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MENTAL FURNITURE #6
Independent of Heritage:
Feldenkrais and Judo: Part 2
©1997 Dennis Leri
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"Dr. Feldenkrais explains
how Judo training educates one to be 'independent of heritage'." (G.
Koizumi, Higher Judo, viii)
To be 'independent of heritage' means that for at least one moment we
can know life in a way not dependent upon our size, weight, strength,
form, age, gender, personal history, ethnic or religious background.
Strictly speaking, Feldenkrais seemed to say that through proper
training and education we can create an identity not founded on
activity, passivity or indifference. For Feldenkrais the basis for such
a training was Judo, the Gentle Way.
The Judo Path, as Feldenkrais describes it, differs from other
disciplines in a number of ways. "What a man can do now is mostly
determined by his personal experience, the habits of thought, feeling
and action that he has formed.... Incapacity to do is produced by fear,
imagination and otherwise distorted appreciation of the outside world.
We teach an unemotional, objective activity which has nothing to do
with what the person is or feels and we show that the result depends
entirely on when, what and how a thing is done, and on nothing else.
The result is that a small, sometimes insignificant physical body, of
sixty years of age or over can control a powerful youth as if the
latter has no will of his own. This is possible only by the impersonal,
unemotional and purely mechanistic habits of thought and action
inculcated by Judo practice." (My emphasis - DL, Higher Judo 17-18) In Judo practice
nothing is or should be taken on faith. Judo evolved a specific regimen
to fulfill the goals of Judo practice.
According to Feldenkrais, Judo employs distinctive means to transform
someone. First, Judo is practiced with bare feet. Immature development
of the use of one's feet means "one is capable of only pre-selected
acts resulting in arrested development, decreased vitality, and
withdrawal from attempting many activities with a corresponding effect
on behavior." Second, Feldenkrais discusses why Judo develops the art
of falling: "With great perseverance it is possible to achieve...the
state where one works not from necessity but enjoys the pleasure of
creative work.... (The state) is never achieved before adult
independence from gravitation." (Higher
Judo, 20-21)
Third, from his first lesson the pupil is taught a fundamentally
different way of using his body. "Our way of action is formed in a
society where organized security and the belief that inherited personal
qualities are things to be proud of and defects to be ashamed of and
hidden. Habits of thought and action formed this way are of little
avail when we are confronted with tasks in which our social standing
cannot influence the outcome of the act. The proper activity is such
that the aim set to ourselves can be achieved in most circumstances.
This demands flexibility of attitude of mind and body quite beyond that
which we form in the present social environment.... In Judo we teach a
functional stability, precarious for any other purpose or for any
length of time, but solving the immediate problem in front of us or the
act to be performed. We seek to mobilize on the present situation all
we have, throwing away all that is useless for the immediate
purpose.... If you examine Fig. 1 you will see that the person who has
produced the throw is himself on the brink of falling. The falling body
is the only thing that provides the balancing force and maintains the
thrower in the upright position. The two bodies are balanced on one big
toe. The thrower has learned to dispense with all rigid ideas of
stability, security and force. He uses all the properties of his body
to the finest degree of perfection and to the limit of independence
from gravitation to achieve his aim... Dynamic stability is stability
acquired through movement, such as that of a top or bicycle. A top or
bicycle is so shaped that it is impossible to make them stand
unsupported, but once set moving, there is little difficulty in
maintaining their centre of gravity above the point of contact with the
ground. In Fig. 1 the man balancing on one big toe is neither quite
motionless nor quite moving. Before a movement is completely arrested,
there is obviously an instant where the stability passes from dynamic
to static stability. The figure is taken a fraction of a second before
that instant; this position could not be maintained for any but a
transitory instant." (Higher Judo,18-28,
my emphasis - DL)
The static and the dynamic to be lived in and through ecstasy. "The
performance of any act while we are in motion is exhilarating.... The
thrilling feeling is quite common in most methods imparting body
skills.... In Judo it is the essence of the training; training is not
complete until the pupils can produce these states at will and in spite
of the opponent's resistance... The Judoka is free to attend to the act
he is performing, while the untrained man has his attention burdened
with the business of keeping balance on two feet -- a laborious and
slow task.... Adult erect standing is therefore not derived from static
principles. It is essentially a continuous regaining of unstable
equilibrium from which the centre of gravity is constantly drifting
away, even while standing still." (Higher
Judo, 18-28)
Fourth, adjustment to and of space is considered. "All the organs
through which we control our relations to space, are located in the
head. Space can, therefore, be viewed conveniently as a sphere, the
centre of which is carried in the head.... Our space function is made
through individual experience and is...a learning process having
infantile, childish, adolescent and adult stages like most of our
functions.... The scientist would say that we carry with us the origin
of co-ordinates, and that we gradually learn to control our activity in
different parts of the system.... We may picture space in front of
us...as a cone with its apex in our head. Gradually, we acquire
independence in one cone after another until we have covered the entire
solid angle of all the cones that compose it.... The infantile stage is
present so long as we cannot move the origin of our space co-ordinate
system.... Judo furthers the development of our space adjustment in all
directions from the origin of our moveable co-ordinate system, and it
stands alone in that it teaches orientation in all possible positions
of rotation and displacement of that centre itself." Gradually, through
increased refinement the center of one's self is located in the lower
torso in the abdomen. From there all actions are originated.
Fifth, "Outstanding excellency in any activity is impossible without
generalized co-ordinated control.... Those men that we incorrectly call
'great' are simply better co-ordinated in most of their being....
Perhaps the most important feature of co-ordinated movement, as we
teach it, is that in the correct act there is no muscle of the body
which is contracted with greater intensity than the rest.... Where
change of position, or rate of motion masses is involved, force is, by
definition of the word, the cause. The sensation of effortless
action...is because we teach to perform voluntary acts by such
attitudes and in a manner similar to the reflex movements of the body.
This sensation of lack of resistance is pleasant, as are all acts where
the voluntary control only directs the involuntary functions but does
not contradict any of the lower nervous centres. When co-ordination is
achieved...the breath is even and unhampered throughout any act....
Evenness of breath is one of the means by which the master judges
whether the pupil complies with his instructions or not." (Higher Judo, 32-36)
Finally, there arises the question of motivation. "There can be no
smooth co-ordinated action of the executive organs without smooth
mental processes, i.e. motivation.... The expert Judo teacher can
detect very slight deviations from the correct procedure, because he
has a very delicate gauge -- the minimum energy principle. He
eliminates all components in any movement that do not actively
cooperate towards the purpose at hand. He is concerned with the 'way'
the purpose is achieved perhaps more than with the act.... To train
motivation control, we have to train the resolution of emotions and
habits. The strongest emotions arise in connection with security and
self-preservation.... It is enough to see what (people) do when...their
security is threatened, or when other strong emotions are set up in
them, to see that there is room for further growth and development.
Many seem to believe, with gratuitous assurance, that the control of
emotions on a verbal plane or that intellectual understanding is
emotional control in fact. There is no such thing as emotion without a
body, a body without a nervous system, or a mind without a brain. There
can, therefore be no training of the body without mental training, or
training of emotional control without arousing emotions in the body." (Higher Judo, 43-45, my emphasis -
DL)
Feldenkrais acknowledged the necessity and the effects of familial and
cultural conditioning. But his experience as a Judo teacher proved to
him that one can diminish to zero their burden upon us. Poor education
in general, and in particular haphazard somatic education, has given us
less than optimal behavioral dynamics. More to the point it has also
formed our habits of attention which are really habits of inattention.
Employing the means of Judo one can unlearn limiting habits while
learning the principles enabling full and mature use of one's self.
Judo is fundamentally educational in nature; its founder Jigaro Kano
was Minister of Education for the Japanese government. We, of course,
see its traces in the aims, style and content of the Feldenkrais
Method. I would argue that our method is a more general approach to
learning than is Judo. Judo uses the vehicle of trial by fire, the
warrior's way. The Feldenkrais Method recognizes that while one need
not be a warrior, everyone desires to fulfill themselves.
In creating the Feldenkrais Method Moshe did something that we should
never overlook. He did not ask us to imitate him or to enact his
particular saga. Rather, out of his extensive experience working with
himself and others he abstracted the impersonal, general structure of
learning. He invented accessible lesson schemas in the form of ATM and
FI lessons. Being impersonal, we find in the lessons plenty of room for
our personal experiences. And that is so by design. Each of us locates
ourselves differently relative to those lessons. If we are to do
Feldenkrais work it is not enough to hold onto our personal
experiences. We too must forge general schemas accessible to any number
of people like or unlike ourselves. The products of our labors may or
may not look like what we have to recognize as the Feldenkrais Method.
In creating lessons we establish a context as well as provide the means
for a person to realize and rearrange the particulars of their life.
In doing the Feldenkrais Method we must be careful not to bow to what's
culturally trendy and fashionable or pander to the cult of
victimization. If we for an instant realize that our lives could be
different and if we further realize the means to make it so, then we
know it can be so for others also. Make no mistake about it, to achieve
even a brief independence from our heritage is to realize the fruits of
learning how to learn. Even a fleeting severance of ourselves from our
conditioning can mark a stunning passage from ungrounded delusion or
drowsy disillusionment to one of unadorned worldly engagement. "You can
lead a horse to water but you can't make 'em drink." In leading a horse
to water one needs to know how to lead and how to recognize water. Our
Feldenkrais heritage, dedicated as it is to providing for independence
of heritage, can with clarity of intention both recognize water and
lead one to it.
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