Kinesthetic Edge™ Releases Free Feldenkrais® Podcast for Dancers
Walpole, MA—Kinesthetic Edge is pleased to announce the release of IntelliDANCE, a free Feldenkrais Podcast for dancers—available now at http://intellidance.blogspot.com and coming soon to iTunes. A somatic technique that heightens kinesthetic awareness and improves overall body organization, Feldenkrais leads to healthier, more efficient movement patterns that enhance dance and can extend careers threatened by injury.
IntelliDANCE is hosted by Andrea Higgins, a Walpole resident, who for
many years was active in the professional dance community in Boston.
After retiring from the stage, she earned her Master’s Degree in Dance
and became certified as a Feldenkrais Method® practitioner. Higgins first became interested in Feldenkrais as
a dancer suffering from a knee injury. “I had been in physical therapy
for weeks and was not experiencing any relief. After just one Feldenkrais lesson I felt improvement. The pain wasn’t gone, but it was definitely better,” said Higgins.
As founder and director of Kinesthetic Edge, Higgins teaches clients of
all fitness levels how to “move better.” In addition to offering Feldenkrais workshops and private lessons, she publishes free audio lessons on her Web site, KinestheticEdge.com.
Higgins caters to athletes from a variety of disciplines, but she
developed the IntelliDANCE Podcast especially for the dance community.
“I took some of my favorite Feldenkrais lessons and tailored them for dance-specific applications, explained Higgins, adding that, as a whole, the Feldenkrais Method comprises some six hundred “Awareness Through Movement®” lessons.
“The first episode of IntelliDANCE deals with alignment. Specifically,
we look at the impact of turnout (i.e. the turned out position of the
legs that ballet dancers must master, and which other forms of dance
utilize as well) on spinal alignment,” Higgins said.
Higgins hopes dance teachers, in particular, will listen to the
Podcast. “Dance teachers can have a life-long impact on their students.
I hope to provide them with simple movement exercises that they can
incorporate into a typical class to bring about better, faster and
healthier results,” said Higgins.
Dancers who tune in will find information they can immediately begin
implementing on their own. “Many dancers prepare for class by simply
stretching. I would love to see more of them adding Feldenkrais
to their pre-class warm-ups. Not only would it help them to better
integrate their movement, but for those dealing with injury, like I was
when I first discovered it, Feldenkrais can be a career saver.”
The IntelliDANCE Podcast is available at http://intellidance.blogspot.com. A link to the alignment lesson mentioned in this article appears beneath the October 1, 2007, post, titled: Alignment for Dancers—Part One: The Inside-Out Principle. Those who enjoy the program are invited to sign up for a free subscription to both the blog and Podcast.
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