Re: New book by Madame de Salzmann
After having this book on my shelf for over a year, I've finally starting to dig into it and I have to say that I'm finding it extremely helpful in my Work. It really is quite a remarkable book, although I'm only less than a quarter of the way through it. I'm finding de Salzmann is incredibly good at bringing across concepts that I would have thought to be beyond the ability to communicate, yet she does so in a very straight forward and practical way.
As others have said, some of it I can relate to and apply to my own experience, while some is beyond me. The chapter about the movement centre and tensions in the body being related to thoughts and feelings I'm having difficulty relating to my own experience, for instance, but it has certainly given a direction for me to work in. The chapter on thought, however, (some of which was quoted earlier in this thread by Helle) was a huge insight and has changed the way I view my thinking. It's like it has given me a new approach to Work from.
Like others have said, this is one I'm working my way through very slowly. I'm actually reading each chapter twice before moving on to the next one in order to gleen as much as I can from it. It does seem to require one to focus beyond our usual attention to really grok what's being said, as 3D Student said.
Anyway, these are just my thoughts. I hope others have found the book as helpful as I have.
After having this book on my shelf for over a year, I've finally starting to dig into it and I have to say that I'm finding it extremely helpful in my Work. It really is quite a remarkable book, although I'm only less than a quarter of the way through it. I'm finding de Salzmann is incredibly good at bringing across concepts that I would have thought to be beyond the ability to communicate, yet she does so in a very straight forward and practical way.
As others have said, some of it I can relate to and apply to my own experience, while some is beyond me. The chapter about the movement centre and tensions in the body being related to thoughts and feelings I'm having difficulty relating to my own experience, for instance, but it has certainly given a direction for me to work in. The chapter on thought, however, (some of which was quoted earlier in this thread by Helle) was a huge insight and has changed the way I view my thinking. It's like it has given me a new approach to Work from.
Like others have said, this is one I'm working my way through very slowly. I'm actually reading each chapter twice before moving on to the next one in order to gleen as much as I can from it. It does seem to require one to focus beyond our usual attention to really grok what's being said, as 3D Student said.
Anyway, these are just my thoughts. I hope others have found the book as helpful as I have.