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Dance of the Elements
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Some Links


The MythoSelf Website
You'll find information here about MythoSelf programs, articles by Joseph and other MythoSelf Trainers, dates and locations of upcoming MythoSelf training ... and more.

The work of Joseph Riggio on AppliedNLP.com
This is Joseph's home website ... you'll find a list of all the upcoming programs Joseph is doing and where he's doing them ... there are articles, some audio clips by Joseph, and a private "Access" section you can sign up for where Joseph puts up new articles before they are posted on the general site.

The work of Joseph Campbell
Joseph Campbell is one of the primary sources of Joseph's work that led to the development of the MythoSelf model, and subsequently to the 'Dance of the Elements'. This is the site of the Joseph Campbell Foundation a great source of Joseph Campbell material including audio downloads that are available to members ... it's a site that's worth the visit.

The work of F.M. Alexander
F.M. Alexander was one of the very first somatic education pioneers and the inspiration to others including Moshe Feldenkrais and Thomas Hanna. Joseph drew heavily from Alexander's concepts on posture, habituation and inhibition in developing the somatic model that underpins the 'Dance'.

The work of Moshe Feldenkrais - Some Information and Resources
Moshe is a modern pioneer of somatic education, movement studies and psychosomatic integration. His thinking about the patterns of habituation stored in movement are seminal pieces of somatic theory. Joseph also draws heavily from this foundational material.

The work of Thomas Hanna - Somatics Website
According to Joseph it would be impossible to talk about modern somatic thinking without including the work of Thomas Hanna ... he says of all the somatic authors he finds Hanna's work most accessible and directly applicable for the widest range of people and in the widest range of applications.

The work of Ida Rolf
Ida Rolf took a different approach to the patterns of limitation embedded in the somatic experience. Instead of focusing on posture and movement, Rolf held that the habituation showed up most profoundly in the connective tissue and developed a technique to release the body from the restraints that show up in balance, posture and movement limited by connective tissue scaring and constraints. It's worth taking a look at Rolf's work if you're a student of somatics.

 

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