Technology News
Home | Tech Store | Amazon Store | Game Store | Webmaster Tools | Safe Kids Links | Promotional Items
Site Sponsor
Recommended Products
Related Links



Christian InTech Articles - Health Eating

 

 

Informative Articles

Health is Not What You Think.
What is health? Everyone wants this thing called health, and yet most people have never thought about what their “target of health” actually looks like. If you and your family were healthy, what would it be like? It is like this: Imagine you are...

How To Choose Good Fats And Avoid Heart Disease
For years we heard that a low-fat, low-cholesterol diet would keep us healthy and help us lose weight. Many of us jumped on the bandwagon, eliminating fat and high-cholesterol foods from our diets. Well, unfortunately, we were misinformed to...

Toothache, could it be more then just a little pain?
Toothache, could it be more then just a little pain? What is a Toothache? A "Toothache" can usually be referred to as pain that is felt around the teeth and or jaw. The cause of a toothache in most cases is by either problems with your jaw and or...

Top Ten Ways to Set and Reach Your Goals
Top Ten Ways to Set and Reach Your Goals By Ruth Anderson If you made New Year's resolutions this year, you may be very aware of how difficult it is to stick with new goals. How can you keep your good intentions? Start by taking a good hard ...

Understanding Aromatherapy
In the 1920's, a French cosmetic chemist named Rene-Maurice Gattefosse, was one day making fragrances in his laboratory, when he accidentally burned his arm. He then thrust his badly burnt arm into the nearest cold liquid, which turned out to be a...

 
     
A Brief Treatment on the Topic of Dance Therapy

A Brief Treatment on the Topic of Dance Therapy


 


Somatic Psychology and Dance/Movement Therapy constitute a rapidly emerging field based on body-mind-spirit integration in the greater field of psychotherapy. This brief treatment of the field is designed to serve as a cursory introduction to the application of Dance/Movement Therapy (D/MT) as a treatment tool.


 


“Dance Therapy is a form of psychotherapy, differentiated from traditional psychotherapy in that it utilizes psychomotor expression as its major mode of intervention. Its basic premise is that body movement reflects inner emotional states, and that changes in movement behavior can lead to changes in the psyche, thus promoting health and growth…to regain a sense of wholeness by experiencing the fundamental unity of body, mind, and spirit is the ultimate goal of dance therapy” (Levy, xi p.1)


 


One assumption that Dance/Movement Therapists make is that “all movement is reflective of both intrapsychic dynamics and one’s socially evolved mode of relating. Dance Therapy, therefore, deals with personality as it is made manifest in the movement behavior, and attempts to make changes on this level” Schmais, p. 26). “The Dance Therapist is able to recognize what [the client’s] limitations are in order to develop, through movement, a broader movement repertoire to better cope with everyday life. The premise is that a wide repertoire of movement and response is a sign of health, because one is then able to alternate means of dealing with stress” (p.27).


 


From my clinical experience I have come to believe that the body contains inherent wisdom and health. A person can realize this wisdom, this potential, when the body, psyche and spirit are connected. As the body contains our memories, we have the ability to access and heal these memories through movement sequencing. I maintain the perspective that when painful memories are repressed, they promote mental illness. Illness can be seen as a detachment or splitting-off from one’s physical self to avoid certain sensations or emotions. This split creates a body-psyche separation and can manifest in a variety of clinical disorders (such as depression, eating disorders, addiction, and dissociative identity disorders, among others). D/MT is a powerful tool for body/psyche integration.


 


Christine Caldwell, author and founder of the Somatic


Psychology department at Naropa University, states “any recovery is incomplete until we reinhabit and enjoy being in our bodies” (p.9). Recovery involves “not just the absence of disease, but a gutsy, full-bodied, vibrant celebration of life, an actual experience of pleasure in the events of life, a rejoicing in being here that makes us all poets and dancers, lovers and painters, humanitarians of the highest order (p.9)” I endeavor to empower my clients with this experience.


 


Recovery based on the body is different. The mind is tricky and slippery, but the body cannot lie. Frequently, this is why we dissociate from the body when we engage in our addictions and unhealthy behaviors. The truth that our bodies offer forth is too raw, too much to handle. This is often interpreted as “unsafe.” In reality, our bodies are doing everything they can to protect and save us. They hold the keys to our recovery. It is in rediscovering the wisdom of the body that we find the most direct route to recovery. My job is to make that safe.


 


 


 


As a side note, my education is in both Somatic Psychology as well as traditional psychotherapy. I fully recognize the import and legitimacy of traditional therapy. What I want to offer is that and more. I want my clients to get the most out of their recovery potential—all that mind, body and spirit can offer. Experience is key. We can theorize and learn and memorize ad nauseum, but living recovery is what makes recovery real. It is work, and it is transformation. I want more than anything to give my clients all the tools they need to do this work, to manifest this transformation.


 


 


 


 


 


Sources


 


Caldwell, Christine. 1996. Getting our bodies back: Recovery, healing, and transformation through body-centered psychotherapy. Boston: Shambhala.


 


Levy, Fran. 1988. Dance/movement therapy: A healing art. Reston, VA: The American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance.


 


Schmais, Claire & White, Alissa. 1986. Introduction to Dance Therapy. American Journal of Dance Therapy. Vol. 9, 23-30.


About the Author

Certified Dance Therapist