Thursday, April 23, 2009

Beef Stew With London Broil

Nous topics: mind-body work

Nous has as its central purpose the growth of personal awareness of the therapist. The power of awareness will be explored in the fundamental dimension of the body and the immediacy of bodily experience.
Our experience and our knowledge of ourselves and of others is always a situated and embodied knowledge (embodied ).

This is one dimension of knowledge that in recent years has entered strongly in the center of the theoretical developments of cognitive psychology and cognitive science. However, the passage

by theoretical models to clinical practice and training of the therapist is still at an early stage .

Nous will be at the forefront in this deepening the contribution of traditions and practices that work on the whole mind-body (mind-body work ) and knowledge of body and that can Offir a great wealth of techniques, methods and knowledge.

The body awareness is in fact not only towards you but also to the other: the goal is to develop an attention span that is able to confront the full complexity of the psycho-physical relationship with the other, whose Words are the visible part: be aware of 'expression of the other because one has learned to be aware of their .

In addition to the contribution of mindfulness, These methodologies are derived from traditions development of awareness, such as the tradition of their own techniques of ' Actors' training - in particular lines of research by Russian and Anglo-Saxon - and some of the psycho-physical cultivated martial arts.


The first step to expand awareness in relationship dynamics and emotional expression in their non-verbal. The latter are mainly aimed at developing skills on the appearance of body awareness in movement and energy dimension.

In constructivist perspective these expressive techniques like mediation and non-verbal span procedural knowledge, tacit and non-conceptual own emotions and corporeality.
With the great advantage, however, that offer real ways of learning, act, concrete and not a "theoretical essay" on corporeality.


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