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October 2008
Alexander’s Secrets
The British Medical Journal recently claimed that
the Alexander Technique could not only reduce back
pain but also enhance your quality of life. Here
Jackie Annesley gives her verdict on lessons that
could create a lasting change
THE
last time I grew an inch in height was in about
1974. The economic climate may be as bad today as it
was then, but 34 years on, you don’t expect any
major bodily improvements without recourse to a
scalpel. Yet it is difficult to overestimate the
effect that 30 lessons of Alexander Technique can
have on your life. The British Medical Journal
published a survey recently confirming that AT
lessons had “enduring benefits”, specifically for
sufferers of back pain (24 lessons led to a fall in
the number of days in pain from 21 a month to just
three) but also in other areas of life. In the past
seven weeks, as well as managing to unfurl an inch,
I’ve improved my sleep pattern, felt less stressed,
been more patient with the children, played
perceptibly faster tennis, gained a better
complexion and reduced the shoulder tension that
invariably led to migraines. I’ve also managed to do
a full body squat without lifting my heels from the
ground, about which more later (try it, it really is
a challenge).
The man at the centre of this transformation is an
instantly engaging Scotsman called Noel Kingsley.
Operating out of a cosy room on Cavendish Square,
W1, Kingsley was taught by Walter Carrington who was
tutored by the great Alexander himself (see box on
Page 36). Kingsley’s challenge was to reform a
middle-aged mother of three who’d always had round
shoulders and who would, when faced with conflict or
stress, hunch them and arch her neck back. It is no
wonder that for the past 16 years I’ve suffered from
chronic migraines. In lesson one, Kingsley targeted
my clenched neck. By getting me to drop my chin and
widen my shoulders, my whole posture instantly
improved. By the following day, rarely used muscles
were already complaining. As time went by, the
45-minute lessons would take on a familiar pattern:
the first 10 minutes were spent retraining the
muscles by sitting down and standing up from a chair
with Kingsley’s hands guiding me. The next 20
minutes, my favourite, were spent lying down in the
“semi-supine position”, legs bent, hand resting on
hips, head on a book, neck completely free. My
limbs, head, shoulders and back would be manipulated
very subtly. We would often end the session with an
assortment of challenges including breathing
exercises — “whispered ahs” in which you relax your
jaw and throat and breathe out the softest, lowest
sound you can. One of the biggest thrills was going
down into a full squat, heels on the ground, and
springing back up like a Cossack dancer, something I
protested I simply couldn’t do.
But Kingsley doesn’t do “can’t”. For him, everything
is possible, and he has the clients to prove it.
There’s the society beauty who couldn’t even turn
her head, the writer with chronic RSI who said the
effect of AT “is the human equivalent of adding oil
to a car engine” and the young London singer who’d
lost her voice for two years. Kingsley worked with
the latter, for virtually nothing, convinced he
could help. JuJu, as she is known, is now the lead
singer of Little Fish, is recording her first album
in LA and has been called the “new Patti Smith” by
Gaz Coombes of Supergrass. Of my progress during 30
lessons in seven weeks, Kingsley says: “Your poise
is now free and upright; your shoulders are more
open and you carry yourself with more ease and
fluidity. You are breathing more freely and this
will be helping your internal functioning,
circulation, digestion and tendency to headaches. I
don’t believe you will ever go back to the way you
were.”
The headaches haven’t gone completely but they are a
lot less frequent — and bizarrely people kept asking
if I’ve lost weight, a common side effect according
to Kingsley. The truth is I’m still more than 10st,
I just stand taller and more broad-shouldered. AT is
a bit like learning a language — throughout the day,
you have to be prepared to implement what you have
learned in the lessons. But the more effort you put
in, the greater the rewards. For the price of a good
holiday I feel Kingsley has taught me something with
a rare quality — a lesson I carry with me, and which
can benefit my health, for the rest of my life. For
your nearest AT teacher contact
www.stat.org.uk
Noel Kingsley 020 7491 3505,
www.alexander-technique.com
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