Arthritis and the Alexander Technique: quick relief or lasting solution?

Osteoarthritis is simply wear and tear of the joints. This doesn't need to happen. It can be stopped if you know why it's happening.

Arthritis is hardly ever the result of over-use. Few people move too much. If they did, the right prescription would be to conserve movement: stop taking exercise!    smiley

No, the real problem isn't moving too much, it's moving badly. Mis-use, not over-use

Misuse: the way you are moving is putting too much pressure on your joints. In osteoarthritis, the arthritic joint parts are rubbing together too hard. Gradually, more and more of the surface rubs off. The joint wears out. (Rheumatoid arthritis is more complicated but this wear and tear is an important component of all types of arthritis, including rheumatoid arthritis).

Let me show you how it happens.

Make a fist with your right hand and rub it gently against the palm of your left hand. Done that?

Now rub again, pressing a lot harder. Notice how quickly your skin rubs raw.

The joint surfaces in your neck, back, hands, knees, hips etc. are just the same. With light pressure, the body is able to replace what little cartilage does wear away. (Just as the body also grows new skin to replace the old as it wears away).

So, if you rub lightly, you can rub all day long with no ill effect. If you rub harder, you soon have to stop to avoid rubbing your skin raw.

The problem is not the rubbing: it's the pressure.

Work a joint lightly and, as fast as the cartilage rubs away, it is replaced. It never wears out. With heavy pressure, new cartilage can't grow fast enough. The joint physically wears out. Eventually you get the scrunch of bare bone against bare bone. Osteoarthritis is wear and tear.

Only tense muscles can press your joints together like this.

Simply put, you develop osteoarthritis if you are too tense. Every little thing you do, you are trying too hard.

When simple actions become a painful effort, it's hard to believe there is an easier way to do the same thing. Do you feel you are only using the effort you need to do a job? Fortunately, this is an illusion — a very convincing illusion but still an illusion.

Objection: “How could I possibly use less effort and still get the job done?”

Let me show you.

Let me give you an example

When you get out of a chair, you need to push with your knees don't you? If you have trouble getting out of a chair, you know your knees just aren't strong enough any more. So you push as hard as you can.

Younger people don't: they just jump up with no effort at all. Can that be because they have much stronger knee muscles than you?  No, not at all. They don't think they need to push with their knees, so they don't. The fact that they still get up proves that the pushing is unnecessary.

So why do you have to push? Answer: you don't.

If only you could leave off pushing with your knees you would simply fall off the chair and on to your feet. You would get up with no effort at all. No effort: no strain. No strain: no osteoarthritis.

“Ah”, you say, “get up without pushing? that's impossible!” Indeed, I know it's impossible and I know that if you try to do it now you simply won't leave the chair. If you take a leap of faith and literally “fall on to your feet” as I suggested you will only land on your nose!

And yet, every day, as an ordinary part of my work as an Alexander teacher, I show people how to do exactly that. Far from falling on their noses, they fall UP onto their feet.

I know it sounds impossible. That's because you haven't done it yet. As, guided and encouraged by an Alexander teacher, you begin to do the “impossible”, all movement gradually becomes as easy as it once was. Then you will remember that you too never used to push with your knees.

Now let's find out how to do the “impossible”.



  • Subscribe to the Enduring Results NewsletterIf you liked this article, why not get my new articles as soon as they're written? Subscribe to Back in Action.
  • Do you have an idea that would make these articles even better?
    Share it.



Medical Study proves lasting effectiveness of the Alexander Technique for low back pain.

Published in the prestigious British Medical Journal on 19 August 2008

This randomised controlled medical trial compares Alexander Technique lessons, exercise and massage for chronic and recurrent back pain.

BBC news report

Jean kept falling over after a hip replacement
Lady with a Hip Replacement

“My teacher is Philip Pawley and I can thoroughly recommend him: he's patient, kind and knows what he's doing. He's given me a new life.”

Rob is a yoga teacher
Yoga Teacher

“My interest in the Technique came from my interest in yoga. At the time when I heard about it, I thought that this would be a useful thing for me to learn — just a development of what I understood yoga to be.”

Margery was disabled by osteoporosis
Lady with Osteoporosis

“Since starting with the Alexander Technique, it has boosted my confidence tremendously. It does so much more besides just helping you with the osteoporosis.”

Caroline is an opera singer
Opera Singer

“I have got enormous benefit out of a series of thirty-minute sessions with Philip Pawley. My whole stance has improved and I'm singing better.”

Watch the full video

The above are short excerpts from a 7-minute video. See the whole video (16MB)
Read the transcript

WHAT BUGS YOU?

Is there anything on this website that bugs you?
Sure there is.

Just let me know what.
If I can fix it, I will. Report a Bug!

 
EnduringResults.com with a white background
Click here if you prefer a white background