Monday, December 1, 2014

Conscious Fitness


Starting a training program can seem daunting at the beginning, there is a lot to learn about the exercise techniques, how to perform each movement, even how to breathe for optimal results.
Your body may move in ways you have not experienced before and you may feel uncertain, even anxious about what you are being asked to do.

MET Fitness training programs are more than just exercises; they are designed to improve your strength and posture and teach you to be more conscious of how you move your body, in your training session and in everyday life.
We often dissociate physical activity from our thoughts and feelings, but as many clients will attest, they have noticed profound changes in the way they think and feel in the whole of their lives, as a direct result of participation in their training program.

The word ‘whole’ comes from the same root as the word ‘health’ and by inquiring into deeper causes of our health problems, not ‘what’ but how we eat, drink, exercise and go about living our lives, we give ourselves the ability to influence our health in a profound and lasting way.
Increased personal neglect contributes to increased reliance on symptomatic ‘fixes’ such as drugs or surgery. What is required are new ways of thinking, feeling and being in our bodies with an awareness that we operate as ‘whole’ rather than a collection of our parts.

Criticism vs Cooperation
By confronting learning opportunities with curiosity instead of fear and being comfortable with the idea of ‘not knowing’ while we are learning, we give ourselves the space to observe, receive feedback and alter our habitual patterns, creating new ways of moving and being.

We usually think that ‘controlling’ ourselves is the best way to effect changes in our lives or ‘improve’ ourselves, when what is needed most is cooperation.
Overemphasis on ‘knowing’ as opposed to ‘learning’ makes looking good in the short term more important that being good in the long term.

A new perspective is required.

Cooperating with ourselves
At MET Fitness we focus on deep learning on a physical level that allows us to embody new capabilities for effective action and movement. This embodiment is a developmental process that continues over time, in a continuous cycle of action and practice.

The impatient quest for improvement often results in superficial changes that leave our deeper patterns untouched. Conscious action is critical for transforming our will, thinking, emotions and body; we must be fully conscious to be fully effective for deeper learning.
Deeper learning often produces fewer obvious consequences for long periods of time.
In order to embody new competencies we have to practice continuously for periods of no apparent improvement. In Chinese, ‘learning’ is expressed by two symbols: the first stands for ‘take in’, the second stands for ‘practice constantly’. In the West, we are so focused on results that we have little time for ‘practice constantly’.”


Learning is a lifelong process that doesn’t end when we leave school; it can feel dangerous or scary ‘not knowing’ and many people prefer the safety of this, rather than questioning, exploring or experiencing anything new in their lives.
We humans are complex beings, we need to experience the unity of our system as a whole, working with our breath and being fully present in our body, to experience conscious activation of the correct muscles for the job.

What we tell ourselves about that feeling can stop us in our tracks and prevent us learning something new and delightful about ourselves, our bodies and our relationships.
There are no mistakes with learning. 
You cannot do it wrong.
Just keep going.