Alexander Technique and Back Pain
When I was a teenager, my mother would (so it seemed)
constantly criticize my posture. I can still hear her voice -
suck in your stomach, put your shoulders back, sit up straight.
Thank you Mom.
As an adult I discovered at a health exam that I had a
defect in my lower spine that could someday put me in traction.
It is a small break for lack of a better plain word that could
allow the nerves to become trapped and compressed. I was
advised to lift nothing over 10 pounds and avoid
sports.
I listened to Mom but not the doctor. I have learned
to deal with my occasional back pain and am thankful it is not
an ongoing pain. I found this article which seemed to put
posture and pain together for everyone's benefit.
http://www.boston.com/news/science/articles/2008/11/17/what_is_the_alexander_technique/
What is the Alexander Technique?
By Judy Foreman
November 17, 2008
The Alexander Technique applies heightened self-awareness of
posture to change the way one moves and sits. It is taught in a
series of lessons, usually private, during which the teacher
watches how you stand, walk, sit, and move your body to see
where you unconsciously hold muscle tension, said Jill Geiger,
a certified practitioner in Newton.
The teacher also places his or her hands on your body to
detect areas of tension and guides you, with words and gentle
hands, to realign your body to achieve better posture and
relieve tension. The lessons cost about $70 each and may or may
not be reimbursed by insurance.
The technique was developed a century ago by F.M. Alexander,
who used it to aid his career as an actor and orator.
New data suggest the Alexander Technique can ease back pain
for at least a year. In the randomized study, which involved
579 people with chronic back pain and was published this summer
in the British Medical Journal, six lessons proved almost as
effective as 24 if patients also did 30 minutes of brisk
walking or the equivalent every day. Massage helped pain, too,
but the effects wore off quickly.
Overall, exercise alone (such as brisk walking) led to a 17
percent improvement in back pain, said Dr. Paul Little, the
lead author of the study and a professor of primary care
research at the University of Southampton in England, in an
e-mail. Six lessons of the Alexander Technique alone also led
to a 17 percent improvement.
Twenty-four Alexander lessons, even without walking is more
than twice as effective as either walking or six lessons alone.
But you can get almost as good results - for much less money -
by combining six Alexander lessons with brisk walking.
JUDY FOREMAN
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