured and then killed, and she was imprisoned and held in
solitary confinement for six years. Ms Cheng was in her fifties
when all this happened.
Conditions in prison were terrible and several times she came close
to death. Describing one on her lowest points, when she barely had
the strength to stand, she writes:
“...I thought that if I was going to survive the Cultural Revolution,
I must discipline myself with physical and mental exercise. Inspired
by my own resolution, I stood up rather abruptly. Dark shadows almost
blinded me, and I had to sit down again. But from that day onward,
I devised a series of exercises that moved every part of my body
from my head to my toes, and did them twice a day. At first the
exercise exhausted me, and I had to interrupt it with frequent periods
of rest. Also I had to avoid the prying eyes of the guards, as exercise
other than a few minutes of walking in the cell after meals was
forbidden. Nevertheless, I managed to exercise each day and after
a few months recovered my physical strength somewhat, as well as
my feeling of well-being.”
Several years later, the political situation in China shifted and
Ms. Cheng was released from prison. Despite all the hardships she
had been through, her health quickly improved. Her friends commented
that she looked much younger than her actual age. Eventually she
moved to the United States.
It was fascinating for me to read about Ms Cheng’s system of movement
exercises because it closely parallels a procedure described in
the book “How to Learn the Alexander Technique - A Manual for Students”
by Barbara and William Conable. This book emphasizes a procedure
the Canables have named “body-mapping” - essentially a systematic
process of exploring on your own body precisely how the major joints
and muscle groups work.
This is not the sort of study one usually associates with anatomy
- what I think of as “anatomy at a distance”, that is learning about
the human body without relating it to the body of the student who
is doing the learning. Nor is it at all like the detailed study
of cadavers done in medical schools.
Body-mapping is all about the practical application of basic anatomical
knowledge to yourself as a living organism, learning about how you
function at rest and in movement.
In their book, the Conables write:
“In recent years some (Alexander Technique) students have expressed
a longing to do flexibility work but have assumed they couldn’t
devote enough time to it. To one of these students I said one day,
‘Well, you could do worse than simply put your joints through their
range of movement each day.’ He came back a week later and said,
‘I did what you suggested and it was amazing.’ “What was that?’
I asked. ‘Put my joints through their range of motion each day.’
He showed me how much flexibility he had gained in a week doing
that, and we began to systematically play with the idea. Sure enough,
it works like magic and takes only about five minutes a day, with
no necessity that the five minutes be consecutive. The student simply
begins with the joint of the head and the spine...rotating the head
and tilting, then moves on the the jaw...then on to the ribs, moving
them at their joints with the vertebrae by taking a good breath.
Then the student moves all four joints of the arm structure and
the hand joints. Then the spine, bending forward, backward, to each
side, spiraling, and twisting. Then the hip joint, knee, and ankle
and the foot joints. That’s it. Done correctly this routine increases
flexibility faster than anything I know, and I have wondered and
wondered why. I now think two factors contribute, first the quality
of attention brought to the movement, which is the kind of attention
that makes it possible for the body to learn from each movement.
Second, some of the movements are ones that many people rarely make,
like rotation at the upper arm joint with the shoulder blade and
rotation at the hip joint. The body seems to delight in these movements
and the availability seems to free the joint.”
If you’d like to become more flexible, the experiences of Ms Cheng
and of Baraba Connable’s students point to a simple, efficient and
effective way to achieve that goal.
***
“Life and Death in Shanghai” by Nien Cheng was first published
by Grove Press, New York, 1986. It is currently available in a paperback
edition. The quote cited above is found on page 203.
About The Author
“How to Learn the Alexander Technique - A Manual for Students”
by Barbara and William Conable, and a great many other books about
the Alexander Technique, is available from the Alexander Technique
Bookstore at http://www.alexandertechnique.com/books
“Body Mapping”, an introductory article on the topic by Stacy Gehman,
can be found at http://www.alexandertechnique.com/articles/bodymap
Robert Rickover is a teacher of the Alexander Technique living
in Lincoln, Nebraska. He also teaches regularly in Toronto, Canada.
Robert is the author of Fitness Without Stress - A Guide to the
Alexander Technique and is the creator of The Complete Guide to
the Alexander Technique (http://www.alexandertechnique.com)
Article Source: JKD Street Combat
- online collection of Exercise articles.
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