12.28.2009

Good Things are Happening

I'm still working away on my thesis during the holidays, but wanted to make sure to pass along these goodies.

1) Ivuka (means "rebirth") Arts Center in Rwanda is a small cooperative arts center establishing a new community of artists, dancers, and musicians to aid the country towards reconciliation. Read the short article in Utne, including the RwaMakondera project, a dance troupe for poor children that teaches them to tell centuries-old stories using Rwandan traditional dances. "If you look into these kids' eyes, you can see they have a lot to say, they just have no means of expressing it. Now they have music and dance."

2. Saltwater therapy for kids with cystic fibrosis with pro surfers Jamie O'Brien, Kelly Slater, and others in this article.

12.16.2009

PLEASE SIGN UP FOR THIS COURSE!

The Center for Movement Education and Research

January 9,10, 2010 – Scripps College -- Claremont CA
February 13,14, 2010 – Pomona College --Claremont CA
9:00am – 5:30pm

http://www.movement-education.org/courses_alternateroute_socal.html


Course Title: Dance/Movement Therapy with Seniors —30 hrs
This dance/movement therapy theory, practice and application course will cover the specific developmental needs of seniors and the dance/movement therapy skills pertinent to working with this population age group. The course content will focus on physical, psychodynamic, psychopathological, and enculturating factors impinging on the later years of human development. Students will be exposed to various clinical concepts of dance/movement therapy viewed within a developmental framework that are pertinent to selected late adulthood populations, including clinical disorders of late adulthood and, the types of somatic transference/countertransference issues that might be encountered.

This course has been approved by the American Dance Therapy Association as meeting the Alternate Route Requirements for the R-DMT credential" and satisfies 30 hours of DMT Theory and Practice Training.


This course meets the qualifications for 30 hours of continuing education credit for MFTs and/or LCSWs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences (Provider #3888). Students taking the class for continuing education are excused from the required assignments other than attendance and participation.

Course Objectives:
1) Students will develop an understanding of the developmental needs, tasks and challenges presented when working with various senior populations.
2) Students will develop a basic understanding of dance/movement therapy assessment and application of dance/movement therapy interventions as they apply to various senior populations.
3) Students will learn interventions through which to facilitate an individual or group dance/movement session for various senior populations.
4) Students will be able to design and facilitate a dance/movement therapy session for seniors that is developmentally sound and takes into account the unique developmental, physical, emotional, psychological and cognitive needs of seniors.
5) Students will conclude the class with a beginning level awareness of dance/movement therapy processes and techniques utilized in working with seniors.

Locations:
Scripps College
Richardson Dance Studio
1030 Columbia Ave
Claremont, CA 91711
Pomona College
Pendleton Dance Center, Studio 16
210 East 2nd Street
Claremont, CA 91711

Course Fee: $750.00

Course Instructor: Gabrielle Kaufman MA, BC-DMT, NCC
is a CMER faculty member, dance/movement therapist and counselor with close to twenty years experience in the helping profession. She has taught creative movement to preschoolers and elementary school students, has used DMT with the elderly, Holocaust survivors, adults with mental illness, individuals with eating disorders and body image issues, with teens at high risk and other individuals suffering from anxiety and depression.
Currently, she is the coordinator of the New Moms Connect Program of Jewish Family Service of Los Angeles. She has run several programs for high risk children and teens in both English and Spanish languages, taught classes to parents of newborns and toddlers, and runs support groups for single parents, women with eating disorders and women with perinatal mood disorders and with seniors. She is a coordinator with Postpartum Support International and has a private practice in Los Angeles.

For Information and Application Contact:
Judy Gantz-CMER Director
POB 2001
Sebastopol, CA 95473

(310) 477-9535

12.11.2009

High Probability of Survival with Children who have Cancer

Since I've been thesis-thesis-thesising lately, I apologize for not updating my blog as much as usual.

Today, I'd like to offer a post I read on the Art Therapy blog regarding a study in Germany on children with cancer and their high probability of survivial. Here's the original article, too.

This research is exciting for the fields of creative and expressive arts therapies, since it highlights aspects of the role of music therapy, positive effects of parent accompaniment, and the importance of quality of life in the hospital.

11.30.2009

Neuroscience 2009 Highlights New Research on Exercise, Music, and the Brain

CHICAGO — Research presented today at Neuroscience 2009, the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience (SfN) and the world's largest source of emerging news about brain science and health, provides a better understanding of the brain, nervous system, and related disorders.

Specific research released shows:

The benefits of exercise on both the brain and body, and, more specifically, underscores the positive influence of regular physical activity on Parkinson's disease, depression, premenstrual syndrome, and memory.
New tools are enabling researchers to identify neural similarities and differences between species. The findings may help to explain faculties, like language, and diseases, like Parkinson's, that are unique to humans.
New insights into male behavior support the idea that many gender differences lie in the brain and are influenced by both genes and environment.
Scientists are developing novel ways to bypass the blood-brain barrier, a network of blood vessels that prevents more than 95 percent of all chemicals from entering the brain from the bloodstream. Researchers describe new methods for transporting drugs across the BBB as well as ways to enhance the brain's own immune response, which is separated from the body's immune system by the BBB.

More information on the studies released today is available at www.sfn.org.

Neuroscience 2009 is a multifaceted exchange of important science research across biological, behavioral, psychological, and chemical disciplines. Hundreds of the world's foremost researchers, clinicians, and experts on all matters concerning the brain will present research findings and be available for interviews.

11.25.2009

A Body Transformed Through Dance

Gregg Mozgala, a 31-year-old actor with cerebral palsy, had 12 years of physical therapy while he was growing up. But in the last eight months, a determined choreographer with an unconventional résumé has done what all those therapists could not: She has dramatically changed the way Mr. Mozgala walks.

In the process, she has changed his view of himself and of his possibilities.

Read the full NY Times story here. (Make sure to watch the video, too.)

11.21.2009

Why Exercise Makes You Less Anxious

This NY Times article was posted on Donna Luder's Somatic Mechanic blog recently.

Why Exercise Makes you Less Anxious:

Researchers at Princeton University recently made a remarkable discovery about the brains of rats that exercise. Some of their neurons respond differently to stress than the neurons of slothful rats. Scientists have known for some time that exercise stimulates the creation of new brain cells (neurons) but not how, precisely, these neurons might be functionally different from other brain cells.


In the experiment, preliminary results of which were presented last month at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in Chicago, scientists allowed one group of rats to run. Another set of rodents was not allowed to exercise. Then all of the rats swam in cold water, which they don’t like to do. Afterward, the scientists examined the animals’ brains. They found that the stress of the swimming activated neurons in all of the brains. (The researchers could tell which neurons were activated because the cells expressed specific genes in response to the stress.) But the youngest brain cells in the running rats, the cells that the scientists assumed were created by running, were less likely to express the genes. They generally remained quiet. The “cells born from running,” the researchers concluded, appeared to have been “specifically buffered from exposure to a stressful experience.” The rats had created, through running, a brain that seemed biochemically, molecularly, calm.

For years, both in popular imagination and in scientific circles, it has been a given that exercise enhances mood. But how exercise, a physiological activity, might directly affect mood and anxiety — psychological states — was unclear. Now, thanks in no small part to improved research techniques and a growing understanding of the biochemistry and the genetics of thought itself, scientists are beginning to tease out how exercise remodels the brain, making it more resistant to stress. In work undertaken at the University of Colorado, Boulder, for instance, scientists have examined the role of serotonin, a neurotransmitter often considered to be the “happy” brain chemical. That simplistic view of serotonin has been undermined by other researchers, and the University of Colorado work further dilutes the idea. In those experiments, rats taught to feel helpless and anxious, by being exposed to a laboratory stressor, showed increased serotonin activity in their brains. But rats that had run for several weeks before being stressed showed less serotonin activity and were less anxious and helpless despite the stress.

Other researchers have looked at how exercise alters the activity of dopamine, another neurotransmitter in the brain, while still others have concentrated on the antioxidant powers of moderate exercise. Anxiety in rodents and people has been linked with excessive oxidative stress, which can lead to cell death, including in the brain. Moderate exercise, though, appears to dampen the effects of oxidative stress. In an experiment led by researchers at the University of Houston and reported at the Society for Neuroscience meeting, rats whose oxidative-stress levels had been artificially increased with injections of certain chemicals were extremely anxious when faced with unfamiliar terrain during laboratory testing. But rats that had exercised, even if they had received the oxidizing chemical, were relatively nonchalant under stress. When placed in the unfamiliar space, they didn’t run for dark corners and hide, like the unexercised rats. They insouciantly explored.

“It looks more and more like the positive stress of exercise prepares cells and structures and pathways within the brain so that they’re more equipped to handle stress in other forms,” says Michael Hopkins, a graduate student affiliated with the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory Laboratory at Dartmouth, who has been studying how exercise differently affects thinking and emotion. “It’s pretty amazing, really, that you can get this translation from the realm of purely physical stresses to the realm of psychological stressors.”

The stress-reducing changes wrought by exercise on the brain don’t happen overnight, however, as virtually every researcher agrees. In the University of Colorado experiments, for instance, rats that ran for only three weeks did not show much reduction in stress-induced anxiety, but those that ran for at least six weeks did. “Something happened between three and six weeks,” says Benjamin Greenwood, a research associate in the Department of Integrative Physiology at the University of Colorado, who helped conduct the experiments. Dr. Greenwood added that it was “not clear how that translates” into an exercise prescription for humans. We may require more weeks of working out, or maybe less. And no one has yet studied how intense the exercise needs to be. But the lesson, Dr. Greenwood says, is “don’t quit.” Keep running or cycling or swimming. (Animal experiments have focused exclusively on aerobic, endurance-type activities.) You may not feel a magical reduction of stress after your first jog, if you haven’t been exercising. But the molecular biochemical changes will begin, Dr. Greenwood says. And eventually, he says, they become “profound.”

11.19.2009

Interested in Becoming a Dance/Movement Therapist?

The Center for Movement Education and Research, CMER, is offering a Dance/Movement Therapy with the Elderly course in Southern California in January and February, 2010.

Please sign up! The course is in danger of being canceled due to low enrollment, and selfishly, I NEED THIS COURSE! :)Tell all your friends!

Info below:

January 9,10, 2010 – Scripps College -- Claremont CA
February 13,14, 2010 – Pomona College --Claremont CA
9:00am – 5:30pm


Course Title: Dance/Movement Therapy with Seniors —30 hrs
This dance/movement therapy theory, practice and application course will cover the specific developmental needs of seniors and the dance/movement therapy skills pertinent to working with this population age group. The course content will focus on physical, psychodynamic, psychopathological, and enculturating factors impinging on the later years of human development. Students will be exposed to various clinical concepts of dance/movement therapy viewed within a developmental framework that are pertinent to selected late adulthood populations, including clinical disorders of late adulthood and, the types of somatic transference/countertransference issues that might be encountered.

This course has been approved by the American Dance Therapy Association as meeting the Alternate Route Requirements for the R-DMT credential" and satisfies 30 hours of DMT Theory and Practice Training.


This course meets the qualifications for 30 hours of continuing education credit for MFTs and/or LCSWs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences (Provider #3888). Students taking the class for continuing education are excused from the required assignments other than attendance and participation.

Course Objectives:
1) Students will develop an understanding of the developmental needs, tasks and challenges presented when working with various senior populations.
2) Students will develop a basic understanding of dance/movement therapy assessment and application of dance/movement therapy interventions as they apply to various senior populations.
3) Students will learn interventions through which to facilitate an individual or group dance/movement session for various senior populations.
4) Students will be able to design and facilitate a dance/movement therapy session for seniors that is developmentally sound and takes into account the unique developmental, physical, emotional, psychological and cognitive needs of seniors.
5) Students will conclude the class with a beginning level awareness of dance/movement therapy processes and techniques utilized in working with seniors.

Locations:
Scripps College
Richardson Dance Studio
1030 Columbia Ave
Claremont, CA 91711

Pomona College
Pendleton Dance Center, Studio 16
210 East 2nd Street
Claremont, CA 91711

Course Fee: $750.00

Course Instructor: Gabrielle Kaufman MA, BC-DMT, NCC
is a CMER faculty member, dance/movement therapist and counselor with close to twenty years experience in the helping profession. She has taught creative movement to preschoolers and elementary school students, has used DMT with the elderly, Holocaust survivors, adults with mental illness, individuals with eating disorders and body image issues, with teens at high risk and other individuals suffering from anxiety and depression.
Currently, she is the coordinator of the New Moms Connect Program of Jewish Family Service of Los Angeles. She has run several programs for high risk children and teens in both English and Spanish languages, taught classes to parents of newborns and toddlers, and runs support groups for single parents, women with eating disorders and women with perinatal mood disorders and with seniors. She is a coordinator with Postpartum Support International and has a private practice in Los Angeles.

For Information and Application Contact:
Judy Gantz-CMER Director
POB 2001
Sebastopol, CA 95473

(310) 477-9535

11.17.2009

Arts in Healthcare

From Musings of a Dance/Movement Therapist blog:

Arts in Healthcare Seen Yielding Benefits
According to a new study by the Society for the Arts in Healthcare, Americans for the Arts, The Joint Commission and the University of Florida Center for the Arts in Healthcare documents that incorporating the arts into health-care settings has multiple benefits for patients and may reduce health-care expenses. Up to half of health-care institutions in the U.S. incorporate arts programming into their care. Benefits from arts programming include shorter hospital stays, less need for medication, and a boost for job satisfaction and employee retention. Philanthropy Journal, Oct 19, 2009

11.15.2009

One of the Most Amazing Videos I've Seen All Year

I've been working with the elderly at a skilled living facility as part of my thesis research leading dance movement groups. After my group yesterday, the activities director showed me this video of a 92 year-old woman dancing with her 29 year-old great grandson. I had goosebumps the whole time. It's incredible.

11.14.2009

SotoMotion Performance Lab in San Francisco

I am definitely going to try to get my booty to Performance Lab this fall. G Hoffman Soto, on faculty at the Tamalpa Institute, is pure genious. In his classes in the past, I have learned so much about myself, not only anatomically and physiologically, but at a deep and embodied level. I hear my heart beat, feel my blood like warm jelly spreading throughout my fingers and toes. I feel powerful, I feel strong. Alive. For anyone interested in expressive arts or creative arts therapies, Soto creates and fosters a safe environment to explore the self, your relationship with others, and the world, its a blending of dance class meets improvisation meets drama therapy. It is truly a mystifying and enlivening experience to attend Performance Lab. Hope to see you there!

IMPROVISATION AND THE PERFORMANCE LAB

Improvisation is a powerful metaphor for life. Studying improvisation provides a vehicle to understanding who we are in the present moment, and to develop ourselves through being awake and present in the moment. To improvise you have to be able to put aside your everyday mind and open up to a state of mind that exists in the now. You have to give over to the bodymind, the movement, and the present moment.

Movement, and a strong embodied physical presence, anchors and centers us in our bodies and in the present. The process is supported with awareness work to assist us in developing a strong kinesthetic base. From the embodied state we can begin to shape and change ourselves and our material both as artists and as human beings. Our personal history lives in the body and through the body we can access this energy and channel it into our creative life.
Improvisation comes very close to mirroring life. It is an art form that has the potential to be a direct reflection and practice of being. When improvising one has to be present and respond in a way that keeps this moment, and what is happening in the moment, alive.
The second part of the Performance Lab process is Movement Exploration. Movement Exploration is a development and refinement of the material that arises from the Improvisation process. M E allows us to recycle and rework our material, to shape and deepen it, and ourselves, in this model.

The Lab provides an environment for participants to develop skills for ones personal creative process through performance. The process moves through awareness, expanded artistic expression, and creativity for personal growth and embodiment that leads to transformation through the Movement Theater model.
The work unfolds in solo, duets, trios and ensemble configurations. The voice and spoken word layer and texture the work to give it a dynamic range of expression and creativity. The spoken word includes improvised text, as well as, developing our personal stories and myths.
The Performance Lab is for performers, actors, dancers, teachers, therapists, coaches, housewives and everybody and anybody who wants to develop themselves as artists, performers and human beings.

While talking about being one with the Tao, Lao Tsu said, “Accept what is in front of you without wanting the situation to be other than it is.” If we add to that “yes, accept what is, and then work with it,” then we have an idea of what Improvisation can be.

The Performance Lab is movement theater model that creates a space to explore, improvise, express and create in movement, voice and spoken word. The class works through both improvisation and developing material. Participants will work in solo, duet, trio and ensemble configurations and is open to all levels of experience. The class has both advanced and more beginning students. Soto believes that we all learn from each other regardless of our experience.

G Hoffman Soto has been teaching, performing and studying movement since 1968. He has been developing this body of work for over 25 years. Soto has taught internationally since 1979 throughout Europe, Japan, Lebanon, New Zealand, Australia and Hong Kong. He has been associated with Anna Halprin, the San Francisco Dancers’ Workshop and Tamalpa Institute since 1973 and has a wide background in Post Modern Dance, various movement and awareness studies, Martial Arts and Body Work. Soto subscribes to the theory that creativity goes to the very core of what it means to be human. “When we are involved in the creative process we are anchoring ourselves in our humanness.”

When: Monday evenings 7pm to 9:30pm, beginning November 16 until December 14. The final class will be a student studio performance.

Where: Mary Sano Dance Studio at 245 5th Street #314, San Francisco between Howard and Folsom.

Costs: $125 with a $10 discount if paid in full by evening of the first class. For further information, questions and or to send deposits of $50 and reservations please contact:

GH Soto
Tel # 415 342 4899
e mail: sotomotion@me.com
Visit the web site at www.sotomotion.com

11.11.2009

Feel Fine? Then Blog Already! And Buy this Book...



A friend of mine's girlfriend worked on this book, now available on Amazon. All I had to do were read the reviews (below) and I was sold. I can't wait for the book to arrive! Wonderfully displayed, a review of the book explains how the authors:

...use their computer programs to peer into the inner lives of millions, constructing a vast and deep portrait of our collective emotional landscape. Armed with custom software that scours the English-speaking world's new Internet blog posts every minute, hunting down the phrases "I feel" and "I am feeling," the authors have collected over 12 million feelings since 2005, amassing an ever-growing database of human emotion that adds more than 10,000 new feelings a day. Drawing from this massive real-world stockpile of found sentiment, We Feel Fine: An Almanac of Human Emotion presents the best of the best -- the euphoria, the despair, the passion, the dreams, and the desires that make us human.


It
...combines the words and pictures of total strangers to explore every corner of the human experience. Packed with personal photos, scientific observations, statistical infographics, and countless candid vignettes from ordinary people, We Feel Fine is a visual, fiercely intelligent, endlessly engrossing crash course in the secrets of human emotion.


We Feel Fine explores our emotions from every angle, providing insights into and examples of each. Equal parts pop culture and psychology, computer science and conceptual art, sociology and storytelling, We Feel Fine is no ordinary book -- with thousands of authors from all over the world sharing their uncensored emotions, it is a radical experiment in mass authorship, merging the online and offline worlds to create an indispensable handbook for anyone interested in what it's like to be human.


Furthermore, for blogging DMTs or DMT students, the content of the book, how people FEEL, is central to our work with therapy and expression.

It is beautifully done. Feel fine. Go ahead, check it out. And let me know what you feel (or think) about it.

11.05.2009

Self Portraits and Healing

William Utermohlen’s self-portraits reveal his descent into dementia over the span of nearly four decades. The accompanying NY Times article can be read here.

In my expressive arts therapy (movement, drawing, writing) training with Anna and Daria Halprin at the Tamalpa Institute, self portraits are introduced as an integral part of the life/art process, at the beginning of the training and at the end.
How we paint or draw ourselves is a creative and symbolic process which can create a dialogue between our psyche and soul. "...the drawing...can contain and express our suffering in ways which help us be with it and move on, finding a healthy way to reintegrate, or live differently with, our wounding experiences" (Halprin, D, p. 179).

Utermohlen's self portraits from 1996-2000:





11.04.2009

Dance Therapy for Postpartum Depression

I had the privilege of attending Gabrielle Kaufman, BC-DMT's workshop on postpartum depression and dance/movement therapy this October in Portland, and look forward to working with her in the future, since she teaches my next CMER course in DMT with the elderly in January, 2010.

The workshop on postpartum depression was fascinating. It is such an emotional and visceral topic for many women, I think we were all a blubbering mess sharing stories and connecting through movement.

Dance Therapy for Postpartum Depression by the Postpartum Progress: Together, Stronger blog:

One of the people I met at the PSI conference this summer was Gabrielle Kaufman, one of the PSI coordinators for Southern California. One of the things we discussed was dance therapy. I had never heard of dance therapy, and was intrigued to find out more about what it is and how it might be used to help women with perinatal mood and anxiety disorders. Gabrielle was kind enough to write the following article to enlighten us:

"When Rachel was deeply depressed after the birth of her baby girl, she didn't know what to do. In desperation and with her husband's encouragement, she reached out for help. Her OB/GYN referred her to a specialist in postpartum depression. When this specialist spoke to Rachel, she gave monosyllabic answers. Her baby sat alone in the baby carrier and Rachel stated, 'I don't want to be her mother.' When traditional talk therapy didn't seem enough to penetrate her sadness, her doctor thought to refer her to a dance/movement therapist.

Based on the understanding that the body and mind are interrelated, dance/movement therapy is defined as the psychotherapeutic use of movement to further the emotional, cognitive, physical and social integration of an individual. The dance/movement therapist's goal was to help Rachel "move" toward health and connect with her baby girl Sophie.

So what did they do? A dance/movement therapist has training much like a traditional verbal therapist, but has additional tools in her belt. With an understanding of movement assessment, the dance/movement therapist can begin to help the client interpret her behaviors and initiate a shift. The process of bonding with a newborn is a very physical one. By simply encouraging the mother to hold her baby and rock with her, movement can begin a journey toward connection. The rocking rhythm is soothing to both the mother and the baby, and the closeness of touch can be healing for both as well.

The therapist may mirror the client in an effort to meet the mother in her depression, or she may be a model mother by encouraging her client to 'move' her depression. Sometimes the therapist might bring out scarves for her client to use. She might invite the client to 'hide' from her baby and return, 'peek-a-boo'. This process is one in which the mother can regain control and initiate her relationship with her baby. We know that the bond a mother forms with her baby early on makes a profound impact on the lifetime development of her child. As much of this attunement is non-verbal, dance/movement therapy can be an ideal intervention.

Read the rest of the article here.

Becoming an Embodied Therapist Workshop with Susan Kleinman

Becoming An Embodied Therapist workshop
Read the news straight from the Hope Blog here.

BECOMING AN EMBODIED THERAPIST:
ACCESSING THE LANGUAGE OF THE BODY IN EATING DISORDER TREATMENT
Wednesday December 9, 2009
9am - Noon
Hancock Center for Dance/Movement Therapy

Earn 3 CEU's
Workshop Cost: $60.00

This workshop offers the opportunity for mental health professionals to discover and trust their innate ability to "attend" empathically, respond authenticcally, and translate non-verbal experiences into cognitive insights. Experiential body/mind exercises based on dance/ movement therapy principles will be used along with didactic presentation, to integrate a more embodied approach into traditional psychotherapy theory and practice.
Participants will learn how these embodied methods can be used to treat individuals with eating disorders with a special focus on how to:

- Be more fully present and congruent.
- Facilitate a somatic state of readiness.
- Utilize treatment techniques based on mind/body congruity to deal with issues
underlying eating disorders.
- Track the process of therapy so as to not become lost in the experience of attending.
Workshop Presenter Susan Kleinman, MA, BC-DMT, NCC, is the dance/movement therapist for residential and outpatient services at The Renfrew Center of Florida. Ms. Kleinman is a trustee of the Marian Chace Foundation, past president of the American Dance Therapy Association, and a past Chair of The National Coalition for Creative Arts Therapies. She is co-editor of The Renfrew Center Foundation's Healing Through Relationship Series, and serves on the editorial board of the Journal for Creativity in Mental Health. She is the American Dance Therapy Association Recipient of the 2009 Outstanding Achievement Award.

11.03.2009

Breath Made Visible, a film about Anna Halprin


Anna Halprin, post-modern dancer, pioneer, innovator, teacher, co-founder of the Tamalpa Institute (the school of which I just completed my MA coursework through!), shares her life and creative life/art process in this film by a French filmmaker and former student of Halprin's.


I highly recommend you check out the trailer for the film RIGHT NOW.

10.28.2009

Time Management for Creative People


As I begin to type my thesis, I would like to share this Time Management for Creative People ebook.

I've found it extremely helpful!

“Be regular and orderly in your life so that you may be violent and original in your work.”
Gustave Flaubert

10.25.2009

New R-DMT Paperwork and Anti-Aging Yoga


If you are a dance/movement therapy alternate route student, or plan to become one in the future, you should definitely check out the ADTA's new website to become familiar with the R-DMT packet. There is a bunch of downloadable paperwork as well, which is newly added since the website makeover. Make sure you're organized!

Also, I came across the Gaiam blog this weekend, and thought I'd share the "anti-aging" yoga slideshow with you. Although I'm not a fan of gimmicky incentives as the only motivation for movement and health, this one is at least interesting enough to pass along. Let me know what you think.


Anti-Aging Yoga: How-to Slideshow
by Sadie Nardini

What yogis have known for centuries, science now backs up: When it comes to looking and feeling young, skin creams and injections ain’t got nothing on the practice of yoga. Yoga changes the body’s system as a whole, so the glow on your more youthful face actually comes from an inner transformation and slowing down of the aging process. This means fewer wrinkles, less stress, more immunity, increased brain power and yes, a body that stays healthy and beautiful for a lifetime. So forget botox. Try yoga!

I’m not talking about face yoga here — though that’s fine to do, too.

More and more research is finding that people who practice a vigorous form of yoga just three hours a week are investing in maintaining a youthful glow by switching on the anti-aging hormones that slow down the process from the inside out. In fact, some studies show that on average, these three hourly sessions make practitioners biologically nine years younger than their non-yogi counterparts. Now that’s change we can believe in! Yoga does this by stimulating the endocrine system to produce balanced amounts of hormones, and helps switch on and off genes that we need (or don’t!) to keep us running smoothly. It’s been shown, among other things, to reduce stress hormones like cortisol, a major factor in disease and aging.

Make this practice part of your regular routine, and reap the benefits of invigorated health and beauty that will have people asking you what your secret is. You’ll just smile slyly (with fewer wrinkles) and say, “It’s the yoga.”

THE PRACTICE

The following 6 power poses work specifically to trigger the main endocrine glands: reproductive, adrenals, thymus, thyroid, hypothalamus, pituitary and pineal, and the major organs, which all work together to regulate stress, metabolism, aging, sleep and immunity.


1. Seated Cat/Cow

Regulates: reproductive and stress hormones

Come into an Easy Seat. Place your hands on knees, and with each inhale, arch your back, drawing shoulder blades closer. Exhale, and round in, shoulder blades move apart, chin towards chest.

Repeat for one minute or more.

2. Metabolic Spark

Regulates: metabolism and weight management, immunity

Return to Easy Seat. Inhale into the chest and ribs, and reach your arms out parallel to the floor, palms facing forward. Exhale more quickly from the navel, and swing your arms to reach out in front of you, palms face each other.

Repeat for one minute.

3. Twisted Lunge


Regulates: organ health, overall system function.

Come into a Lunge Position, back heel up, hips squared. Bring your palms together at the chest and plant your right elbow onto the left knee. Keep the hips level as you exhale and spin your heart and top shoulder to the sky. Place your back knee down onto the floor if needed.

Take 5-10 breaths here, then switch sides.

Read the full article here.

10.22.2009

Skeleton in the Closet


Skeleton in the Closet is a series of intimate portraits, by artist Fritz Liedtke, of people struggling with anorexia and bulimia.

Combining photographs and text, it creates a powerful narrative of what it's like to live with-–and leave behind-–an eating disorder.

www.skeletoninthecloset.net

10.20.2009

Dance Therapy Coursework at Kinections in NY

Right around the corner in 2010!

May
Dance/Movement Therapy Theory & Practice I
Foundations and Principles of Dance/Movement Therapy
May 24, 2010 - May 28, 2010
Danielle L. Fraenkel, Ph.D., BC-DMT, NCC, LCAT, LMHC

June
Group Processes in Dance/Movement Therapy
The Marian Chace Approach
June 2, 2010 - June 5, 2010
Elissa White, BC-DMT, CMA, LCAT

A Bill Evans Approach to Laban Movement Analysis
June 7, 2010 - June 10, 2010
Bill Evans, MFA, CLMA, CMA

An Experiential and Theoretical Introduction to the Kestenberg Movement Profile
Janet Lemon Williams, R-DMT, KMP Analyst Level I
June 12 - June 15, 2009

The CenterPost Trauma & Resiliency Framework
Dance Movement Therapy for Survivors of War, Torture and Violence in Cross-Cultural Settings
June 16, 2010 - June 19, 2010
Amber Elizabeth Gray, MPH, MA, BC-DMT, LPCC

Group Processes in LivingDance~LivingMusic
June 23, 2010 - June 27, 2010
Danielle L. Fraenkel, Ph.D., BC-DMT, NCC, LCAT, LMHC

Articles Relevant to the Creative Arts Therapies

New research on music, movement, and the brain.

Yale researchers hopeful for new treatment options for the mentally ill by studying the evolution of the human brain.

Finally, a great essay by Malcolm Gladwell on dogs and body language.

10.19.2009

10.18.2009

Why is Imagery Important?


Donna Luder, who certified me in the Pilates method, on mental imagery. As a dancer and researcher, Luder uses visualizations and images when teaching Pilates to clients and is inspired by the Franklin Method.

As Luder's student, I feel more of a connection with my body using cues of imagery, like imagining my spine is a "strand of pearls" for example. But a whole lot more goes into using one's brain for these cues.

About Mental Imagery
by Donna Luder © 2007-08 All rights reserved.
For two and a half millennia, philosophers have discussed and debated the role-assignments of the body and mind. Is the mind superior and the body inferior, or is the body just a way to access the mind, or is there no separation? The debate over the relative superiority of mind or body may not be a useful construct for physical educators. Instead, it may be more useful for teachers to recognize athletic goals can be enhanced through physical or cognitive skill development. Students of movement would be well-served to be accomplished in both skills.
Athletic coaches and physical education teachers are familiar with skill drills and other physical techniques for improving athletic ability. Somewhat less familiar is the cognitive technique of mental imagery. This paper seeks to review the research behind mental imagery, discuss the philosophy of mental imagery, and provide a concrete prescription for the front line of movement educators to improve motor learning and performance through mental imagery. It is advantageous to use this cognitive skill because it is potentially quick, powerful, and applicable to all people in all walks of life, from ballerinas to football players to stroke survivors.
Ernst Weber (1795-1878) founded the field of psychophysics by studying the relationship between sensory information and cognitive evaluation of that information between 1829 and 1834, according to Mook (2004). In 1860, Gustav Fechner contributed a method to correlate physical variables to mental variables over the entire range of possible variables (Mook). Fechner was sufficiently mesmerized to later pen the metaphysical text “On Life After Death”. Early 20th century research branched into the field of mental imagery and theorized the body would respond to mental practice alone (Washburn, 1916) but EMG did not confirm this theory until 1932 (Jacobson). Simultaneously, the lay literature began to explore how concepts from modern science could enhance desired outcomes. The year 1927 brought pianist Heinrich Kosnick’s Lebenssteigerung (Life-Enhancement) in which he described how his “psycho-physiological” method could increase the skills of his piano students. In 1933, Freeman showed concomitant muscle activity could be measured during mental imagery of an activity, as cited in Green (1994). By 1934, Sackett concluded that physical practice was superior to mental imagery but mental imagery did improve performance. Mabel Todd, a professor at Columbia University Teachers College, published The Thinking Body in 1937 in which she outlined her philosophy of “Structural Hygiene” that taught students mental processes to influence ease of movement and posture. In the mid- to late-20th century, multiple reviews of previous research (Richardson, 1967; Corbin 1972; Weinberg 1982; and Feltz and Landers, 1983) concluded mental practice is indeed an effective method for improving performance.
Although research supports mental practice as a viable method of physical skill development, the question remains: how does it work? Evidence points to the theory that mental imagery is consciousness itself (Marks, 1999 and Ginsburg, 1999). Wittgenstein declared mental images are the means by which we interact with the world, they are how we know (1949/1978). For example, when a chef following a recipe reads the ingredient “artichoke”, the chef may visualize the artichoke, smell its aroma, taste it, spatially locate it in the kitchen, kinesthetically feel its spiky roughness, or relate to it emotionally. All of these responses are represented by mental imagery. Even the word “artichoke” on the recipe card is an image, a representation of the real thing. Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) expresses this concept with the phrase, “the map is not the territory” (Bavister and Vickers, 2004). In the same way that a map is a representation of the territory but is not the territory itself, the image of the artichoke is not the artichoke any more than the word “artichoke” is an artichoke. Although the mental image of the artichoke as a smell, taste, visual picture, location, or sensation is not the artichoke, it is a valid and useful representation of an artichoke, and the method by which the chef is made conscious of the ingredient for the recipe.
That which one is conscious of is one’s reality; it is a truism from which one operates. Plato’s allegory of the cave described prisoners who have spent their entire lives in a cave, chained so that they can only see flickering shadows on the cave wall. The prisoners think the shadows are real, substantive beings, because it is all they have ever experienced. It is obvious to the outsider that shadows have no substance; they are not real in the sense that people are real. However, whether something is experienced as real has very little to do with its status in the physical world. Only the subject’s perception of the object, dictates its realness (Heidegger, 1932/2002).
In order for an athlete to be considered conscious, some type of mental imagery is in use. The batter anticipates the feel of the bat connecting to the ball, the diver mentally hears the quiet splash of a perfect dive, the dancer visualizes the flight of a swan, and the soccer player daydreams about a friend and subsequently gets thumped by an incoming ball! A constant river of mental information flows through the mind of every conscious human and it can be influenced by consciously chosen imagery.
Purposeful manipulation of mental imagery is familiar to elite level athletes who report using imagery more often than less experienced athletes (Hall, Rodgers and Barr, 1990). This content is largely at the athlete’s discretion and therefore a potential ally in performance success. The athlete who images crossing the finish-line and seeing the desired time on the clock is “using imagery” to succeed; Walter Mitty daydreaming of his secret life as a fighter-pilot thus escapes his normal life. Both streams of thought are purposeful and, by design, both are “real” to the thinker. Negative imagery is just as “real” to the athlete and also powerful. For this reason, negative imagery has been shown to produce significant performance deterioration (Hall, Schmidt, Durand, and Buckolz, 1994).
Vividness refers to how clearly an athlete sees the image. Control is the ability to direct an image and manipulate its contents. Both are important characteristics of successful imagery. Start and Richardson as cited in Green (1994), found that athletes who had high degrees of both vividness and control performed best. They found the next best combination was low vividness and high control, then low vividness and low control, and lastly high vividness and low control. This surprising finding caused the authors to conclude that if an athlete can vividly image performing, but cannot control the image to direct what is wanted, the athlete might actually be practicing detrimental movement patterns.

To read the rest of the article, go here.

10.14.2009

Related Articles and Videos

I've been getting back into the swing of things at work this week after a fabulous two weeks off in Maui (friend's wedding) and Portland (ADTA conference). If you haven't yet been to the ADTA conference, GO NEXT YEAR IN BROOKLYN. It's a profound experience to be with hundreds of dance/movement therapists. I felt as though I was with "my people."

While I adjust back to my regular schedule, here are some articles you may find interesting:

*The act of exercise can improve body image.

*How can taking the stairs be more fun?

Interactive Swedish Piano Stairs - Watch more Funny Videos

*"Breath Made Visible" a documentary about Anna Halprin, co-founder of the Tamalpa Institute (my movement based, expressive arts therapy school), and postmodern dancer extraordinaire.

10.05.2009

Changes in Certification Coming Soon

According to the ADTA newsletter, The ADTA voting membership ratified creating
a Dance/Movement Therapy Certification Board! In addition, the majority vote was to create new service marks: R-DMT (dance/movement therapist-registered, instead of DTR) and BC-DMT (dance/movement therapist-board certified, instead of ADTR). In the coming months you can expect to hear how this new certification board and the new service marks will be rolled out.

So I will be changing the name of this blog to "The Dance to R-DMT" shortly.

10.03.2009

American Dance Therapy Association Conference

And the countdown begins!!!

The American Dance Therapy Association conference is next week, October 8-11th in Portland, Oregon.



I will be co-presenting with the fabulous Lora Wilson Mau, DTR, and Ty Tedmon-Jones, ADTR on the topic of BLOGGING! This is where it all began, folks. We are so thrilled to be presenting such a great topic. I've learned so much about blogging, Twitter, and marketing since my first post November of 2008. Hope you all can join us in the dance across the world wide web presentation.

If you are able to come to the conference, it promises to be an educational time filled with fun and a huge dance party on Saturday night.

Hope to see you there!

9.27.2009

Beyonce makes me want to...

Movement is expressive. In this case, this kid portrays all the emotions and movements that I want to express when I see this Beyonce video. Go kid, go!

9.24.2009

Making Art in Healthcare: Liz Lerman's Dance Exchange


Excerpt from Stage Presence - Body Presence: Movement and Body Experience With the Elderly by Babette Becker, PhD, CSW, BCD

Liz Lerman, a dancer and choreographer, developed an intergenerational dance company by first training young dancers in her company, The Dance Exchange, to teach and dance with older adults.

Creativity is often arrested in the aged. It is imprisoned by inhibitions, habits, and expectations. When it is released we get a Grandma Moses creating vibrant paintings in the primitive style. If it is never inhibited, we get a Picasso creating until the week of his death. Creativity can be released in many ways.
...The experiences and emotions of older persons can be translated into vibrant, creative works. Usually, however, there must be a program and a setting that encourages and channels free expression into an art form.


Movements can be used to express emotion, re-create an event, tell a story, work out an idea, or simply create joy. Dance is an active expression of individuals' willingness to move, learn, and reveal themselves through their bodies as well as to learn, take directions, work harmoniously, share ideas, and rehearse--to grow as artists, both collectively and individually. As muscles get full play, they are likely to improve in their range of motion, stamina, and agility.

To teach dance to older adults, I rely heavily on the experience of dance itself than on the therapeutic growth of the individual. If each of us listens to our own individual beat, we can create themes and movements. All forms of creativity, emotional and physical expression, physical movement, intellectual agility, and body health together produce therapeutic growth for elderly persons as well as create vitality for rich and long lives.

Read more about Liz Lerman's Dance Exchange here.

Juliette Binoche: Actress, Artist, Dancer

"And I'd say that as I paint, I'm dancing on the paper, and as I'm dancing onstage, I'm drawing in the space."

Listen to Juliette Binoche on NPR's All Things Considered.

9.14.2009

Michael Jackson Tribute at the MTV Video Music Awards

The MTV Video Music Awards opened last night with a tribute to Michael Jackson.

What was their tribute, you might ask?

The dances from his videos. Enough said.



Click here for my previous blog post about his death.

9.12.2009

Frustrations and Joys and Entering my 29th Year


I have just entered the last year of my twenties with a whole lot of turmoil and excitement.

I received an email this week regarding the updated requirements of becoming a registered dance/movement therapist, which will be integrated into a new handbook compiled by the American Dance Therapy Association's (ADTA) Credential Committee (which is also transitioning to the official title of DMT Certification Board).

In the new handbook, new guidelines have been established, specifically:

...prior to starting the DMT internship, 9 credits of general training coursework, (abnormal psychology, psychopathology, developmental psychology, and group process)in addition to 18 credits of dance/movement therapy coursework must be completed.


I have approximately 450 internship hours completed at this time. And 3 credits of DMT coursework.

OH NO!!!!!!!!

And this is the main reason why I blog: to let other budding alternate route students aware of what is necessary to become a dance therapist ahead of time, making their alternate route experience, well, a little less bumpy and without these OH NO's.

So I do not know if all my internship hours will count. There is a fear that none will, or maybe only 200 hours will be accredited towards the fieldwork supervision hours necessary in addition to the 700 unpaid internship hours I've been chipping away on all year.

I don't mean to gripe about this experience, either. Trust me, this past year I have had to do A LOT of outside reading, writing, and planning with my supervisor to further understand the breadth and depth of working as a dance therapist in a psychiatric hospital. I've been getting cozy with the DSM-IV, and have been trying on my 'clinical hat' for writing notes. I've scientifically been doing trial and error kinds of experiments with patients and groups to see what happens, (like if the patients are responsive or not to something in particular) and I know for a fact that all of this would be much easier and smoother if I had all of the DMT coursework completed prior to beginning my internship.

Thus, I await further communication with the DMT Certification Board with an open heart and a positive mind. All these experiences in the past year have made a tremendous impact on my life and who I am as a dance/movement therapy graduate student. I would not give back this internship experience for anything.

And then later this week, as I turned 29 years old, I received a message from my three year old niece, saying:

If Auntie Blair is sweaty, I will fix her. I will put a tree and a glass of milk on her and I will wash away all of her eyes. Then I will knock over her milk and laugh about it, then I will sail back home.


So I dance with these nourishing images of milk and trees, dancing their growth potentials until I become sweaty with big eyes, and take a deep inhale. I remember why I decided to go alternate route and stay in California in the first place, opting out of a dance therapy graduate school experience in New York, a decision I made on the day my niece was born. And I exhale, and smile.

And then I got word that SB788 - the bill for professional licensure of clinical counselors in California has passed BOTH THE STATE ASSEMBLY AND THE STATE SENATE.

All that is left is for our Governor to sign it into law!

California Dance/Movement Therapists will indeed be considered licensed clinical counselors after years of being the ONLY state in this country that did not recognize dance therapy as a licensed profession.

This. is. great. news.

And it calls for a celebratory dance. I hope our Governator will sign the bill into law with a dancing heart, because according to this short article, Arnold says "Dancing is not my specialty." Let's hope his pen won't reflect those feelings for this momentus and historical moment for dance/movement therapists in California.

9.07.2009

Manu Chao Records his Latest Album in a Psychiatric Hospital with the Mentally Ill

I love Manu Chao.

If you've never heard of him, definitely check out his music. There's even a free download of his latest endeavor of creating music with psychiatric patients in Buenos Aires at www.VivaLaColifata.org .

Read more about it from the Guardian UK's article, and go listen to some good Manu Chao.

Adios!

8.27.2009

Staying in Sync and the End of Summer


I'm going to Grandma's house for a week of vacation in the humid midwest. In the meantime, I'd like to share a nice article from TherapyTimes.com about dance therapy.

Happy end of summer!

Staying in Sync
Dance/movement remedies to mind-body problems

by Bob Stott



The music is slow, barely audible, a soothing cello wafting across the room from the stereo in the corner. Anya stands between two chairs, her muscles rigid and clearly strained as she attempts to walk from one chair to the other, her therapist standing close by, but not touching her.

Midway, Anya suddenly freezes and her back leg becomes paralyzed. She is unable to move in any direction, and her whole body begins to shake from the strain. The therapist attempts to ground her by reminding Anya that she is in this room, a safe room, and not the traumatic place she is experiencing in her mind. Through this reaffirming tone, the therapist is attempting to teach Anya ways to alleviate the stress of these traumatic episodes.

The therapist moves closer to Anya, coming into her field of vision to establish direct eye contact, and stretches out her hand. Warily, Anya takes the hand and together, they begin to slowly sway, moving gently from side to side in a shared rhythm. Guided by Anya’s subtle movements and the continued eye contact, the therapist “dances” with her until the terrified period subsided, and Anya sits down in the chair to rest.

Looking up at the therapist with tears in her eyes, Anya finally makes the connection that her immobility was caused by some deep-rooted psychological disturbance, rather than her previous self-diagnosis that she was experiencing some rare form of stroke that went undetected, despite the extensive neurological work-up that had been performed on her.

Armed with this simple awareness, Anya is prepared to begin confronting the pain she realizes has been haunting her subconscious mind for a long time.

Different Symptoms, Different Therapy

It is one of the stereotypical aspects of human nature to divide and conquer certain obstacles as they are presented. And to many, the concept of therapy is no different. In the common view, people who have mental disabilities or behavioral problems are sent to a variety of psychologists or behavioral therapists, while people who are in need of bodily rehabilitation, due to injuries or physical disabilities, should be redirected to their type-specific physical therapist.

The logic is so cut and dry that it seems almost preposterous to question, yet, there are a large number of therapy patients whose symptoms would have them tumbling through the gaping holes in this rigid therapeutic divide.

The dance/movement therapist works on the premise that the mind and the body are interrelated, and the disturbances of one can often be seen by the reactions of the other. Not all people who are experiencing mental duress or overcoming a particularly traumatic experience react to it in the same way; many people, unsure of how to deal with the enormity of their feelings or how to express these feelings to others, attempt to repress the entire event.

This type of emotional suppression can sometimes surface later along with a number of different emotional, cognitive, and social problems, ranging from intimacy issues, to physical disability, to a disconnect with their normal activities.

Dance/movement therapists work with individuals of all ages and cultural backgrounds, operating in both group and private sessions, depending on which is better for a patient at a particular stage of therapy. Therapists primarily focus on helping their clients improve their cognitive skills or social abilities by developing effective communication skills and expanding their movement vocabulary, a particular pattern of actions that mirror the client’s own usually-limited range of expressed emotions.

“The language of the body is, in essence, our ‘native language’, since human beings communicate through their bodies long before they learn to talk,” says Susan Kleinman, MA, ADTR, NCC, a dance therapist for residential and outpatient services at the Coconut Creek-based Renfrew Center of Florida. “As we develop, we add words to our communication; however, body language remains our most acute means of recognizing our needs and expressing ourselves.”

Movement is the primary medium that dance/movement therapists use for observation, assessment, research, and therapeutic interaction. Working in settings where the patients are most susceptible to mind-body distortions, dance/movement therapists can be found in psychiatric and rehabilitation facilities, schools, nursing homes, drug treatment centers, counseling centers, crisis centers, and various medical facilities.

A Healthy Image

An eating disorder is just one of several ways in which repressed traumatic experiences can manifest themselves. Eating disorders need to be understood in the context of experienced trauma, with many eating problems beginning as survival strategies rather than vanity or obsession with appearance. Feeling helpless in the face of an inflicted trauma, people look for a part of their lives they can control – food and weight become that “control” for them.

Low self-esteem and constant self-criticism cause these individuals to constantly fear losing control, and even consuming a small amount of food could be considered a loss of control. Studies on women from various social backgrounds, sexual orientation, and ethnic cultures find that eating disorders are a common response to environmental stresses, such as sexual, physical, and emotional abuse.

“I work with girls and women with eating disorders, who also have trauma or abuse issues, or have substance abuse issues,” says Kleinman. “Women with eating disorders tend to avoid connecting in their body and because of this, they often feel numb. Whenever they get feelings that overwhelm them, they turn to their eating disorder in order to cope with those feelings. Instead of expressing a feeling or a problem, a person might hold back or restrict a problem, and that person may then go on to turn it into an eating disorder in which they mix up food and feelings. They then begin to restrict food, which becomes their main calling in life – restricting food – and quickly evolves into anorexia.”

To confront this common theme of disconnect, dance/movement therapists encourage their patients to communicate via postures, gestures, and idiosyncratic movements, with the therapist using their own physical responsiveness to create a therapeutic interaction.

Through these non-verbal sessions, underlying issues, such distorted body image, fear of intimacy, lack of body boundaries, and fear of taking risks, start to become visible in this exchange between patient and therapist.

A Child’s View

Dance/movement therapy is also utilized to treat a number of pervasive developmental disorders (PDDs) – characterized by delays in the development of socialization and communication skills – which has the therapist most frequently working with children. The most commonly known developmental disorder is autism, but PDDs also include Rett syndrome, childhood disintegrative disorder, and Asperger syndrome.

While parents may note symptoms of PDD as early as infancy, typically onset is prior to 3 years of age, evident by delays in the child’s ability to adjust to their environment or socialize with others.

Children afflicted with PDD vary widely in abilities, intelligence, and behaviors. While some children do not speak at all, others speak in limited phrases or conversations, and some are noted to have relatively normal language development.

These children are shown to display repetitive play skills and a limited set of social skills, as well as atypical responses to certain sensory information, such as loud noises or different kinds of light. Limited to particular patterns of expression and mechanical socialization, this disorder represents the sort of ‘break’ in the mind-body sensory input that dance/movement therapy can readily assist.

Gayle Gates, MA, ADTR, NCC, LPC, a dance/movement therapist and associate director of dance/movement therapy education at the Hahneman Creative Arts in Therapy program at Drexel University in Philadelphia, has worked extensively with adolescents with developmental disorders. Working exclusively with autistic children at the Philadelphia-based Green Tree School, Gates recommends that therapists pay close attention to a child’s physical posture before beginning therapeutic interaction.

“[Ask yourself], ‘What do I think when I look at this body as a whole? What are the body parts that the child is using?’” says Gates. “Is there a lack of complex gestures? Are there stereotypic and atypical patterns of mobility?”

From her experience, Gates has developed her own dance/movement therapy assessment, which allows therapists to observe and measure the movement data and interaction that patients express in a given environment:

Limitations interfering with the patient’s adaptation to an environment
Strengths that patients use to compensate for weaknesses
Emotional problems, such as depression, anxiety or anger
Behavioral problems, such as attention span, impulsivity, and low tolerance level
Body image disturbances involving distortion of self and environment
Fragmented communication patterns affecting the patient’s ability to interact and socialize

Through dance/movement therapy and the kinesthetic awareness that its therapists employ, patients are given another outlet through which they can express their suppressed emotions. By allowing patients to overcome their emotional hurdles at their own pace, therapists form a tighter bond with their patients – oftentimes this is a necessity when assisting them.

As exploration into the field continues, therapists from other modalities, such as physical and occupational therapy, are becoming steadily aware of the chances for progress available for patients that may have already plateaued in respect to physical rehabilitation.

8.16.2009

Check Out Ning.com

Have you heard of Ning.com?

You should check out Ning.com's Dance/Movement Therapy social networking page. Beautifully organized, it's an interactive and multi-modal page that offers videos, postings, articles, and chat opportunities, and more to share with others.

8.10.2009

Dancing with Apples on the Road

What do you want to reach for right now in your life?

It’s amazing how many patients reach for apples. Their arms reach upward, outstretched in a single movement, as they pick an imaginary apple off an imaginary tree. I see a gentle twist in a wrist indicating pulling the stem off of a branch, I see the rounding of fingers as if to hold the apple in the palm of their hand, bringing it in to their body. Sometimes they want to bake an apple pie with the apples, or offer one to their neighbors. Patients will reach for all types of apples--red, green, Fuji, pink lady, delicious, Macintosh--and I’m amazed with the diversity of apples present within our diverse group, but then again, this is Berkeley, a Northern California utopia for foodies. Everyone knows their varietals, they get to taste them at the local artisan farmer’s markets, experiencing a myriad of tastes and textures—sweet, bitter, sour, crisp, juicy, bland, mushy—and many are aware of which fruits are in season. As we’re approaching autumn now, the season for apples, and I’d like to offer you one to provide you with an apple dance, full of nourishment.

I wonder if it’s this metaphor of apple that is so intriguing to hospital inpatients. Do they yearn for nutrition, or comfort, or childhood snack time memories? Do they crave the seeds, the core, the flesh, and the skin as a way to reach for and hold a metaphor of their own body?

I am reaching for so many things I desperately want right now.

Most of all, I want to become a certified dance / movement therapist. I feel so passionately about this work that I want to scream it from the mountaintops and shout it through the valleys. Dance with others to help them? This is the best job on earth! This work feeds my soul and speaks to my truth, my intuition of yes. Movement works. To dance is human. To dance is art. It connects us to ourselves and others, and makes us feel better. Results are often instantaneous. But dance is also an act of alchemy and is purely improvisational, one that requires many tools for working with a myriad of populations, and a ton of education.

As an alternate route student in California, I made the commitment to become Dance Therapist Registered (DTR) knowing that it is a challenging road, mostly because there is no ADTA approved graduate program in the state, so the road ahead is bound to have a few speed bumps. At times, the road is not paved, and other times, it’s smooth and conducive to cruise control. I imagine my road is now surrounded by apple orchards, full of vitality and abundance, and most of all, opportunity.
When I first began my journey to become an alternate route student, I felt isolated and disconnected from my peers. I craved human connection with others reaching for my same goal.

So I started this blog.

I began my personal blog, The Dance to DTR, in November of 2008 as an effort to put my energy, experiences, and questions out into cyberspace. My hope was that others going through the same wonders, trials, and tribulations along the road would miraculously find my needle of a blog in the vast cyber haystack, and that the blog would become a platform for what to do (or, at times, more aptly what not to do) to become a dance/ movement therapist.

But now my blog has transitioned, in its own timely dance, to become a marketing tool for the field of dance and the expressive and creative therapies. Now my goal has also transitioned to explain what dance therapy is to the world. I blog and put a link to it to send it out on Twitter. I search for others in cyberspace who have similar interests or stories and continue to write, to learn, and to reach for more.

I was doing a lot of reaching and not a lot of receiving. And then one day I received a comment on my blog from a young woman that read,

Oh my gosh, i am soo happy to have stumbled upon your blog. It is my
dream to become a dance therapist but I am really confused as to where
I should start and what I should do. Do you happen to have an outline
as to the steps you took? Would you mind if I emailed you or scheduled
a phone interview? Thank you so much for providing all this information!


Someone found my blog! It’s a miracle!

The young woman called me for information on educational opportunities for alternate route certification in the state, and, with all the bottled energy I had planned to share with everyone interested in becoming alternate route in California, I talked her ear off. I told her about my journey and my thoughts and my advice, and about the then future event the California chapter (SCCADTA) was promoting in her area. I told her to sign up for the list serves to stay abreast of events, and of course, to stay tuned to my blog.

She arrived at the SCCADTA event a few months later, introducing herself to me, and as I reached out my arms to give her a welcoming hug, I felt proud of my journey thus far, and of meeting my intention to help others.

How ‘bout them apples?

International Expressive Arts Therapy Association (IEATA) Convention

The IEATA convention is this week in Cambridge, MA. I am not able to go, but am looking forward to attending (and co-presenting!) at the American Dance Therapy Association Conference this October in Portland.

Dance therapist, Donna Newman-Bluestein, is attending and presenting at IEATA's conference and has a blog posting about it you can read here. Sounds lovely!

Zen and the Art of Expression

When times are bad, like in this recession, we evolutionary beings tend to seek for ways to feel better by expressing ourselves and searching for meaning, understanding, and connection. We search for ways to feel human and alive, to console ourselves and trust that the world is a good place and that things will get better.

There's a zen saying that the purpose of life is "to express the ineffable, which is the ultimate paradox."

Expressing the ineffable is the language of art. And these days, performance art is used as self expression, healing, and to establish community. And it seems to be everywhere.

Many times in an improvisational way, performance artists plan (somewhat) to gather a large number of people to perform a certain an art, like doing a choreographed dance in a train station, for example, or causing a scene of some kind in an urban setting, like in the popular NYC group, Improv Everywhere's video, Human Mirror:



Some performance artists nonverbally make a statement, like in this video, also by the same group:



Performance art, which is a nonverbal display of art, integrates a lot of movement or dance as its medium. The human body is the canvas, and the situation and/or costume or clothing its paint.

It expresses the ineffable in a world full of paradox. Its a in-your-face-art, one in which passers by do not need a ticket and is usually documented or videotaped for the world to enjoy with the click of a button.

I'm planning one I hope to perform in before 2010, and I'll definitely be videotaping to share with the world.

Stay tuned.

8.06.2009

What is JCAHO?

"The state is here!" cried a doctor from her car as she pulled into the parking lot. My supervisor, walking with me into the hospital, stopped abruptly and slowly covered her hand over her mouth.
"You can't be here" She said as she looked at me.

Of course, I had a heads up for a few weeks, knowing that Jchao (pronounced "JAYCO"), whoever that was, was going to make a surprise visit to review the hospital, and all interns (that's me) were to be sent home. It made sense, I am technically a "volunteer" since I opted not to do my dance therapy internship through my graduate school, but rather for the hours and experience towards my hopeful dance therapy registration in the future, and I don't have formal training. Yet.

So I Googled "Jayco" when I got home and found this blog post, written by the CEO of a Boston hospital, stating why Jcaho, The Joint Commission, is important and necessary. Here is Jcaho's website on hospital standards, and Wikipedia's explanation of who they are and why they're so important for our health and wellbeing.

Good luck, hospital!

8.05.2009

Why I love Surfing


1. Movement.

Not a big surprise from a future dance / movement therapist, right?! The movement of the waves, the movement of paddling and pushing my body up on the board to stand, and the process of letting the ocean's energy move me through the water is like nothing else. It's a dance on water and an improvisational act. Each day the conditions are different, each wave is different, and each surf spot is different. I never know if the water will be crowded, what sea life and creatures will show up (or how they will behave), what the exact water temperature will be, or if I'll be able to catch a wave at all.

2. Ocean/Water.

My mother would take my sister and me to the beach when we were fighting a lot as children, saying in recent years that it was to "chill us out." It worked. And still does. Like a mother rocking her baby to sleep, the lapping of waves on the shore is a tranquil sound, and calm waves can create a rocking and holding quality of movement that is nourishing to my body and my mind. I still go to the ocean to clear my head, and I always feel better.
Water is healing. There's nothing revolutionary about that, the ancient Romans knew to take baths to cleanse, and Scandinavians still partake in dipping their bodies in freezing cold water temperatures after sweating profusely in saunas. Of course, we can't forget about Turkish baths or the cleansing rituals of the Japanese or Mikvot in Jewish culture.

3. Confronting the Unknown.

Waves can be very big and very scary. Many people die in the ocean. Many times while paddling out, I feel my body being aggressively pushed and pulled in a way that is totally out of my physical control. When the bigger sets come through, I find myself duck diving or pushing through the white water (for the smaller waves), hoping to not get rocked or too pummeled. I like to be in control in dark, cold, and wild waters. But I also love the feeling of confidence and joy I get when I confront these unknown conditions and fears. These are rare occasions when I am actually proud of myself.

4. Connecting to Nature.

Fresh air and exercise are a great combination, and to get both of while in the ocean is pure delight. Sunshine doesn't hurt, either. To quote a friend,

"There is something so tranquil and revitalizing about being in a body of water that connects all across the world…"

And it's no wonder that I find surfing, like dance, therapeutic. Like dance and movement on the earth and land, it's improvisational, healing, nourishing, and connecting. Growing up near the ocean, I've seen how surfers can become happily addicted to surfing in the ocean, their calm demeanors shining like a halo around their heads.

Since I am interested in alternative therapies, I did a little research and found:

The Jimmy Miller Foundation in Southern California uses Ocean Therapy to work with mentally ill children, and the Paskowitz family's Surfers Healing teaches children with Autism to surf.

8.04.2009

The Most Talented Chroeographer EVER...

...is Wayne McGregor.

I had the opportunity to intern for McGregor's dance company, Random, while I was studying abroad in London during college. I was living a dancer's dream there, commuting by Tube to Sadler's Wells Theatre by day, where Random is the resident company, and taking classes by night at Pineapple Dance Studio in the quaint Covent Garden. I was amazed with McGregor's talent then, and continue to be consumed with wonderment with every project he takes part in, which most recently was for the opening ceremonies of the World Swimming Championships in Rome:



McGregor's style, one that I believe competes to being the most unique and artistic of our time, is to use dance as a way embrace, question, and challenge aspects of being human. This perspective on dance as an organic art form along with a voluminous confidence (in personality and in the work) is one of the most appealing aspects, to me, about McGregor's work. I can't get enough of this guy. I want to drink him in, in ridiculous hope that some residue of his gold (which everything he puts his mind to turns into) will pool up in my gut, constructing a temple of genius there, so that I may become an enlightened (or golden), McGregorite. One blogger describes seeing his work for the first time in Proprius, a dance including London school kids age 8-14:

Wayne’s movement style is very familiar to me – a way of doing trust falls, of lifting and carrying other dancers, of turning people using your heels, of balancing in a way that’s just not quite standard in modern dance – a way I find far more intimate and involved than most modern dance, and certainly ballet – that totally says, “This is something Wayne McGregor created.” It’s a language that is as clearly itself as Chinese or Japanese – I would never mistake it for Korean just because it was in a different context. And it’s difficult, and it’s, I think, not something people wrap their heads around easily – it doesn’t really have a basis in the “language of dance” that people outside of modern dance aficionados have in their heads (think of ballroom dancing or club dancing or even how people dance in musicals – it’s not modern dance at all).


I agree that his work is a recognizable language, and would argue that it is modern dance, possibly postmodern. A world in which movement is art and life informs the dance.

Years ago when I was the intern, I remember much of McGregor's choreography was influenced and inspired by computer software programs that bend the body, on screen, in impossible and unthinkable ways. McGregor's recipe for choreography also adds quality dancers with strong, very thin and flexible bodies, music and sounds by Scanner, and a splash of artistic lighting. The result is genius.

7.31.2009

Proven: Dance Combats Dementia



For hundreds of years dance manuals and other writings have lauded the health benefits of dancing, usually as physical exercise. More recently we've seen research on further health benefits of dancing, such as stress reduction and increased serotonin level, with its sense of well-being.

Then most recently we've heard of another benefit: Frequent dancing apparently makes us smarter. A major study added to the growing evidence that stimulating one's mind can ward off Alzheimer's disease and other dementia, much as physical exercise can keep the body fit.

You've probably heard about the New England Journal of Medicine report on the effects of recreational activities on mental acuity in aging. Here it is in a nutshell.

The 21-year study of senior citizens, 75 and older, was led by the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City, funded by the National Institute on Aging, and published in the New England Journal of Medicine. Their method for objectively measuring mental acuity in aging was to monitor rates of dementia, including Alzheimer's disease.

The study wanted to see if any physical or cognitive recreational activities influenced mental acuity. They discovered that some activities had a significant beneficial effect. Other activities had none.

They studied cognitive activities such as reading books, writing for pleasure, doing crossword puzzles, playing cards and playing musical instruments. And they studied physical activities like playing tennis or golf, swimming, bicycling, dancing, walking for exercise and doing housework.

One of the surprises of the study was that almost none of the physical activities appeared to offer any protection against dementia. There can be cardiovascular benefits of course, but the focus of this study was the mind. There was one important exception: the only physical activity to offer protection against dementia was frequent dancing.

Reading - 35% reduced risk of dementia

Bicycling and swimming - 0%

People who played the hardest gained the most: For example, seniors who did crossword puzzles four days a week had a 47% lower risk of dementia than those who did the puzzles once a week.

Playing golf - 0%

Dancing frequently - 76%.
That was the greatest risk reduction of any activity studied, cognitive or physical.


Quoting Dr. Joseph Coyle, a Harvard Medical School psychiatrist who wrote an accompanying commentary:
"The cerebral cortex and hippocampus, which are critical to these activities, are remarkably plastic, and they rewire themselves based upon their use."

And from from the study itself, Dr. Katzman proposed these persons are more resistant to the effects of dementia as a result of having greater cognitive reserve and increased complexity of neuronal synapses. Like education, participation in some leisure activities lowers the risk of dementia by improving cognitive reserve.

Read more of Richard Powers' article here.