Eva-Marie Batschko

Introduction to Rhythmical Einreibung


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1) Breathing Observing Attention – exhalation and inhalation with all senses (What was said – what did we hear?) 2) Warming Connecting Warming to the topic (What are the essential emotional experiences and thoughts?) 3) Nutrition Processing Process of digesting the topic – Working on and analysing different thoughts 4) Separation Individualisation Incorporating and making the content our own. Allowing new thoughts, feelings and intentions to rise up in ourselves (Distinguishing the essential from the nonessential – developing a question) 5) Conservation Practise Cultivating the seeds of the new thoughts (Repetition) 6) Growth Growing skills Transforming concrete exercises into higher abilities – synthesis. Drawing benefit from resistance! 7) Reproduction New creation Developing and realising something new – creativity

      These seven learning steps take place both consecutively and simultaneously – as is also the case with the life processes of the body (unconsciously).

      The second part of the seminar is devoted entirely to practical work which takes place in groups of three. Every participant assumes each of the three different roles of patient, practitioner and observer:

      The patient with the question: how does it feel? (Too firm – too light – too fast – too slow, etc.).

      The practitioner with the question: what effects come about? (Warmth – deepening of the breathing – vitality, etc.).

      The observer with the question: is the technique correct? (Direction of circles – start of the movement – course of treatment, etc.).

      The process is carried out in seven different stages (cf. Rolf Heine (2) who describes the process in three stages).

      Stage 1:

      The treatment is demonstrated – without comment – with the participants at first only observing.

      Stage 2:

      The participants imitate what they have observed in groups of three: posture, gestures and technique are absorbed. What they have experienced, including for themselves, is then communicated in the plenum.

      Stage 3:

      The same treatment is now explained by way of preparation and then demonstrated again. With increased attentiveness, what has been demonstrated is repeated in groups of three. In doing so, the basics of the technique are learned. The experiences are then discussed in a more differentiated way. The new experiences are examined in the plenum.

      Stage 4:

      The same treatment is performed again in groups of three and the acquired insights and experiences are applied. There is again an exchange of views about what has been experienced, including by the participants themselves. In the plenum we seek to understand the inherent laws and thus also obtain an understanding of the indications.

      Stage 5 as a mirror of Stage 3:

      The knowledge obtained by each person for themselves is repeatedly practised with new aspects.

      Stage 6 as a mirror of Stage 2:

      Higher abilities can develop through our own cognitive process.

      Stage 7 as a mirror of Stage 1:

      We can now become creative for ourselves in what we do.

      Consideration of various substances completes this practical part of the seminars.

      A basin filled with water is put on the table. Standing at one end of the basin, I touch the water surface with my hands held in parallel.

      First I can feel the temperature of the water, then its surface tension. Slowly I submerge my hands deeper and deeper into the water and can perceive that this is possible only by exerting pressure.

      If I release the tension from my hands under water, the water carries them back to the surface. The water has tangible buoyancy.

      When I lift my hands from the surface, the water is sucked upwards slightly before contact is completely broken.

      In a next exercise, I slowly let my hands glide in a straight line over the surface of the water.

      Here I can observe the flow and the formation of the vortex within the water. A more subtle feeling for this process of immersion is developed through regular practice.

      I lift a hand to shoulder height, the palm of the hand facing forwards. I bend my fingers towards the heel of the hand without completely closing them in a fist.

      I gradually perceive the warmth developing in the palm of my hand. It forms with ever greater clarity into a 'ball of warmth' with a 'boundary'. Now I open my hand again and slightly spread my fingers; as a result the ‘ball of warmth’ can expand and be ‘held’.

      This exercise supports the warming of the hands before the Einreibung. Slightly spreading the fingers during treatment can preserve the warmth developed in this way. (If, on the other hand, the fingers were spread completely apart, the warmth would dissipate and coolness would surround my palm!)

      The participants stand in a circle and hold their left hand in the supination position (the ulna and the radius are in parallel), the right hand is in the pronation position.

      Then they move their hands towards one another so that the circle is closed. The participants do not touch their neighbours’ hands directly but instead perceive only the warmth that arises between their hands.

      This exercise requires attentiveness to the quality of the warmth: do the left and right hands show any differences in generating warmth?

      What is the quality of the warmth arising in the space between the hands (e.g. radiating, rapidly developing or slowly building up)?

      This exercise trains a sense of the warmth envelope created during the treatment.

      All the participants are moving about at the same time; therefore a lot of space must be available (possibly outdoors). The participants separate into pairs.

      One participant in each pair goes ahead, thereby revealing their ’movement melody’. The other participant follows, trying to immerse themselves in the bearing of the leading participant’s movement (posture, movement approach, step length, etc.) and imitate it. As soon as the leading participant perceives that the following participant’s movements correspond to their own, they give the signal to change. Then the follower becomes the leader – and the exercise is repeated.

      Subsequently, still in pairs, they discuss the types of movement of the leading participant (e.g., purposeful, soothing, tiring, refreshing, invigorating, energetic, powerful, etc.).

      In the plenum, this is then put in the context of the three-fold human constitution and the question is considered as to whether the gait was respectively dominated by the head, metabolic and limb or rhythmical system; ’head-types’ are dominated by the nervous and sensory system and thus their gait reveals excessive control by the head;