Feldenkrais - Alternative Physical Therapy
Posted: Wed Mar 19, 2014 5:09 am
Hello Everyone,
I thought I'd share about a physical therapy I am currently attempting called Feldenkrais. Here is the Feldenkrais website with some information: http://www.feldenkrais.com/
Let me first mention that Feldenkrais likely won't work for anyone with a true complete entrapment caused by scar tissue or encasing of the nerve. However it may work for people who are in constant pain with severe neuralgia, which could potentially be most people in pain. Either way, it's one more alternative before attempting surgery.
The official website defines Feldenkrais as a "pedagogy of movement". I found that all of the explanations of what Feldenkrais is were hard for me to understand until I went, and I only went because my HMO starting making PT approvals such a nightmare I needed to try to find something for the months I would go without. What I found is that in the classes, they touch, ease, and roll you gently into various positions, helping you see all the ways you tense, bend, and flex your body. Every person has a particular way of moving their bodies that is unique to them. For some of us, these subtle movements over the course of a year, five years, a lifetime, can accumulate into (for instance) shorter muscles on one side of the pelvis, an anterior pelvic tilt, hip displaysia, etc etc. My practitioner said that this is why some people may even have a surgery to get out of pain, then find themselves back in pain again, because some issues may be asymmetry issues from birth, but many asymmetry issues in the body are accumulated over a reproducing the same movements year after year. Feldenkrais is not just about "awareness" or "mindfulness" so to speak, although noting your body position is certainly part of it. Feldenkrais is about awareness in such a way so that you can eventually start training your body to do actions using different muscles than it is used to, reliving areas of tightness. I know, it might sound truly far-fetched or odd, but my practitioner was able to briefly move me out of pain last week for the first time in a year so I'm continuing to go. I see the point in what they are doing, it is a neuro-muscular skeletal treatment for a neuro-muscular skeletal disorder. Part gentle moving, part consistent re-positioning of the body, part self awareness of muscle tension. I don't know if I'll get better or if this will be the way for me, but I encourage everyone here to try it because it is non-invasive and incredibly gentle. It can't HURT you, even if it can't help you, because it is all about moving you OUT of your discomfort, not pushing or stretching the body in ways that cause pain.
I started attending classes at the urging of a Pelvic Floor PT in Los Angeles who I truly like and trust (Dr. Bonnie Cardenas in Studio City) who I found through the UCLA Pelvic Pain Clinic, at the referral of Doctor Andrea Rapkin. Bonnie is a highly experienced Pelvic Floor PT, and certified in Feldenkrais, but she urges her patients to go to classes as they can be more economical over time and help her patients help themselves. Bonnie often uses or refers to Feldenkrais when traditional internal release therapy (trigger point therapy, myofasical release) fails. It failed miserably in my case, worsening and severely compounding my pain. Feldenkrais I can always do, and if I am ever uncomfortable, Amie, my practitioner, will always see to it that I adjust to what I can do.
The website should help you find someone in your area, but if you are in Los Angeles, Amie teaches a class both on the west side during the week and on weekends in Studio City. Relative to most treatments she is extremely economical. She does her West LA classes at the YMCA for only $15 (day pass cost) or no fee at all if you are a YMCA member. Day passes are $10 if you are a senior citizen.
If you're interested in Feldenkrais in LA or have questions, I'm not the most experienced person to go to but I'd be happy to try to help. For people like me who have shown evidence of muscular skeletal issues (tight muscles on one side of pelvis, all the way up the back, & down the thigh, hip displaysia) it may be a good option for treatment.
I thought I'd share about a physical therapy I am currently attempting called Feldenkrais. Here is the Feldenkrais website with some information: http://www.feldenkrais.com/
Let me first mention that Feldenkrais likely won't work for anyone with a true complete entrapment caused by scar tissue or encasing of the nerve. However it may work for people who are in constant pain with severe neuralgia, which could potentially be most people in pain. Either way, it's one more alternative before attempting surgery.
The official website defines Feldenkrais as a "pedagogy of movement". I found that all of the explanations of what Feldenkrais is were hard for me to understand until I went, and I only went because my HMO starting making PT approvals such a nightmare I needed to try to find something for the months I would go without. What I found is that in the classes, they touch, ease, and roll you gently into various positions, helping you see all the ways you tense, bend, and flex your body. Every person has a particular way of moving their bodies that is unique to them. For some of us, these subtle movements over the course of a year, five years, a lifetime, can accumulate into (for instance) shorter muscles on one side of the pelvis, an anterior pelvic tilt, hip displaysia, etc etc. My practitioner said that this is why some people may even have a surgery to get out of pain, then find themselves back in pain again, because some issues may be asymmetry issues from birth, but many asymmetry issues in the body are accumulated over a reproducing the same movements year after year. Feldenkrais is not just about "awareness" or "mindfulness" so to speak, although noting your body position is certainly part of it. Feldenkrais is about awareness in such a way so that you can eventually start training your body to do actions using different muscles than it is used to, reliving areas of tightness. I know, it might sound truly far-fetched or odd, but my practitioner was able to briefly move me out of pain last week for the first time in a year so I'm continuing to go. I see the point in what they are doing, it is a neuro-muscular skeletal treatment for a neuro-muscular skeletal disorder. Part gentle moving, part consistent re-positioning of the body, part self awareness of muscle tension. I don't know if I'll get better or if this will be the way for me, but I encourage everyone here to try it because it is non-invasive and incredibly gentle. It can't HURT you, even if it can't help you, because it is all about moving you OUT of your discomfort, not pushing or stretching the body in ways that cause pain.
I started attending classes at the urging of a Pelvic Floor PT in Los Angeles who I truly like and trust (Dr. Bonnie Cardenas in Studio City) who I found through the UCLA Pelvic Pain Clinic, at the referral of Doctor Andrea Rapkin. Bonnie is a highly experienced Pelvic Floor PT, and certified in Feldenkrais, but she urges her patients to go to classes as they can be more economical over time and help her patients help themselves. Bonnie often uses or refers to Feldenkrais when traditional internal release therapy (trigger point therapy, myofasical release) fails. It failed miserably in my case, worsening and severely compounding my pain. Feldenkrais I can always do, and if I am ever uncomfortable, Amie, my practitioner, will always see to it that I adjust to what I can do.
The website should help you find someone in your area, but if you are in Los Angeles, Amie teaches a class both on the west side during the week and on weekends in Studio City. Relative to most treatments she is extremely economical. She does her West LA classes at the YMCA for only $15 (day pass cost) or no fee at all if you are a YMCA member. Day passes are $10 if you are a senior citizen.
If you're interested in Feldenkrais in LA or have questions, I'm not the most experienced person to go to but I'd be happy to try to help. For people like me who have shown evidence of muscular skeletal issues (tight muscles on one side of pelvis, all the way up the back, & down the thigh, hip displaysia) it may be a good option for treatment.