zlord.com
  Index Page :> About Us :> Add Url :> Privacy of Info :> Terms of Use :> Submit Article
Search:   
 

Low Carb Beer: Not So Skinny

Light beers can contain as much as three times as many carbs as a low carb beer. But can drinking lo ... - Shawn Low
 

Eating Outside Your Box

One way to combat the boredom many people complain accompanies eating healthy is to ?eat outside you ... - Jackie Stanley
 

Penis Enlargement Pills and Exercises

What are penis enlargement pills and exercises? Do they work and which of the two works better? Thes ... - Michael Dunn
 
 

Autism and Supplementation

Supplements have become an important part of the health industry. There are literally thousands of p ... - Rachel Evans
 

Fibre And Weight Loss: How Closely Are They Connected?

The incidences of deseases like obesity, diabetes, colon deseases etc.are minimal in countries where ... - Rajesh Shetty
 

Simple Meditation to Overcome the Mystique of Meditating

There is a tendency amongst many people to think that meditation is a somewhat aloof, elitist, mysti ... - Roy Thomsitt
 

Stress, Pain Relief with Meditation-3 Keys That Get Results

Is stress killing you? Trying a weight loss program and can't stick with it? Maybe you're trying to ... - William Cole
 

Acupuncture

Acupuncture is one of the components of the health care system evolved in China at least 2,500 years ... - Kevin Stith
 
 

Index Page » Fitness & Health » Alternative Medicines
 

Narcissus and Alexander: Reflections on the Origins of the Alexander Technique

 
Author: Robert Rickover

Beside the pleasant pool Narcissus lay
And bending over, quenched his thirst, to find
Within his heart a thirst of different kind...

Narcissus was an exceptionally beautiful sixteen-year-old Greek boy, hard and disdainful, who scorned everyone, including the nymph Echo who had fallen madly in love with him. But Echo got her revenge: one day Narcissus lay down beside a pool and, seeing his own reflection, was so smitten by his beauty that he fell in love with himself.

Narcissus never discovered that he was only looking at a reflection. He tried to clasp and kiss it, but naturally was unable to do so. Frustrated and tormented by not being able to possess the object of his desire, he grieved and grieved. When mourners came for him, even his body had disappeared. All that was left of him was a flower next to the pool.

This is the first recorded reaction to seeing ones own reflection - a pretty depressing story, to say the least.

But now lets fast forward a few millennia and shift our attention away from the cradle of western civilization to a distant outpost of the late l9th Century British Empire. For it was in Australia that a historic man-mirror encounter of quite a different sort was taking place.

How did it compare with Narcissus sad tale?

Frederick Matthias Alexander was an exceptionally talented young man from Tasmania who spent a great deal of time looking at himself in a mirror. He was systematically seeking a way out of a voice problem that threatened his career and he was spending a lot of time looking at his reflection trying to figure out precisely what he was doing to himself that was causing his problem.

One can easily imagine his friends and colleagues becoming concerned about this odd behavior: Fred just stands there in front of that damned mirror for hours on end. Cant even get him to come down to the pub for a beer anymore. I know. Yesterday, when I stopped by his rooms, he was having an intimate talk with his reflection. That voice problem of his has gone to his head.

After achieving a considerable measure of success in his project, and in helping others with difficulties of their own, Alexander left his mirrors and his homeland and moved to England. No doubt some he encountered there also thought him a bit strange - in a harmless sort of way of course. Others saw genius in the man and attached great value to his discoveries. They read his books, gazed intently into their own mirrors, and gladly paid good money for lessons in his Technique. A few of them devoted their lives to furthering his work. This pattern continues today, forty years after Alexanders death.

Narcissus became world famous. His story is perhaps the best known of all the tales of ancient Greek mythology and his name has become synonymous with self-love and self-centeredness. Alexander is less well known, although the Alexander Technique is now generally recognized as the forerunner of all modern mind-body methods and one of the most powerful methods of self-transformation available.

Alexander Technique teachers and students can occasionally be accused of narcissism - when their legitimate emphasis on paying attention to themselves slips over into obsessive self-interest. But for the most part they continue to use mirrors, and other tools for self-observation, in a discerning and reasoned manner.

This is something Narcissus was simply not able to do. He was overcome with self-love, and in no condition to bring his critical faculties to bear on his predicament. That poor chap was simply not in communication with his reasoning, Alexander might well have declared.

Unlike Narcissus, who wanted to merge with his reflection, Alexander used his mirror as a means of distancing himself from his faulty sensory awareness. In his own creation story - Chapter I of Use of the Self, one of his four books - Alexander systematically brings his mirror into play at each step of his quest.

While Narcissus lost his human form and was transformed into a flower, Alexander used his reflection to gain accurate information about himself in order to fulfill his human potential. Indeed the mirror proved to be his principle tool for learning the truth about his behavior, and about the effectiveness of the attempts to make useful changes in that behavior.

As far as we know, Alexander was the very first person in history to use a mirror in that way. He forever changed the relationship between man and mirror - and that in itself is worth reflecting upon.

Author Bio:

Robert Rickover

Robert Rickover is a certified teacher of the Alexander Technique in Lincoln, Nebraska. He also teaches regularly in Toronto, Canada. He graduated from the School of Alexander Studies in London, England in 1981 where he also served on the faculty. He studied for over fifteen years with master Alexander teacher Marjorie Barstow in Lincoln and frequently assisted her in teaching her Alexander Technique workshops. He maintained a teaching practice in Toronto, Canada before moving to Lincoln in 1990.

He has taught Alexander Technique classes at many colleges and universities including the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, the University of Toronto, Doane College and Sir Wilfred Laurier University. He has also taught at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto and with the Voice Care Network. He is the author of Fitness Without Stress - A Guide to the Alexander Technique and holds degrees in economics and physics from Yale University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

You can search for this article using: complementary alternative medicine, alternative medicine guidelines, types of alternative medicines
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Plan for Weight Loss - Only One Dieting Strategy Covers All the Basics
 
Womens Health - What is Thrush?
 
Eating Outside Your Box
 
To Egg Or Not To Egg Is The Vegetarian Question
 
Caverta Enhances a Perfect Penile Erection
 
Honest Smoking Cessation Advice
 
My Beginning Yoga Experience
 
Depersonalisation
 
Shielding Lotions May Be Key to Diabetes-induced Dry Skin
 
Genital Warts on Women
 
 
 
Multiple links exchange
 

Finance & Banking

Fitness & Health

Vehicles & Automotive

Malls & Shopping

Science & Space

Garden & Home

Government & Politics

Fashion & Relationships

Sports & Adventure

Cooking & Drinking

Teens & Children

Academics & Learning

Healthcare & Medicine

News & Events

Art & Culture

Tour & Travel

Business & Commerce

Property & Agents

People & Communities

Careers & Employment

Entertainment

Computers & Software

Online & Indoor Games

Self Management

 
Index Page :> Privacy of Info :> Terms of Use
Copyright © 2008 www.zlord.com All Rights Reserved.