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 Journey to Tensegrity -2

I have been doing physical therapy since 1969, when I became qualified in a Swedish massage therapy.

In 1974, after adding osteopathy skills, I discovered
clinic and began his career in the field of physical medicine.
Over the next ten years, I attended many workshops on osteopathy and chiropractic techniques. Some studies have provoked that standard stress-analytical methods of osteopathy are not needed. This approach fascinated me because it was a less decisive approach, but it also seemed more kind to the body. These less powerful approaches used body position and tissue tension to facilitate correction.

One of the most eminent researchers who studied and used the oriental methods of therapy, and from his theories developed new physical methods that meet the criteria. Dr. George Goodhart developed a series of muscle tests from the Chinese theory of meridians.
which correlates with the diagnostic method for diagnosing the pulse used in acupuncture. Collected pages of Dr. G. Goodhart. Acupuncture and knowledge of the meridian system is thousands of years old. Applied Kinesiology is one of the most
several systems that added new information to ancient knowledge. Walter, D.S. (preface) Applied Kinesiology.

These muscle tests soon became robust and empirical for understanding the links between eastern and western methodology. With the help of muscle tests, he demonstrated the effectiveness of the method and a reliable form of diagnosis and post-verification. Even the Swedish massage, which I originally practiced, was developed by the Swedish doctor Peter Lin from a Chinese background. This caused me to interest in the oriental methods of therapy and lifestyle.

My other interest in the East also began in 1970, when I began to study Japanese karate. After studying fifteen years, I discovered that many of the Japanese masters were also doctors of Japanese medicine. In 1985, I began to study the ancient form of the principles of the Japanese warrior. The grandmaster of this school was Dr. Masaaki Hatsumi and was the owner of the ancient scrolls of nine schools of martial arts and the school of ancient medicine. His day class was practicing Seitai, which translates as the Japanese form of osteopathy.

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I first met Dr. Hatsumi when he first came to England in 1986 to demonstrate his fighting principles. Although his fighting skills were frighteningly effective, another quality shone from him. He was friendly, gentle, and the movement of his body was graceful. He seemed to have plenty of time to dodge the attacks made on him during the demonstrations, and seemed to float when he was undergoing various techniques.
With trepidation, I watched a man over the age of 20, working with the ease and precision of a finger to block my opponents in confused body configurations. To find out what this man practiced as an osteopath, I completely intrigued me and thought about his methodology. When he practiced the puppet, he would have said: “Budo and Medicine are the same!” And if medicine is not practiced well, it can kill. He told us to study nature and learn from nature, and the natural movement was all that was needed to maintain health.

That day in 1986 I was changed, I found my mentor, a person who was in my hobby and my profession, and described them as one. I moved from the hard physical discipline "Karate" to a softer, evasive method of protecting the body. This also affected my
the decision to stop manipulating the standard osteopathic method and to study the naturalistic approach of Dr. Hatsumi.
I used body positioning and gentle movement in my practice methodology.

Slowly, I began to get results from this body orientation approach. In 1995, I went to Dr. Hatsumi to ask for guidance and an opportunity to demonstrate these principles to him. He was impressed with my progress and said that he would teach me one on one. He painted calligraphy for me, which was translated as mysterious hands. He said that it describes what he saw while watching me.

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In a private session, Dr. Hatsumi worked on a friend of mine who had been a patient for several years. This man suffered from Osteopetro - a disease of a fragile bone from birth. He suffered many bone fractures and injuries, but in the twenties he severely broke the femur in his left leg. After many hours of surgery, they had to abandon the correction of transactions, as they could not drill a fragile bone. This left him after many months in a cast with a bound left leg. This is due to abnormal pelvis and scoliosis of the spine. He had severe lameness and he had to walk with a stick. Despite these and many other difficulties after treatment from me, he even began military training.

After several years of study, he visited Dr. Hatsumi with me. Dr. Hatsumi noticed how he was walking, asked him to lie down and began to feel his injured leg. A few minutes later he decided on the spot and said "This is the place." Then he quickly and deeply presses the fabric of the foot. My friend's pelvis and spine were intercepted and twisted when he pushed his toes up. Then my friend got up without help and walked a few steps with a little limp and more vertically aligned. He sat up so that his stick was too short to reach the ground where he held it. He could also step forward with both legs almost evenly.

I now saw evidence that I can only describe as a miracle. Then Dr. Hatsumi pressed my foot in a similar place so that I could feel the depth and pressure of pressure. He explained that this feeling and the movement of the body that generates it is the most important thing to learn. All the lessons of my teacher were delivered in this oxymoronic way. He demonstrated a technique that stretched your imagination, and then let you think about the questions that would lead you there.

Another time, he pressed my cheek with his thumb for a moment and immediately suffered all my symptoms of fatigue and jet lag. He explained that these effects on the body were possible because of the principle known as Gairon, which the translators explained him as “The Big Picture,” private textbooks (1995). M. Hatsumi, the interconnection of all things, the sense of nature.

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My research was to understand the relationship between the osteopathic lesion and the tissues that preserved the lesion.
The manipulation was based either on high speeds, or on bones, or on strong leak principles. These methods can be painful for the recipient and can also destroy adjacent tissues. In 1995, I was lucky enough to observe first-hand that the Japanese master rebuilds pelvic and spinal distortion in moments without force or leakage. He actually pressed his inner thigh with his thumb for two to three seconds. With the re-client all the physical factors of the problem were rebuilt.

He said that this approach is possible because of the principle known in Japanese as Gyron. “The connection between the biosphere and Gaia is similar to that between your body and you. The biosphere is a three-dimensional geographic area in which living organisms exist. Gaia is a super-organism made up of all life, closely connected with air, oceans and surface locks. "Lovelock. J, GAIA body and the role of energy in health and disease ". Oschman. J, Energy Medicine (p232)

The basis of my new research was based on the following principles. It had to be natural, it was a feeling that came from the heart and was delivered through the fingers, it was released in the spine and delivered through our walk. Every time he taught technique, he explained these principles. "All this is in your walk, you must find it in nature, it must come from your heart, and if you do not understand Gyron, then you will not be able to continue." The simplistic but mechanistic way he observed and then considered the condition was impressive, but disappointing. My early attempts to imitate his technique were based on strong pressure, which soon
Dennis Bartram - A Journey to Tensegrity that my clients complain about.

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When I lit, I could not get the fabric to respond.
This disappointment led me to explore many approaches to pressing into tissue from Shiatsu, various types of massage, Rolfing, and other physical modalities. There was nothing
the effect of Dr. Hatsumi on the fabric.
"The spirit and sense of technology is more important than the mechanical means of achieving it." Hassumi personal Discussion, 1995. My main area of ​​research in studying the natural principles of human movement and medicine was bipedal locomotion and our vertical competence against gravity.
The main reason for this was that Dr. Hatsumi explained that humans are the only creatures that need to learn to move in a natural way. Dr. M. Hatsumi (1995) "Thus, the neurodeveloping stages of crawling, creeping, rough walking and mature walking, through which normal children develop, are directly related
evolutionary ancestors of amphibians, reptiles and mammals. Novella, MD (p1).

When we move naturally, we move energy around our body and unite the left and right hemispheres of the brain. My personal experience in overcoming dyslexia was a cross-scan program developed by two doctors named Doman and Delacato. They found that babies who do not crawl evolve from early programming of the homo-lateral movement to walking and miss the development of cross-crawling.

This leads to a desynchronized picture of the brain that can cause dyslexia, dysclasia and dyspraxia.
Therefore, my search went further along the way. The problem of studying physical functions is a reductionist approach that does not take into account the overall coordination or integration of the body. "The reductionist approach claims that it is almost impossible to study phenomena at the level of the whole organism simply because it is too complicated." Oschman J., p48 (2000). Energy Medicine

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Most of the data that I could find when walking is an anatomical Newtonian approach to movement. The whole idea of ​​Guyon Hatsumi’s approach was to include everything, and he explained that he was everywhere in nature. The traditional Newtonian concept of causality excluded non-deterministic data, since the information did not fit into its paradigm. Accepted knowledge that the muscles moved the bones, cutting, and that the bones were carriers of body weight, is not enough to demonstrate the coordination of natural movement.

In nature, there is a concept known as ephemeralization, which means minimum effort and maximum output. When it is applied to the Newtonian approach of body motion, it does not apply.
The earliest form of movement developed through the separation of somites to become flexor muscles in the spines of the fish. They simply fell, and at the final stage of contracting, the nasty set of flexors fell. This led to the movement of fish with minimal use of the brain and body with the maximum variety of its strength. It was the potential of the movement that Dr. Hatsumi demonstrated in his almost floating style of walking. Dr. Oshman PHD. In the seventies, they began to study the effects of pressure on body tissues.

It describes the study of the level of a simple cellular matrix. "Now we know that the cell is filled with filaments and tubes, as well as fibers and trabella, which are collectively called the cytoplasmic matrix or cytoskeleton." Oshman, I. p45 (2000). This breakthrough in cellular makeup has led to new information on the evolution and composition of bodily tissues.
He also demonstrated the scientific basis of the relationship and continuity of parts of a living organism. It was part of the puzzle in my quest for the Gyron Hatsumi principle. Tissues develop in accordance with the stresses imposed on them at the stages of development.

This is the basis of the law of development of Wolff trabeculae in the bones and tissue. The fish and its spinal movement, described earlier, were sufficient for
compressive forces of water to ensure its movement of the projectile with flexor muscles only on its spine.

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For a fish like an organism to leave the aquatic environment, the first of its new stress was gravity, compressive force. Now two flexor muscles are not enough to move through the three-dimensional gravitational space. Therefore, the next development was
have an antagonistic extensor muscles to work with flexors. It also adds extra size to cause rotation and side bends in the spine.

As creatures became more capable of earth, justice was a popular quality. This led to the formation of trabeculae in the cell matrix. When collagen cells are tightly packed, they produce icosahedrons and collagen molecules, when
folded triple helix shapes. These collagen threads are intertwined into a fabric of tissue to develop stress-balancing lines of force against compressive or
compression forces. This ability at the cell level is an essential plan for organizations to balance stress and maintain its integrity. This voltage is balanced.
integrity became known as the notion of Tensegrity.

This concept was first developed by a man named Kenneth Snelson, who was born in Pendlton, Oregon in 1927. He said: "My art is connected with nature in its primary aspect, the structure of physical forces in three-dimensional space." He developed
three-sided weaving structure, compatible with rigid compression, tubes extending outward, held together by flexible tension cables extending inwards. These multi-faceted units could fit so that they resemble the structure of a hive. Their antagonistic mutual tension and compression give them powerful structural integrity omnidirectionally in three-dimensional space.

Robert Bakmister Fullers actually coined the term Tensegrity, and as a philosopher and engineer, he developed an architectural design and developed a geodesic dome. Geodetic foundations are based on mathematics special relationships. Dome - all or
part of a sphere whose shell is made of rigid struts forming equilateral triangles. Tensegrity through these structures creates the same energy everywhere, symmetry. It was Guyron, the interconnection I was looking for to explain the global effect of Dr. Hatsumi's touch.

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In 1970, Dr. Stephen Levine argued that in fact the body is a structure in the form of dozens. Soft tissues of the body provide stretching and bones and incompressible fluids in the body that provide compression. In this model, the bones act as dividers and provide the diverging force necessary to keep the space open. He describes the body as “a subject with soft tissue, with local bone pads, and not with a hard tissue with motor units of soft tissues”. Live lecture April 16 (2005) Bundles and soft tissues “are constructed using soft visceoelastic materials that behave nonlinearly” Journal of Mechanics in Medicine and Biology. Volume 2, 3 and 4, 375-388 World Scientific Publishing Company. This explained the influence of the archaeological excavations of the body on the formation of our bones. If the spine is constructed in a column and a bundle of Newtonian path, then the calculated forces necessary for the grandfather to raise his three-year-old grandson will crush the spine.

The laws of Tensegrity allowed me to understand the principles of Dr. Hatsumi’s natural movement strategies and his strength without strength. The next problem was to be able to control the body's tensegrity from an external source of contact. Dr. Levin in the description of the body as a tensor block also
explained that tensegrity breaks down at the interface or periphery of the body. The trauma of the tissue affects the game of movement of the joint, the game is a non-linear part of the curve that is measurable and reproducible.

My previous attempts at applying pressure did not result in a joint restriction amendment. I started working on the angle and depth of the contact arm, but it was a body movement that fulfilled the criteria I was looking for. The principles of Dr. Hatsumi’s natural movement are opposed to the Newtonian or biomechanical principles applied to the body. Основное различие заключается в том, что в естественных принципах движения вы перемещаете кости вместе с минимальным расходом энергии.

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Путем аппроксимации костей с минимальным сокращением мышц
тело остается расслабленным, и ваш контакт с интерфейсом сглаживания объединяется как единое целое. Тело тела реципиента принимает ваше приложенное давление через интерфейс
подключение. Этот контакт позволяет вам изменять тяги ограничения, чтобы нормализовать совместное воспроизведение даже на расстоянии от точки контакта. С помощью этого протокола теперь можно воздействовать на ткани тела, чтобы нормализовать сайты с поврежденной мышцей скелета с помощью воспроизводимого и предсказуемого подхода к терапии под давлением.

Этот подход одобрен доктором Стивеном Левином и теперь может стать основой нашего подхода в Аматсу и стать основой для дальнейших исследований. Человеческая вертикальная двуногая прогулка имеет в себе потенциал для принципа духа тела и разума, известного как SHIN GI TAI ICHI. Это переводится как SHIN наш дух или аффективный домен, GI, как человек в кинестетической или психомоторной области, а TAI - ум в познавательной реальности.
Когда мы движемся и работаем в этом поведении, любая выполненная задача находится в NOW ICHI как один момент. Эта форма осознания и
движение - наше наследие природы - эволюция психической сомы правого двуногого человека.

Я использую и объясняю достоинства такого рода движения для терапевтов, которых я тренирую. Во-первых, он включает в себя высокий уровень эргономической безопасности для практикующего и, во-вторых, делает генератор тактильной силы и чувствует психомоторное умение терапии. По мере развития моего исследования я надеюсь разработать программу упражнений, ориентированных на движение, чтобы помочь дислексическим и диспраксическим условиям.

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БИБЛИОГРАФИЯ
Дарт, Раймонд. A, Добровольная мускулатура в организме человека,
двойная спиральная компоновка Том 1, № 2. Человеческий потенциал 1968

Фуллер, Бакмистер. [http://www.bfi.org/domes/index.html]

GGoodheart, G. Dr. Collected papers.

HHatsumi, M. Dr. Частные уроки 1995

J Журнал механики в медицине и биологии, Том 1, 2 и 3,
375-388 Научно-издательская компания

Лелевин, Стивен. Д-р Живая лекция 16 апреля 2005 г.

LLovelock, J. GAIA Новый взгляд на жизнь на Земле.

NNovella. Стивен. MD, Psychomotor Patterning Page 1, 20/04/2005
[http://www.quackwatch.org/01QuackeryRelatedTopics/patterning],
HTML

OOshman, J. Energy Medicine, Научная основа 2000.

ReRece, I и Walker, S. Teaching, Training and Learning. 2004.

SSnelson, Кеннет. [http://www.KennethSnelson.net/icons/bio.html]

WWalther, David S. Applied Kinesiology Synopsis.1988

Связаться с Dennis Bartram по электронной почте amatsu.uk@ntlworld.com




 Journey to Tensegrity -2


 Journey to Tensegrity -2

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