Standing one moment, gesticulating wildly the next, doing crouches the third.
It's something of a trip.
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Another thing: once gotten into, you often have to stop deliberately for it to end.
Body will just keep finding new shit to do. Currently swaying on an axis as I'm writing this.
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Different meditation techniques have different levels of "stickiness", and shorter or longer half-lives.
It's interesting that the body-centered ones seem to be on the stickier end.
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It feels almost mantra-like, although mantras need to be revved up for much longer before they start self-perpetuating.
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I wonder if ecstatic dance works on the same principle.
I wonder if I've tried ecstatic dance while dancing around to Lana Del Rey everywhere last summer.
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Still doing weird shit while actively tweeting and having multiple other threads open in awareness.
This is definitely not replicable with every technique, at least after so little practice.
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Feels almost like it's... litigating past movement errors? These are all recognizable movement patterns that are happening.
Curious. Most curious.
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Breathing and rhythm keeps changing, tonally as well, with each new pattern.
Almost like some sort of automatic troubleshooting process.
Correction: exactly like that.
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I don't feel like I'm qualified to say much more right now, but I'll definitely do a few hundred hours of this now.
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fascinating. what IS body-centred meditation though? a technique? a school of thought? any links i could read to learn more?
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For Alexander Technique, the only stuff I know to recommend is the stuff puts up.
I don't know that he'd call it meditation, but trying some of the techniques he recommended I felt like I was meditating with a different orientation and purpose. Strong overlap there.

