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Healthcare Professionals

 

Clinical Somatic Education is a system that is easy to incorporate inot your practice, produces consistent, effective and lasting results and will not contribute to practitioner repetitive strain injuries and burnout.

Workshop Schedule

When the Body Arches
Vancouver, August 25-27, 2006
Fee: $350 (19 CMTBC Credits)

When the Body Stoops
Duncan, September 29-30 & October 1, 2006
Fee: $350 (18 CMTBC Credits)

Working with the Extremities
(Upper and Lower) and the TMJ
Duncan, BC, Oct. 20-22, 2006
(Prerequisite: When the Body Tilts, When the Body Arches, When the Body Stoops)
Fees: $350 (18 CMTBC Credits)


CMTBC Credits

Several of our workshops are accredited by the College of Massage Therapists of British Columbia (CMTBC). The CMTBC is the regulatory board for Massage Therapy in BC. Its mandate is to enforce standards for education and qualification and protect the public. The CMTBC requires all Registered Massage Therapists to complete 24 Continuing Education and Professional Development (CE/PD) Credits every two years.

Andrew Teufel, RMT, CHSE has been teaching courses accredited by the CMTBC (CE/PD) for eight years.

Workshops Offered
(see schedule above)

When the Body Stoops (18 CMT credits)
When the Body Arches (19 CMT credits)
When the Body Tilts (18 CMT credits)
Hands, Wrists, Elbows, Shoulders - Pandiculating the Upper Extremities
Feet, Ankles, Knees, Hips - Pandiculating the Lower Extremities
Somatic Walking - Intentional Gate
Explore the Myth of Aging - The Somatic Cat Stretch Series

Testimonials

"Somatic Educatin is a gentle yet powerful system to work interactively with clients, and can be used easily by both practitioner and client."
R. Partridge, RMT, Duncan

"Somatics is a great tool to add to you massage knowledge & practice because it works & you will see results."
J. Cage, RMT, Kamloops

"Always gets results. I wish Somatics training was in my basic schooling as a RMT. Great stuff."
K. Harvey, RMT, Logan Lake

"Not only do you expand your wealth of techniques to help your clients, but the therapeutic movements done by yourself make you feel wonderful!"
B. Emms, RMT, Sechelt

"Very noticable differences in short time frame."
B. Stuckenberg, RMT, Kamloops

"Through this work I have gained mobility. I thought I had lost, and hope to help others with it."
L. Fairburn, RMT, Port Coquitlam

"The Applied Somatics course has helped me regain lost mobility.
I now have the tools to improve. I am 63."
D. Biro, RMT, Heffley Creek


CASE STUDIES

Two case studies are presented here: Cliff (immediately below) and Bird

Cliff's Story

Sometimes the best way to understand a concept is to see it. When the "Before" picture at the end of this case study was taken, Cliff was surprised to see how poor his posture was. "I'm nearly 80 years old and I guess one gets into those sort of postures over time," Cliff said.

"I always thought in my own mind that I was walking fairly straight." After about a month of treatments and a 45 minute daily regimen of Somatic exercises at home Cliff said

"... I feel as though I'm walking on air."

The process with Cliff Payne involved eight sessions over seven weeks. The first session consisted primarily of massage therapy while I explained the process of clinical somatic education to Cliff. The following seven sessions involved one each of the full protocol of ‘When The Body Stoops’ and ‘When The Body Tilts’ clinical somatic education, and one session included a partial introduction to ‘When The Body Arches’ protocol.

However, the following four sessions outside the full protocol sessions involved review and reinforcement of the exercises that Cliff was learning. Throughout the process of the eight sessions I interspersed some trigger point therapy and myofascial techniques to help Cliff manage some new increased discomfort.

In hindsight it would have been great to take before and after pictures with each session as I could see and feel suppleness and improved posture return with each session.

When you look at Cliff’s pictures it is amazing to see the obvious and subtle changes in his posture. These sessions worked with Cliff’s spinal-pelvic centrum, and yet, the periphery and upper extremity also experienced positive improvements.

Besides the obvious changes to his head, neck (visibly reduced neck tendon tension), spine, and pelvis some of the changes you might notice in the periphery are: reduced internal rotation of his shoulders; reduced flexion at the elbows; reduced flexion and adduction of the fingers; reduced flexion at the knees; and finally reduced adduction of the lower extremity for a more relaxed balanced posture


BEFOREAFTER


An article, titled Somatics A Matter of Mind Over Muscle, containing additional information on Cliff is available through our Products and Resources page.

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Hanna Somatic Education is a registered trademark of the Novato Institue for Somatic Research and Training. Used with permission.

 


 


QUICK
LINKS


Case Studies

Cliff's Story

Bird's Story

CMTBC Credits

Workshops

Workshop Schedule

Testimonials

TOP

Case Studies

Cliff's Story

Bird's Story

CMTBC Credits

Workshops

Workshop Schedule

Testimonials

TOP

Case Studies

Cliff's Story

Bird's Story

CMTBC Credits

Workshops

Workshop Schedule

Testimonials

TOP

Case Studies

Cliff's Story

Bird's Story

CMTBC Credits

Workshops

Workshop Schedule

Testimonials

TOP

Case Studies

Cliff's Story

Bird's Story

CMTBC Credits

Workshops

Workshop Schedule

Testimonials

TOP

Case Studies

Cliff's Story

Bird's Story

CMTBC Credits

Workshops

Workshop Schedule

Testimonials

TOP

Case Studies

Cliff's Story

Bird's Story

CMTBC Credits

Workshops

Workshop Schedule

Testimonials

TOP


CLINICAL SOMATIC EDUCATION

Clinical Somatic Education is based on Hanna Somatic Education®, the system developed by Thomas Hanna, PhD, after years of study with other somatic pioneers including Moshe Feldenkrais. Hanna expounded upon Feldenkrais’ work around the startle reflex by noting that humans also tend to react to stresses and traumas with two other specific, predictable muscular reflexes.


Pandiculating the latissimus -
the Tilting pattern

These three reflexes, when over stimulated, can become habitual and unnoticed, creating pain, inefficient movement patterns and distorted postures – a condition known as Sensory Motor Amnesia.

These three reflexes, when over stimulated, can become habitual and unnoticed, creating pain, inefficient movement patterns and distorted postures – a condition known as Sensory Motor Amnesia.

 

Overcoming Sensory-Motor Amnesia (SMA)

SMA is a term coined by Hanna for the memory loss within the central nervous system of how certain muscle groups feel and how to control them. The sensory-motor system operates in a feedback loop.

 

Exploring the scapula connection to the Somatic center

To fully sense a muscle you must be able to move it. If sensory input is diminished, motor control will also be diminished. However, because SMA is a learned adaptation to stresses and traumas, it can be unlearned.

The goal of a Clinical Somatic Educator is to help clients learn new, more efficient patterns of movement through sensory-motor learning.

The Human as a Soma

The concept of sensory-motor learning involves viewing the human from a somatic perspective. Human beings can be viewed in two ways: from the outside in (third person perspective-as a body) or from the inside out (first person perspective-as a soma). Modern medicine relies heavily on an objective, observable third person view of the human as a body that can be worked upon through such external methods as surgery and manipulated through methods like massage therapy and chiropractics. While this is true – humans are indeed bodies that can be worked upon from the outside – they are also simultaneously somatic beings that can learn to sense their internal functions and change themselves. They are somas.

A soma is defined as a living body sensed from within. Many people can look at you and see a “body”, but only you can have the privileged experience of yourself as “me” or “I.” As somas, humans possess the unique ability to take human consciousness and direct it inwards to improve physiological processes.

As Hanna said, “Sensory motor reawakening is an educational process done by an active person, from the inside out. Awakening our cerebral cortex, the seat of the brain's voluntary actions, to control movement once again is an internal somatic feat that goes from inside the brain to the muscle system.” (Somatics, p 36)


Exploring the power at the center

The somatic field offers healthcare professionals a new paradigm for working with people suffering from musculoskeletal and stress disorders. By complementing and completing the objective, third-person scientific, physiological view of humans with the self-sensing, self-moving, self-adjusting somatic view of humans, clinical somatic educators have a framework for successfully reversing musculoskeletal disorders whose causes lie, not with any fault in the structure of the soma, but with its functioning.

Somatic Education – An Active Process
As a Clinical Somatic Educator you work with clients to help them develop their sensory awareness of themselves – areas in their body where their muscles are chronically contracted, how they sit, stand, and so on. Because HSE is a systems approach, practitioners view the entire body looking not only for postural imbalances but also how those imbalances may be causing referred pain and tension. Practitioners will then directly engage their clients’ attention to their muscular holding patterns. This enables clients to learn to restore resting tone and change patterns that contribute to dysfunction. Practitioners of HSE use the two methods of handling used by functional integrators, ie.,means-whereby (created by F.M. Alexander); and kinetic mirroring (the term Hanna used to describe the work of Feldenkrais) and a third method called pandiculation that Hanna created and which distinguishes his work from that of his teachers.


Rebalancing the hips and pelvis
Pandiculation
Pandiculation literally means, “to stretch while yawning.” Hanna’s method of “assisted pandiculation” is a controlled shortening and lengthening of a muscle or muscle group which reawakens the sensory-motor cortex to more voluntary neuromuscular control of that muscle or muscle group. Muscles that may have been contracted for years will release, and, with reinforcement movements or exercises that the client can perform on their own, will stay relaxed.

Somatics – Teaching The Science of Holism
As a practitioner of somatic education you are there to facilitate the client’s learning process. Besides teaching how to do an exercise, practitioners also teach clients why it should be done and what is involved anatomically and physiologically. This allows the client to fully understand that it is their awareness of their sensory-motor system that determines their behaviours and potential outcomes. It also allows you, as a licensed healthcare practitioner, to fully impart your specialized knowledge of the human body to your clients, empowering them to take more control and responsibility for the functioning of their soma.

Bird's Story





BEFORE AFTER

The pictures here were taken before and after the third session of clinical somatic education that Mason received. Although it might appear that these changes happened after a ‘When The Body Stoops’ session these are after a ‘When The Body Arches’ session. It was just what he needed to bring the balance to his posture and lengthen his spinal column. Notice the reduced shadows of tension in his neck, lengthening and aligning of his spine, and finally how his head and chin come back into place. Also there is less internal rotation of the shoulders and reduced flexion at the elbows.


Besides positive changes in posture and flexibility Bird experienced reduced pain and increased comfort.
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