Offering from the Conscious Body: The Discipline of Authentic Movement
Autor Janet Adleren Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 aug 2002
• Uses sample sessions and descriptive theory to explain the discipline.
• Based on the author's 35 years of movement work.
Offering from the Conscious Body reveals both the theory and practice of a unique body-based process that is cathartic, creative, healing, and mystical--as presented by Janet Adler, the presiding voice in the field. This Western awareness practice encourages the individual to experience the evolving relationship with oneself, another, the collective, and the divine through the natural impulses of conscious movement, compassionate witnessing, and clear articulation of experience. Through the vivid examples taken from her own practice, Adler demonstrates that physical movement can invite direct experience of spiritual truths. The reader is led through the multiple layers within the discipline--moving and witnessing in dyads and then groups, in the presence of a witnessing teacher--to develop a comprehensive and experiential understanding of this innovative way of work. Designed for professionals and laypersons interested in psychology, bodywork, mystic traditions, or personal transformation, the discipline of Authentic Movement is at the cutting edge of emerging Western healing practices.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780892819669
ISBN-10: 0892819669
Pagini: 264
Ilustrații: illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Inner Traditions/Bear & Company
Colecția Inner Traditions
ISBN-10: 0892819669
Pagini: 264
Ilustrații: illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Inner Traditions/Bear & Company
Colecția Inner Traditions
Notă biografică
Janet Adler (1941–2023) held a Ph.D. in Mystical Studies, taught the discipline of Authentic Movement in the United States and Europe and was the founder and director of The Mary Starks Whitehouse Institute, the first school devoted to the study and practice of the discipline. She is the author of Arching Backward and of two films: Looking for Me, documenting her work with autistic children, and Still Looking, reflecting her work in the discipline of Authentic Movement. She was also a hospice chaplain.
Extras
Offering from the Conscious Body
The Discipline of Authentic Movement
Introduction
When you brush a form clean, it becomes truly what it is.
Rumi
In 1969, in my twenty-eighth year, I experienced the clarity of John Weir’s perception of the self in relationship and the depth of Mary Whitehouse way of knowing body consciousness. Though my encounters with my teachers were brief, the jewel I received from each became the source for the discipline of Authentic Movement, both a form and a practice which developed within the following thirty years in my studio work. This discipline has evolved because of each individual who has committed to it and because of my deep, unexplainable need to track its unfolding.
It was John Martin, in 1933, in speaking of the dances of Mary Wigman, who I believe was the first person to use the words ‘authentic movement’.
“This class of dance is in effect the modern dance in its purest manifestation. The basis of each composition in this medium lies in a vision of something in human experience which touches the sublime. Its externalization in some form which can be apprehended by others comes not by intellectual planning but by “feeling through” with a sensitive body. The first result of such creation is the appearance of certain entirely authentic movements ...”
It is not surprising that though these words come from the world of dance, authentic movement has become a source from which both therapeutic and mystical experiences manifest. Witnessing the emergence of a discipline with authentic movement reverberating at its center, I have been witnessing the body as a vessel in which healing occurs, a vessel in which direct experience of the divine is known. As the vessel becomes conscious, it becomes more capable of enduring the darkness and receiving the light of our humanity.
With roots in dance, healing practices and mysticism, this practice reveals an inherent order. This order, the theoretical ground of the discipline of Authentic Movement, slowly became apparent as immersion in studio work relentlessly pushed toward the edges of that which we could not yet know. Trusting only what we could know, our experience in our bodies, was challenging, at times for me unbearable. Stumbling into clearer seeing in blessed moments was ecstatic. It seemed as though the form itself was insisting on opening, calling for change in the practice, demanding clearer presence. The tension between the longing to see clearly and the longing to surrender to the mysteries of embodiment contained a potential for transformation of the work, perhaps of the individuals committed to it. In moments of grace, the clarity and the mystery became one.
The architecture of the discipline is based on the relationship between a mover and a witness. For each, work is centered in the development of the inner witness which is one way of understanding the development of consciousness. Because it is a Western, contemporary awareness practice, aspects of the whole are often separated, making the relationships among them more conscious. In this discipline, the inner witness is externalized, embodied by one person who is called the outer witness. Another person, called the mover, embodies the moving self. Though the name of the discipline suggests work concerning movement only, the core intention for each person is toward bringing awareness to the relationship between the moving self and the inner witness.
This relationship evolves within the study of three interdependent and multiple layers of experience: the individual body, the collective body and the conscious body. The work is developmental but not linear as both personal and transpersonal phenomena occur in the practice within each realm. Individuals can enter this evolving practice at any time if experience in another discipline appropriately prepares them.
Beginning with the study of the individual body, an individual commits to the moving practice, to a longing to be seen. In the presence of a witness with eyes open, the mover with eyes closed, learns to track her movement and her concomitant inner experience. Entering the empty space, the mover discovers an infinite range of physical movement, of sensation and emotion as experiences emerge into consciousness. In this process, the mover discovers movement which is authentic, that which she recognizes as her truth.
As her inner witness strengthens and she becomes more present to her embodied experiences, the mover opens to another longing, a longing to bring such presence toward seeing an other. Continuing her movement practice, she now also commits to the witness practice. The witness, who sits in stillness to the side of the movement space, learns to track another mover’s physical movement and her own inner experience in response. The witness, too, discovers an infinite range of sensation and emotion as her experiences emerge into consciousness. Within their developing relationship, the mover and the witness speak together about their experiences after each round of work. Because words bridge experience from body to consciousness, a rigorous practice toward clear articulation in speech as well as in movement becomes necessary.
The relationship between a mover and a witness, the ground form, most clearly reflects the root system originating in early healing practices, what has come to be understood in the West as a therapeutic container. In this discipline, instead of only talking about sensations and emotions, the literal force of moving and witnessing them, in a safe and appropriate way, infuses the relationship with new ways of knowing the self and the other.
Because of the depth and complexity of the embodied inner life of the mover, the witness must be professionally trained in the study of psychotherapeutic practice. Therapists trained in body- based disciplines, such as dance/movement therapy, somatic psychotherapy and creative arts therapy are especially qualified to become teachers of this discipline or to use it in their therapy practice with individuals or group.
The Discipline of Authentic Movement
Introduction
When you brush a form clean, it becomes truly what it is.
Rumi
In 1969, in my twenty-eighth year, I experienced the clarity of John Weir’s perception of the self in relationship and the depth of Mary Whitehouse way of knowing body consciousness. Though my encounters with my teachers were brief, the jewel I received from each became the source for the discipline of Authentic Movement, both a form and a practice which developed within the following thirty years in my studio work. This discipline has evolved because of each individual who has committed to it and because of my deep, unexplainable need to track its unfolding.
It was John Martin, in 1933, in speaking of the dances of Mary Wigman, who I believe was the first person to use the words ‘authentic movement’.
“This class of dance is in effect the modern dance in its purest manifestation. The basis of each composition in this medium lies in a vision of something in human experience which touches the sublime. Its externalization in some form which can be apprehended by others comes not by intellectual planning but by “feeling through” with a sensitive body. The first result of such creation is the appearance of certain entirely authentic movements ...”
It is not surprising that though these words come from the world of dance, authentic movement has become a source from which both therapeutic and mystical experiences manifest. Witnessing the emergence of a discipline with authentic movement reverberating at its center, I have been witnessing the body as a vessel in which healing occurs, a vessel in which direct experience of the divine is known. As the vessel becomes conscious, it becomes more capable of enduring the darkness and receiving the light of our humanity.
With roots in dance, healing practices and mysticism, this practice reveals an inherent order. This order, the theoretical ground of the discipline of Authentic Movement, slowly became apparent as immersion in studio work relentlessly pushed toward the edges of that which we could not yet know. Trusting only what we could know, our experience in our bodies, was challenging, at times for me unbearable. Stumbling into clearer seeing in blessed moments was ecstatic. It seemed as though the form itself was insisting on opening, calling for change in the practice, demanding clearer presence. The tension between the longing to see clearly and the longing to surrender to the mysteries of embodiment contained a potential for transformation of the work, perhaps of the individuals committed to it. In moments of grace, the clarity and the mystery became one.
The architecture of the discipline is based on the relationship between a mover and a witness. For each, work is centered in the development of the inner witness which is one way of understanding the development of consciousness. Because it is a Western, contemporary awareness practice, aspects of the whole are often separated, making the relationships among them more conscious. In this discipline, the inner witness is externalized, embodied by one person who is called the outer witness. Another person, called the mover, embodies the moving self. Though the name of the discipline suggests work concerning movement only, the core intention for each person is toward bringing awareness to the relationship between the moving self and the inner witness.
This relationship evolves within the study of three interdependent and multiple layers of experience: the individual body, the collective body and the conscious body. The work is developmental but not linear as both personal and transpersonal phenomena occur in the practice within each realm. Individuals can enter this evolving practice at any time if experience in another discipline appropriately prepares them.
Beginning with the study of the individual body, an individual commits to the moving practice, to a longing to be seen. In the presence of a witness with eyes open, the mover with eyes closed, learns to track her movement and her concomitant inner experience. Entering the empty space, the mover discovers an infinite range of physical movement, of sensation and emotion as experiences emerge into consciousness. In this process, the mover discovers movement which is authentic, that which she recognizes as her truth.
As her inner witness strengthens and she becomes more present to her embodied experiences, the mover opens to another longing, a longing to bring such presence toward seeing an other. Continuing her movement practice, she now also commits to the witness practice. The witness, who sits in stillness to the side of the movement space, learns to track another mover’s physical movement and her own inner experience in response. The witness, too, discovers an infinite range of sensation and emotion as her experiences emerge into consciousness. Within their developing relationship, the mover and the witness speak together about their experiences after each round of work. Because words bridge experience from body to consciousness, a rigorous practice toward clear articulation in speech as well as in movement becomes necessary.
The relationship between a mover and a witness, the ground form, most clearly reflects the root system originating in early healing practices, what has come to be understood in the West as a therapeutic container. In this discipline, instead of only talking about sensations and emotions, the literal force of moving and witnessing them, in a safe and appropriate way, infuses the relationship with new ways of knowing the self and the other.
Because of the depth and complexity of the embodied inner life of the mover, the witness must be professionally trained in the study of psychotherapeutic practice. Therapists trained in body- based disciplines, such as dance/movement therapy, somatic psychotherapy and creative arts therapy are especially qualified to become teachers of this discipline or to use it in their therapy practice with individuals or group.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Preface
The Individual Body
Developing Mover Consciousness
The Mover
The Moving-Witness
Developing Witness Consciousness
The Witness
The Silent Witness
The Speaking Witness
The Collective Body
Developing Collective Consciousness
Coming Toward the Circle
One Circle
The Conscious Body
Offering
Emerging Forms
Embodied Text
Dance
Energetic Phenomena
Epilogue
Epigraph Source Notes
Recenzii
"Janet's astonishing ability to track and articulate the development of this work makes her writing a necessity for those of us who know about Authentic Movement and for others on similar journeys who seek to know about the relationship of the body to psychological healing, artistic impulse, and experience of the numinous."
"Janet Adler's shaping of Authentic Movement is a significant response to a widely felt needs for a spiritual practice that is both embodied and non-authoritarian. Offering from the Conscious Body gives a lucid description of each element of the discipline of Authentic Movement and its impact on the soul. It is an invaluable resource for anyone interested in this area of human development."
"Janet Adler's Offering from the Conscious Body is an outstanding contribution?beautifully written, rich with information, scholarly, and deeply moving. Her definitive work on the origins, theory, and practice of Authentic Movement is a great gift to us all."
"A remarkably subtle guide to discovering who we are in the present moment through the spontaneous movements of our bodies."
"Offering from the Conscious Body is a tour de force for exploring the further realms of our essential human development."
"In the richness of her offering, Janet embodies the mystical journey present in all of humanity. Her writing inspires us from the soul of antiquity."
"An unusual book--a novel approach to self-discovery through movement and careful observation . . . a slowing down to step into Presence."
"A remarkable guide to this spiritual, kinetic, transformative practice."
"This text promises to find its place among the primary literature on movement written in this epoch. I would teach from it, and I would recommend it to others."
"Janet Adler's shaping of Authentic Movement is a significant response to a widely felt needs for a spiritual practice that is both embodied and non-authoritarian. Offering from the Conscious Body gives a lucid description of each element of the discipline of Authentic Movement and its impact on the soul. It is an invaluable resource for anyone interested in this area of human development."
"Janet Adler's Offering from the Conscious Body is an outstanding contribution?beautifully written, rich with information, scholarly, and deeply moving. Her definitive work on the origins, theory, and practice of Authentic Movement is a great gift to us all."
"A remarkably subtle guide to discovering who we are in the present moment through the spontaneous movements of our bodies."
"Offering from the Conscious Body is a tour de force for exploring the further realms of our essential human development."
"In the richness of her offering, Janet embodies the mystical journey present in all of humanity. Her writing inspires us from the soul of antiquity."
"An unusual book--a novel approach to self-discovery through movement and careful observation . . . a slowing down to step into Presence."
"A remarkable guide to this spiritual, kinetic, transformative practice."
"This text promises to find its place among the primary literature on movement written in this epoch. I would teach from it, and I would recommend it to others."
Descriere
The exploration of the direct experience of healing and of the divine through the witnessing of movement becoming conscious.