Your Map
You will need some kind of a padded surface, such as a Yoga mat or folded blanket. A bed is too soft. You should also have a folded towel nearby, that you can use to put under your head when lying on your side.
Click the link for the scan.
Does your attention travel to any one area, before the others, does some area interest you more than the others, does one part feel bigger or more aware than the others?
Set yourself ten minutes. You have the option of
1) drawing the area which comes to your attention, in whatever way you like, or
2) writing about it.
Here are some writing suggestions. Feel free to do something different.
-- Write the name of the part. “My neck” for instance, as many times as you like, until something occurs to you. Write as quickly as you can, not returning to edit. Don’t worry about spelling or grammar. Write as badly as you can, whatever that means for you. If you are at a loss for words, repeat “my neck, my neck, my neck.”
Need an example? Here’s a poem by bpnichol from his book Selected Organs, Parts of an Autobiography.
http://artistsbooksandmultiples.blogspot.ca/2013/07/bpnichol-selected-organs-parts-of.html
-- Create a cluster. Write “my neck” in the middle of the paper, circle it, and then draw circles nearby including related words, connecting them with lines. You may create more than one cluster, branching out from the central word. You may at some point get a sense of a story you’d like to tell or a piece of writing that could emerge.
Here are some examples of clusters:
http://www.gabrielerico.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=14&Itemid=69
Here is a website using randomization in combination with the works of experimental and avant garde writers. It might offer some ideas about other ways to proceed.
http://www.languageisavirus.com/
After about ten minutes do one or more of the Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement® lessons above.
Then return, either to the first activity or choose another activity.
The associations don’t matter – positive, negative, obscure. The purpose is to disrupt habits of thinking and create new possibilities, but also to practice knowing that you have a choice.
Awareness Through Movement is a registered service mark of the Feldenkrais Guild of North America®.