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THE ALEXANDER TECHNIQUE
AND SPORT
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With the Alexander Technique the
sportman learns to keep the result in mind without
leaving aside the means necessary for a good use of
himself.
Anybody will easily admit that physical exercise
is healthy. The danger comes when we are ready to
harm ourselves in order to try to overcome our limits.
You might have known some moments where your results
were becoming worse and worse despite of your desperate
attempts to do better.
In the Western world, we are quite obsessed by the
achievements of our goals, obsessed by the end results
of our efforts. You might have noticed, during international
competitions, the apparently lack of effort and the
expressions of release on the face of some African
runners. On the other hand, the aggressive expression
of victory of some Westerners is often shocking and
distressing in this context.
Not to put one’s goal before anything else is
a difficult concept for a Western mind, because it
seems to go against any value imparted to him since
he was born.
This is where the Alexander Technique can be very
useful. It teaches how to keep the goal in mind without
taking destructive shortcuts for our health and efficiency.
It teaches how to become able to give to ourselves
the means to achieve our ends. It teaches us to give
more importance in the practice to the means in order
to discover the joy and freedom of movement. The pains
and sacrifices that a top athlete goes through are
incompatible with this perspective of self respect.
But this is his choice and even he can limit the damages
to himself by the practice of the Alexander Technique,
as many will testify.
Many sports require anyway so much effort, physical
and mental and can easily lead to traumas or even
broken bones. The Alexander Technique can teach you
to use your body in an more balanced and appropriate
way, reducing this way part of the excessive tensions
which lead to traumas and change your responses to
the situations, and avoid accidents.
In his book ‘The Use of the Self’, Alexander
describes the case of a golfer having difficulty to
keep an eye on the ball, a problem often encountered
by golfers. He describes how his attention goes away
from the ball at a crucial moment and his eyes leave
the ball. By learning to inhibit our habitual way
or doing and reacting and by applying the principles
of the Alexander Technique, we can learn not to interfere
with the reflex movement activity at the crucial moment,
to prevent all sort of unnecessary tensions and to
create the appropriate mental, psychological and physical
conditions.
We can also learn to improve the quality and the time
of our reactions in order to get the best of a given
situation by getting the best our ourselves in a state
of better use and coordination. And, who knows, even
maybe feel happier …
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©
Athanase Vettas |
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Webmaster |
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