Monday, February 28, 2011

Exercising your Body-Mind

IN OUR MODERN WORLD, we recognise the interconnection of all things and beings. Quantum physics has paved the way for scientists, theologians, philosophers, artists and healers to embrace, and or, reassert the significance of the interconnectedness of life. The interrelation of the mind & the body is fascinating.  Once the body was thought of as being controlled by the mind. However, today, the body itself is seen as being a type of mind in its own right. We can also use the body to influence the mind, and the mind to influence the body! The boundaries between body & mind are becoming ever more blurred. Take that thought into the Pilates, yoga or movement class with you and start talking (and listening) to your body!




In 2007 I attended the Polestar Pilates International Conference in Sydney. The highlight for me, was Dr Louisa Walker's lecture 'Psyche and Soma: Emotions & the Bodymind'.  In her presentation, Louisa stated that the 'mind & body are inseparable in the organisms that we call the self', as both the body & the brain create & release chemicals that trigger our moods & behaviors. Each neuro-peptide receptor that is know in our brain, is also found throughout the body. Therefore, our states of mind are not specific to our brain, but are being created within the body itself. On the flip side, she also noted that many 'hormones', such as insulin, are also found in the brain.  The heart, for example, contains every neuro-peptide receptor (found in the brain), and many that govern emotions, leading to the idea that the heart is the place where our emotions ARE born. 'More afferent nerves (travel) from the heart to (the) brain than (from the) brain to (the) heart' (1).

A feeling, which may be felt in the stomach becomes processed by the brain to reveal information. Our 'gut instinct' has been found to have more credible validity. The entire lining of our intenstines is lined with nerve endings, which all contain neuropeptides and receptors(brain chemicals). This explains why we can feel emotions in our stomach. (2) 

HEALTHY BODY, HEALTHY MIND


CREATING a new physical experience by working on the body, in turn creates a new psychological state, just as shifting your psychological 'frame of mind',  creates a new physical experience. Establishing a practice of conscious & mindful movement, is the beginning of a path towards both a more peaceful mental state, and also a more comfortable body to be in.

Most of us are aware of the importance of exercise to our physical health. Exercise is also publicised again and again as a vital component of mental health. Exercise increases endorphins, serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine, hormones which elevate mood. Exercise also improves concentration and decreases stress, helps to guard against dementia and Alzheimers, improves cognitive activity, and results in more energy, higher confidence & stronger discipline. (3)



TALKING TO YOUR BODY

(Bringing the Mind into the Body)
Usually our physical being operates without consciousness. We don't have to think about breathing, pumping blood, growing new cells or digesting food, neither do we, generally, have to think about how to physically make our bodies move. We clap, walk,  jump, run, lift, carry, and swim without little conscious thought to do so.  However, bringing consciousness to movement can affect, transform & improve it. You can actually think yourself into a more full breath, thereby creating more oxygen in the body. You can think yourself into a taller spine, therefore off loading the joints. With a mere thought or idea, you can slow your pulse, calm your nervous system, release muscular tension, alter the recruitment pattern of muscles, change the shape of your spine, pelvis, neck, shoulders, pretty much anything you can 'talk to' can be affected.

Improving your awareness of, and control of, your body, requires an active, participating mind. Focusing the mind into the body begins a process of dialogue between you & your body.  'The puzzle of mind-body healing is how a thought, a nonmaterial object, can cause the brain to make a material object, a neuropeptide molecule, that will initiate communication to the immune system or the endocrine system, eventually leading to healing' (4).


Many body workers & movement educators use imagery and visual techniques to create a  feeling or a picture within a body. Once this image is held in the mind, it can become actualised in the body. We in fact 'use the same brain regions to recreate mentally, a set of movements (we) would have used had (we) physically performed them'.(5)



MINDFUL MOVEMENT


Mindfulness is a practice in itself. Fostering mindfulness during Pilates, yoga or any form of exercise you enjoy, will expand the benefits beyond purely the physical, and will also effect your mental state, allowing you to work more transformatively on a physical level. Meditation or physical practices such as Pilates are a fantastic way to begin listening to your body. The intelligence of your body can reveal much, listening will help you to understand what your body needs. 

I enjoy watching clients  tuning in to their breath, learning to activate 'new' muscles, improve their postural awareness, release unnecessary muscular tension, and gain confidence in having an internal dialogue with their body. Eric Franklin, imagery master has a new book 'Beautiful Body - Beautiful Mind'. This text looks at how we can use imagery techniques for beauty as well as health! http://www.optp.com/Products/Beautiful-Body--Beautiful-Mind__8619.aspx


THOUGHT OF THE DAY
Bend and you will be whole.
Curl and you will be straight.
Keep empty and you will be filled.
Grow old and you will be renewed.
Lao Tzu 'Tao Teh Ching'

MOVEMENT OF THE DAY 
Imagery Exercise 

Stand or sit. Where is the weight through your feet or sit bones? Where do you feel you are holding yourself up from? How do your shoulders feel?  What about your neck, pelvis, jaw and legs? Now tune into your spine and see it as a stack of vertebrae and see if you can create space between each vertebrae. Taking your mind to your coccyx, let it hang down toward the earth. Feel the top of your head floating lightly upwards like a helium balloon, creating space throughout your spine. Beginning with your coccyx, slowly move up the spine allowing each vertebrae to float above the one below. .As you move up the spine, let the rest of your body melt and soften. When you arrive at the skull, feel it floating away from the base of the spine.


How has this image changed your physical body? Has the weight shifted through your feet? How do your shoulders feel now? What about your neck, pelvis, jaw & legs? 


NOTES

(1) Dr Louise Walker 'Psyche & Soma: Emotions & the Bodymind'  pg 21 Handbook, Polestar Pilates Australia & New Zealand Inaugural International Conference 19-21st October 2007, Manly NSW, Australia



(2) Dr Louise Walker 'Psyche & Soma: Emotions & the Bodymind'  pg 22 Handbook, Polestar Pilates Australia & New Zealand Inaugural International Conference 19-21st October 2007, Manly NSW, Australia

(3) http://ezinearticles.com/?Benefits-of-Exercise-on-Mental-Health&id=4719639

(4) Dr Louise Walker 'Psyche & Soma: Emotions & the Bodymind'  pg 29 Handbook, Polestar Pilates Australia & New Zealand Inaugural International Conference 19-21st October 2007, Manly NSW, Australia

(5) Dr Louise Walker 'Psyche & Soma: Emotions & the Bodymind'  pg 28 Handbook, Polestar Pilates Australia & New Zealand Inaugural International Conference 19-21st October 2007, Manly NSW, Australia

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