Body and Earth. Andrea Olsen

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Body and Earth - Andrea Olsen

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and stabile place. Most of us squirm, shift our feet, avert our eyes. It’s not easy to be exposed to the simplicity of who we are and to acknowledge who we are capable of becoming.

      Alignment is relationship, to self and the environment. Even when standing “still,” the earth is always moving, we are always moving. A gift of our bipedal structure is our multidimensional agility of body and mind, which keeps us alert and responsive, adaptable to change. The risk is that instability can cause fear and rigidity in our attitudes and stance. When we have a relaxed, toned body, if we are pushed, we recover. If we are pushed when rigid, we fall off center. Our fluid body, undulating spine, and reflexes of face, gesture, and language support our vertical and vulnerable selves.

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      TO DO

      Standing in plumb line, eyes closed:

      • Touch the bump on the outside of one ankle. This is your outer malleolus, the lower end of the leg bone and the first landmark in postural alignment.

      • Touch the large knob on the side of your upper leg bone (the part that touches the floor when you are lying on your side). This is called the greater trochanter the second landmark in postural alignment. Line the greater trochanter directly over the center of your ankle.

      • Touch the center side of your ribcage, the third landmark in postural alignment. Line it directly over the greater trochanter and outer malleolus.

      • Touch the center of your ear, the top landmark in postural alignment. Lift your elbows to the side and imagine lines from each pointer finger meeting in the center of your skull. Do a small “yes” nod around this horizontal axis. Line this joint up with the other landmarks for postural alignment.

      • Touch the top of your skull and imagine the plumb line extending upward and downward, creating a vertical energy line around which the body parts are organized. This is called “extended proprioception” (imagined sensation).

      • Check that the knees are not locked; weight should pass through the center side of each knee joint.

      • From postural alignment, slide into your favorite “hang out” posture; feel this position. Then, beginning with the feet (your connection to the earth) slowly reorient your body toward postural alignment. Repeat.

      • Sometimes it is helpful to use a mirror to “check” alignment. Stand with your side to the mirror; align the body, feet to head; then rotate the skull to look in the mirror and notice the vertical relationship of body parts.

      • In efficient alignment, weight passes through the bones, your mineral body, to the earth.

      In yoga, the vertical stance is called Tadasana, Mountain Pose. Imagine a favorite mountain as you stand, allowing its qualities to inform your body.

      Standing in postural alignment:

      • Begin a spinal undulation from side to side, a “fish swish.” Imagine a mouth and eyes on the top of your head, a fish tail at the end of your spine, like a trout or shark.

      • Swing your tail (pelvis) side to side to propel the spine and head, or swim the head through the water to lead the spine and tail. Keep the movement side to side, as though your front and back surfaces are between two flat panes of glass. This fish pattern, evolving 400 million years ago, still lives in your spine.

      • Change to a spinal undulation front to back. Still imagine the mouth and eyes on the top of the head, but now you have a flat tail, like a whale or dolphin. This mammalian pattern, appearing 180 million years ago, still underlies your movement.

      • Change to a spiral pattern of the spine, unique to humans. Begin rotating the pelvis and allow all the vertebrae to respond, like a flag wrapping around a flagpole. Let the eyes finish the spiral, looking behind you as you twist. This pattern was present in your earliest hominid ancestors in Africa 5 million years ago, and underlies your multidimensional agility—the capacity to move in any direction with ease.

      • Reverse the spiral until you have a full swing, wrapping left, wrapping right. Include the whole spine.

      • Repeat each undulation, noticing any place there is holding in the body: the neck, the heart area, the lower back or tail. Encourage mobility of the spine in all three directions to support the stability of your vertical stance.

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      Photograph by Erik Borg.

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      Three body weights with spinal depth.

       Place visit: Attention to bipedal alignment

      Begin standing in plumb line, eyes open: Look at the trees and plants around you from this vertical stance; imagine you are growing roots from your feet into the soil, intersecting with those of the plants at your place. Remember that the root system of a tree is often as large as its crown. Try spinal undulations standing; notice the mobility under your bipedal stance. Pause and observe place in open attention. 20 min. Write about your experience. 10 min.

      When my parents were young, they decided to pull a long green trailer across the United States in search of a place to call their home, raise their children, lead a good life. They had passed through thirty-nine states and were headed toward California, when they found themselves parked next to the Grand Canyon with both children crying, “We want to go home.” So they turned the long green trailer around and headed back to Illinois, to the farm my mother’s father had given her as a present. He never expected her to live there.

      When they arrived, they parked the trailer in the back pasture, under the black walnut tree, and set to work. Farming was familiar. Things were done just about the same as when my father’s father had tilled the soil in Denmark. When we left nine years later, everything had changed. We had entered the era of more: more land, more money, more equipment. And of less: less community, less intimacy, less humor. But a photo of this first season shows my parents standing side by side in a field of corn, children by their sides, watching the sun set on the horizon. This was their place, their work, their time to learn and grow together with the land.

      Standing, read aloud or write and read your own story about the upright stance.

      image DAY 5

       Underlying Patterns: Earth

      We have forgotten what we can count on.

      —Terry Tempest Williams, Breadloaf Writers’ Conference, 1997

      It takes both a macroscopic and microscopic perspective to understand place. Macroscopically, we can reflect on basic occurrences over the past 4.5 billion years that have affected the Earth’s land forms, temperature, and capacity for sustaining life, as well as ongoing influences such as the eruptions of volcanoes, recomposition of the atmosphere,

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