Monthly Archives: March 2013

yield, baby

Laila  (& Precious) yielding

Another of the gifts of having a long visit with my grand daughter Laila Rose is the opportunity to do some hands on revisiting of Body-Mind Centering, the groundbreaking work of Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen.  According to Bonnie, all of our movement is built upon these five fundamental actions (1) yielding, (2) pushing, (3) reaching, (4) holding, and (5) pulling. Any movement can be seen as a variation or combination of these basic actions.

I am especially interested in the yielding, as that is the action that I find personally the most challenging.  I don’t yield a lot.  So besides playing with Laila using yielding, I have been using yielding in my riding.  Yielding my hips into the saddle and then into the horse’s back and then yielding my legs down to the ground, and practicing a yielding contact on the reins.  That is different from “giving the reins away.”  It has to do with the Aikido principle that Mark Rashid taught us about softening toward the horse’s mouth without actually moving the hands. When I yield my hips into the horse, there is a corresponding (subtle) push and then a reach through the head that creates a beautiful balancing counter-tension.  Naturally, breathing has to support the yielding (and everything else).

Interestingly, Bonnie’s husband Len is a longtime practitioner of Aikido.  Connections everywhere!

For those of you who want to know more, dance therapist and BMC practitioner Susan Aposhyan describes these fundamentals this way:

Yielding is a quality of resting in contact with the environment and underlies our basic relationship to the world. It is about the state of being versus doing, and forms the basis for the ability to act effectively in the world. In being in contact with the environment, discernment can be developed as to whether push, reach, or pull is desired or appropriate.

Pushing separates oneself from the immediate environment. The action contracts (shortens) all the musculature around the pushing limb resulting in the body becoming denser and more substantial. This action supports the capacity to psychologically feel, establish, and maintain boundaries, thus promoting an internal sense of support. It also supports the process of individuation and confidence building.

Reaching is an action that supports going beyond the sense of self. It is a way of extending out towards others or towards objects. Psychologically, reaching manifests curiosity, desire, longing, and compassion. This action may, however, expose one to risk taking and a sense of vulnerability.

Holding and Pulling allows for reaching out into the environment towards something/someone desirable and bringing it closer to oneself. Psychologically, the ability to hold and pull depends on the capacity to yield, push and reach. These actions provide the opportunity to reach out and take in from the external space.

 

Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen

I first met Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen in 1980 when I was in the certification program in Laban Movement Analysis in New York.  That was my first exposure to her life’s work:  Body-Mind Centering.  Our paths continued to cross over the past more than thirty years.  My last hands on experience with Bonnie was when she helped me to heal from my first hip replacement.  With the most exquisitely light touch, she literally rewove the tendon- ligament-muscle-bone-nerve-fluid connections that had been disrupted by the surgery.

Lately, after the birth of my grand daughter, I have become obsessed (again) with Bonnie’s work – especially the infant developmental patterning work.  Of course, one thing leads to another.  Next I have been exploring her work with organ support for movement in relationship to my riding.  And then, sure enough, looking at the skeletal work in relationship to my injured knee.  The gifts of Bonnie’s work are endless and continually unfolding. Thank you Bonnie, again and again.

Check out my Facebook page for a few more videos and also a lovely piece on infant development patterning from a BMC group in Holland.  And check out the BMC website and YouTube Channel and of course her wonderful book, Sensing, Feeling and Action..