"Awareness facilitates healing. Awareness can be healing." (p.4)
"We all have the capacity for awareness, and our awareness affects our physiology. When awareness is part of a therapy, that therapy becomes somewhat process oriented. This is because our awareness, like any process, is always changing." (p.5)
"Genuine learning always involves dealing with the unknown. If you are open to the process, you can learn from anything and everything, whether you are traveling to a new place, making a new friend, moving your body in a new way, or simply staying home to watch television. Every breath you take is new, as is every cloud that traverses the sky and every bird that hops on your lawn. Learning is a state of mind." (p.6)
"A distinction can be made between awareness and concentration. These words generally refer to paying attention, but they actually have very different meanings. In simple terms, awareness involves widening your scope of consciousness, while concentration involves narrowing your scope of consciousness." (p.7)
"When something is named, it is defined, and that definition can limit a person’s ability to see it fully and without preconceptions." (p.8)
"Musculoskeletal pain, even severe pain, can result from habitual muscle tension, from poor posture that causes tissue compression, from muscular reactions to physical impact (such as a car accident), or from unresolved emotional stress. Increasing your kinesthetic awareness can help unravel and resolve all of these problems because you need to be able to sense your body accurately in order to move it comfortably." (p.11)
"It makes sense to regain healthy kinesthetic awareness first, before going through complicated treatment procedures that can overlook its importance." (p.22)
"Kinesthetic awareness affects your physical and emotional flexibility. These two types of flexibility are not separate; they support one another. When your kinesthetic awareness is clear, you can experience your feelings as they occur. Essentially, this means you know yourself. As a result, you are more flexible in dealing with stress and better able to make choices about your life circumstances." (p.29)
"Emotional stress can trigger muscle contractions, which can eventually become a dysfunctional movement pattern." (p.43)
"As a general rule, the more efficient your movement patterns, the less energy you expend and the easier an activity is to do."(p.45)
"Many people have been trained to think of exercise as something that is naturally painful, forceful, and arduous." (p.46)
"The more skilled you are with movement, the less force you need and the more relaxed you can be." (p.47)
"It is a commonly accepted sign of mastery when a performer makes a difficult art appear easy; this occurs when a performer is relaxed with what he or she is doing." (p.47)
"The ideal way to move is to “go with the flow” of the movement, rather than forcing yourself. Although it sounds simple in theory, it’s not necessarily easy in practice."(p.47)
"The physical health and performance fields tend to overemphasize the importance of muscle strength and ignore the importance of kinesthetic awareness." (p. 58)
"Since the nervous system interconnects all parts of the mind, body, and emotions, muscle tone is a reflection of the whole person." (p.59)
"Balance and security in your body comes from being comfortable with freedom of movement, not holding yourself still or collapsing into your ligaments." (p.81)
"People can go through life with “emotional suppression” as their default setting. The rational mind takes over, and life goes on." (p.132)
"Let your bones hold you up."(p.187)