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AnotherUser
Bronze Member
Enough of the diary today. There are new things to report, but they can wait. I want to write about the work I have done with the back/spine in the last month, and about how biofeedback seems to function when you put sensorimotor psychotherapy into practice.
(I apologize that I sometimes write 'psychorimotor therapy' instead of 'sensorimotor psychotherapy'. You know what I mean...)
Extending the spine/back
I wrote in an earlier entry that my T, pleased with the work I began with my feet/legs, suggested that I add work with my arms to my experiments. And I also wrote that I have failed to be able to do that; my arms still just hang at my sides, and I have work to do both with her and with myself to understand why I cannot move and change how I use them; there are deeper issues involved, themes of 'fear to act', and 'freezing', I think. I only move my arms when I speak Italian, but I need to tackle this problem in my native language, with the words (and in the places) which have 'old power' over me.
Since I realized that my arms would have to wait, I turned my attention to my back and spine, about which much is written in Trauma and the Body.
I understood very quickly that I have no connection with my back at all; I cannot feel it. It is quite similar to the situation with my arms. The book describes a torture victim who lost touch with the back that had been literally whipped so often, and how his T gradually helped him to reconnect with it. Obviously that was a far more serious case, but it was interesting even for me to read about.
There was one thing I knew I could do with my back for which I have no analogous possibility with my arms - to stop compressing my spine and stand up straight.
I have now been doing it for two weeks. My absolute total lifetime record in the last forty years is about thirty minutes, with my body fighting that 'standing up straight', so that the experience before had been physically painful and difficult to maintain; impossible to maintain.
But in those cases, the pressure to stand up straight was internal; a girlfriend who complained I was slouching; my dad or some teacher telling me to 'stand up straight'.
It is a very different matter when you do it for yourself, and not the world, and I will write more about that in a moment.
The practical side of standing up straight
When I told her of this back experiment, my therapist asked me how it made me feel, and I answered honestly that I have not got that far with the experiment yet. For now I am just 'doing it'.
How strange it felt at the start! I am 5 "11, and quite barrel-chested, so I felt that I must seem an extraordinary sight as I walked about with this new extension in the body. In fact, I passed a window in the Bucharest old town, and saw that what felt to me 'bizarre' and 'over-extended' just looked like an ordinary adult man standing fairly straight, but still 'vulturing' his neck forward a little bit. So in fact I had to stand even straighter!
Though the book carefully avoids any comparison to hanging oneself (!), it instructs the person attempting to straighten their spine to imagine how the body would compose itself if it was suspended from a line, and this gives a good guideline for the work.
I carry a rucksack most days hung over my right shoulder. I found that if I put the rucksack on properly, with both straps over both shoulders, it really aids me in staying straight - particularly if the rucksack happens to be heavy that day. So that's one external aid that has been useful. If you're trying it, you might find that certain clothing or clothing types makes it easier.
Why I compressed my spine
I slouched my whole life for a number of reasons; early on it was a defense against the bullies and adults who criticized me for being a fat kid and having 'boy boobs'. Since I was barrel-chested, they were impossible to hide.
And besides that, it is about invisibility and trying not to be seen by the world. Slouching is quite intimately connected with avoiding eye contact. They are both examples of magical thinking - the way babies will play the 'eye-hiding' game with their mothers, as if closing one's own eyes could make one invisible to the external world. I think the concept is known as solipsism.
It must be pretty obvious that a guy nearly six foot tall is going to draw more attention and not less by having a warped posture. But sensorimotor psychotherapy illustrates how those defective coping mechanisms just keep 're-photocopying' themselves out of our childhood and into the years and decades of our adult lives, with their own continually damaging and unchanging logic.
I am slowly bringing my 'back work' into times when I am simply by myself in an apartment, etc, rather than in public, but it takes work. By comparison, I have brought my leg-work (feet awareness and leg posture) into the domestic environment more and more.
Facial expression and bio-feedback
When you're out and about, and observing and being mindful about what is going on in your body, you will likely (as I do) be paying particular attention to one or more parts of the body. In my case I concentrate on my feet and legs (whose behavior I am actively changing as part of therapy), and my abdomen (which is the barometer of my anxiety at any given time).
(also, lately, my back and spine)
But the idea is to be aware of what is going on all through your body. That includes your facial muscles, and awareness of your expression. Along with the abdomen, it's one of the key indicators to what is happening in your body as it relates to people and the world.
When I feel my facial muscles tensing up, when I feel that a frown has developed, I take note of it and what is going on in the environment or internally that may have caused it.
But this is super-important all through this part of SP: I do not attempt to change the expression.
SP is not about being 'hard on yourself'; you've probably had quite enough of that in your life. The last thing you need is some imaginary version of R. Lee Ermey in Full Metal Jacket telling you to 'Get your act together!'.
So I just keep observing - environment, thoughts...are they negative? What are they? Make a note. Keep watching, keep aware, and leave your face alone. If it needs to frown, let it.
Strangely enough, the frown tends to disappear within less than ten minutes when you approach it with this level of attention and care.
The same applies to the back/spine. Am I slouching? Are my shoulders tense and getting painful? Okay, so I consciously relax them - but I'm not doing it to 'solve the problem'; I'm doing it to see if changing the body's attitude changes how I feel. This is the crucial difference between the Full Metal Jacket approach and sensorimotor psychotherapy.
You must do it for yourself, and you must do it with the kindness and adult responsibility that may not have been there when the debilitating habits formed earlier in your life.
Neither are these exercises intended to make you 'pass for normal' in the outside world. Those people passing by are just fine, don't worry about them; they don't care, and you don't know them anyway. This is your day in your lab. It's enough to make yourself tolerably presentable before you go out, and none of your experiments (most of which involve tiny changes in posture, etc) will even be remotely obvious to anyone else anyway.
However, it is interesting to observe how the changes you make in yourself with SP affect the world...
Hypnotizing the pharmacist
About two weeks ago I had been practicing body observation for about five hours when I realized I needed to go into a chemist and buy a flu jab. After so much effort with the technique, I felt very relaxed, facially and in my body. And that, for me, is the cue to challenge the state and observe the results.
Trying to buy anything in a country where you don't speak the language much is a nice little stressor-test, so this was the moment.
You also need to understand how traumatized the average Romanian shopkeeper is. If they do speak English, you're putting them under stress by making them speak it (usually) imperfectly; if they don't then you're both stressed as you try to negotiate the transaction with semaphore and what few words you might have of the other's language. Romanians, brilliant and loving as they are, have been through a lot of hard times, and they're not usually confident people, particularly with foreigners.
So pharmacist #1 is a girl in her mid-twenties. She already looks alarmed because there's a customer! How much worse it gets as I ask (in Romanian) if she speaks English. Her own facial expression deepens into such a frown, you would think I had walked in there with a bomb-belt.
But though I wish her no harm, I don't care. I'm too busy observing my own facial reactions. Doing that and having a difficult language exchange is as much as I can process in real-time.
She calls her senior colleague, a woman in her mid-thirties, who emerges from the back with an even deeper frown. Waves of hostility are blowing towards me, but they're deflected away like I was a blade in a wind-tunnel; I'm too busy watching the bio-feedback in my own body and trying to explain what I want to buy to engage in it at all.
My face stays calm and even and good-natured, because that's how it was when I came in and I don't have time to do anything else with it.
Pharmacist #2 starts to relax. We work it out, that I want to buy the vaccine. I don't react to her relaxation any more than I reacted to her stress, I'm too busy with the language and with observing my own body language.
After five minutes, pharmacist #2's own face mirrors my own. She is relaxed and happy, and looking at me with a strange kind of impressed amazement. She seems to be fighting the smile that is attempting to light up her face. As I leave, she looks after me as if she is falling in love with me.
None of this matters in terms of anything I want to do with it in the real world. I wasn't attempting to influence, hypnotize or manipulate anyone, and I'm not looking for a date with the lady. But I do observe that my own internal bio-feedback has transmitted itself over to her. She feels better too; and she feels very positive about me, starting from a position of total hostility.
Not all days are like this, or contain incidents like this. But if you put as many hours into body observation the SP way, these events do multiply, and they are encouraging signs for the future.
(I apologize that I sometimes write 'psychorimotor therapy' instead of 'sensorimotor psychotherapy'. You know what I mean...)
Extending the spine/back
I wrote in an earlier entry that my T, pleased with the work I began with my feet/legs, suggested that I add work with my arms to my experiments. And I also wrote that I have failed to be able to do that; my arms still just hang at my sides, and I have work to do both with her and with myself to understand why I cannot move and change how I use them; there are deeper issues involved, themes of 'fear to act', and 'freezing', I think. I only move my arms when I speak Italian, but I need to tackle this problem in my native language, with the words (and in the places) which have 'old power' over me.
Since I realized that my arms would have to wait, I turned my attention to my back and spine, about which much is written in Trauma and the Body.
I understood very quickly that I have no connection with my back at all; I cannot feel it. It is quite similar to the situation with my arms. The book describes a torture victim who lost touch with the back that had been literally whipped so often, and how his T gradually helped him to reconnect with it. Obviously that was a far more serious case, but it was interesting even for me to read about.
There was one thing I knew I could do with my back for which I have no analogous possibility with my arms - to stop compressing my spine and stand up straight.
I have now been doing it for two weeks. My absolute total lifetime record in the last forty years is about thirty minutes, with my body fighting that 'standing up straight', so that the experience before had been physically painful and difficult to maintain; impossible to maintain.
But in those cases, the pressure to stand up straight was internal; a girlfriend who complained I was slouching; my dad or some teacher telling me to 'stand up straight'.
It is a very different matter when you do it for yourself, and not the world, and I will write more about that in a moment.
The practical side of standing up straight
When I told her of this back experiment, my therapist asked me how it made me feel, and I answered honestly that I have not got that far with the experiment yet. For now I am just 'doing it'.
How strange it felt at the start! I am 5 "11, and quite barrel-chested, so I felt that I must seem an extraordinary sight as I walked about with this new extension in the body. In fact, I passed a window in the Bucharest old town, and saw that what felt to me 'bizarre' and 'over-extended' just looked like an ordinary adult man standing fairly straight, but still 'vulturing' his neck forward a little bit. So in fact I had to stand even straighter!
Though the book carefully avoids any comparison to hanging oneself (!), it instructs the person attempting to straighten their spine to imagine how the body would compose itself if it was suspended from a line, and this gives a good guideline for the work.
I carry a rucksack most days hung over my right shoulder. I found that if I put the rucksack on properly, with both straps over both shoulders, it really aids me in staying straight - particularly if the rucksack happens to be heavy that day. So that's one external aid that has been useful. If you're trying it, you might find that certain clothing or clothing types makes it easier.
Why I compressed my spine
I slouched my whole life for a number of reasons; early on it was a defense against the bullies and adults who criticized me for being a fat kid and having 'boy boobs'. Since I was barrel-chested, they were impossible to hide.
And besides that, it is about invisibility and trying not to be seen by the world. Slouching is quite intimately connected with avoiding eye contact. They are both examples of magical thinking - the way babies will play the 'eye-hiding' game with their mothers, as if closing one's own eyes could make one invisible to the external world. I think the concept is known as solipsism.
It must be pretty obvious that a guy nearly six foot tall is going to draw more attention and not less by having a warped posture. But sensorimotor psychotherapy illustrates how those defective coping mechanisms just keep 're-photocopying' themselves out of our childhood and into the years and decades of our adult lives, with their own continually damaging and unchanging logic.
I am slowly bringing my 'back work' into times when I am simply by myself in an apartment, etc, rather than in public, but it takes work. By comparison, I have brought my leg-work (feet awareness and leg posture) into the domestic environment more and more.
Facial expression and bio-feedback
When you're out and about, and observing and being mindful about what is going on in your body, you will likely (as I do) be paying particular attention to one or more parts of the body. In my case I concentrate on my feet and legs (whose behavior I am actively changing as part of therapy), and my abdomen (which is the barometer of my anxiety at any given time).
(also, lately, my back and spine)
But the idea is to be aware of what is going on all through your body. That includes your facial muscles, and awareness of your expression. Along with the abdomen, it's one of the key indicators to what is happening in your body as it relates to people and the world.
When I feel my facial muscles tensing up, when I feel that a frown has developed, I take note of it and what is going on in the environment or internally that may have caused it.
But this is super-important all through this part of SP: I do not attempt to change the expression.
SP is not about being 'hard on yourself'; you've probably had quite enough of that in your life. The last thing you need is some imaginary version of R. Lee Ermey in Full Metal Jacket telling you to 'Get your act together!'.
So I just keep observing - environment, thoughts...are they negative? What are they? Make a note. Keep watching, keep aware, and leave your face alone. If it needs to frown, let it.
Strangely enough, the frown tends to disappear within less than ten minutes when you approach it with this level of attention and care.
The same applies to the back/spine. Am I slouching? Are my shoulders tense and getting painful? Okay, so I consciously relax them - but I'm not doing it to 'solve the problem'; I'm doing it to see if changing the body's attitude changes how I feel. This is the crucial difference between the Full Metal Jacket approach and sensorimotor psychotherapy.
You must do it for yourself, and you must do it with the kindness and adult responsibility that may not have been there when the debilitating habits formed earlier in your life.
Neither are these exercises intended to make you 'pass for normal' in the outside world. Those people passing by are just fine, don't worry about them; they don't care, and you don't know them anyway. This is your day in your lab. It's enough to make yourself tolerably presentable before you go out, and none of your experiments (most of which involve tiny changes in posture, etc) will even be remotely obvious to anyone else anyway.
However, it is interesting to observe how the changes you make in yourself with SP affect the world...
Hypnotizing the pharmacist
About two weeks ago I had been practicing body observation for about five hours when I realized I needed to go into a chemist and buy a flu jab. After so much effort with the technique, I felt very relaxed, facially and in my body. And that, for me, is the cue to challenge the state and observe the results.
Trying to buy anything in a country where you don't speak the language much is a nice little stressor-test, so this was the moment.
You also need to understand how traumatized the average Romanian shopkeeper is. If they do speak English, you're putting them under stress by making them speak it (usually) imperfectly; if they don't then you're both stressed as you try to negotiate the transaction with semaphore and what few words you might have of the other's language. Romanians, brilliant and loving as they are, have been through a lot of hard times, and they're not usually confident people, particularly with foreigners.
So pharmacist #1 is a girl in her mid-twenties. She already looks alarmed because there's a customer! How much worse it gets as I ask (in Romanian) if she speaks English. Her own facial expression deepens into such a frown, you would think I had walked in there with a bomb-belt.
But though I wish her no harm, I don't care. I'm too busy observing my own facial reactions. Doing that and having a difficult language exchange is as much as I can process in real-time.
She calls her senior colleague, a woman in her mid-thirties, who emerges from the back with an even deeper frown. Waves of hostility are blowing towards me, but they're deflected away like I was a blade in a wind-tunnel; I'm too busy watching the bio-feedback in my own body and trying to explain what I want to buy to engage in it at all.
My face stays calm and even and good-natured, because that's how it was when I came in and I don't have time to do anything else with it.
Pharmacist #2 starts to relax. We work it out, that I want to buy the vaccine. I don't react to her relaxation any more than I reacted to her stress, I'm too busy with the language and with observing my own body language.
After five minutes, pharmacist #2's own face mirrors my own. She is relaxed and happy, and looking at me with a strange kind of impressed amazement. She seems to be fighting the smile that is attempting to light up her face. As I leave, she looks after me as if she is falling in love with me.
None of this matters in terms of anything I want to do with it in the real world. I wasn't attempting to influence, hypnotize or manipulate anyone, and I'm not looking for a date with the lady. But I do observe that my own internal bio-feedback has transmitted itself over to her. She feels better too; and she feels very positive about me, starting from a position of total hostility.
Not all days are like this, or contain incidents like this. But if you put as many hours into body observation the SP way, these events do multiply, and they are encouraging signs for the future.