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The following paragraph comes from an article written by Thomas Hanna, Ph.D., originator of the method. There are two distinct ways of perceiving and acting upon physiological processes: first, one can perceive a body and act upon a body; second, one can perceive a soma and act upon a soma. The first instance is a third-person standpoint that sees an objective body "there", separate from the observer -- a body upon which the observer can act, for example, a doctor "treating" the patient. The second instance is a first-person standpoint that sees a subjective soma "here": namely, oneself -- ones own soma, upon whose process one can personally work, oneself. A soma, then, is a body perceived from within. (Author’s emphasis) Somatic Education is sensory-motor, brain-muscle training to improve bodily awareness and voluntary control of ones muscular system. It is "somatic" in the sense that learning occurs as an internalized learning process. It affects how you feel to yourself. This kind of training is greatly accelerated by the use of a natural bodily response, called The Pandicular Response. This response is universally familiar to people in the action of yawning and pleasurably stretching (though decidedly different than the effort to stretch muscles, as practiced in athletics and dance). It is an action pattern that occurs generally among animals throughout the vertebrate kingdom as animals arouse themselves from rest and prepare for action. In the pandicular response, a strong voluntary muscular contraction feeds back an equally strong sensory stimulation to the motor areas of the brain. The effect in the nervous system is to "wake up" the sensory-motor cortex of the brain. Systematic use of the pandicular response is the prime technique used in Hanna Somatic Education. Use of the pandicular response improves muscular control, even over involuntary muscular spasticity. Relaxation occurs as control improves. With relaxation, pain ends while control remains. APPLICABILITY TO PAIN CONTROL Dr. Hanna writes: "It is my understanding that perhaps as many as fifty percent of the cases of chronic pain suffered by human beings are caused by Sensory-Motor Amnesia (SMA)." This new term,
Sensory-Motor Amnesia,
which Dr. Hanna coined for descriptive purposes, refers to a condition often present in cases of chronic pain (and sometimes diagnosed as dystonia). It's most common sign is poor muscular control caused, not by damage of muscles or the brain, but by brain conditioning following injury or long-term stress. The person no longer has an accurate sense of their body, of which muscles they are holding tight and which are relaxed. Some areas of the musculature have too much sensation (pain) and some areas have diminished sensation. Some are too tight and some are too loose. Some kinds of movement are easy to control, others difficult. The pain of Sensory-Motor Amnesia results primarily from chronic muscular tension and soreness (fatigue); additional pain may come from resultant joint compression and nerve entrapment (paraesthesias). Sensory-Motor Amnesia is a state of habitual tension, rather than a state of injury (i.e., a lesion). Tension and movement habits cannot be changed by drugs or surgery (which is why standard pain-management methods are so often only partially or temporarily effective with chronic pain); habits can be changed only by new learning -- in this case, by developing or reactivating neural pathways that enable a person to move voluntarily and freely with an accurate body-sense. The process involves learning or relearning muscular control, whatever the clinical method employed. Because of its use of the Pandicular Response, Hanna Somatic Education is a particularly effective method of brain-muscle training applicable to a wide range of complaints. END OF ARTICLE As Lawrence Gold makes clear in the above article, Hanna Somatic Education is a revolutionary method for treating, not only lower back pain, but chronic pain in general. Below is a link to certified practitioners of Hanna Somatic Education. It's not an extensive list since there are only about a hundred or so "certified practitioners" worldwide. However, many of us in the field of bodywork have for years studied Hanna Somatic Education, both through workshops and using Thomas Hanna's excellent book, Somatics: Reawakening the Mind's Control of Movement, Flexibility, and Health. If you cannot find a practitioner near you on the list, you can: 1) Contact me (if you are coming to Vermont at some point) at
Neuromuscular Therapy of Vermont,
USA for an appointment, or 2) Purchase the book and learn the movements yourself Click here to order Somatics by Thomas Hanna
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