What is psychomotor therapy?
created by American husband and wife Albert and Diane Boyden Pesso, starting in 1960, psychomotor therapy has evolved into an alternative discipline of psychological survey by improvised physical movements to engage in the patient's internal unrest. Literally mixing the root words "psycho" or mind and "engine" or physical movement this technique developed into a complex method of analysis of patient problems and conquest of traumatic memories. The therapist leads patients through a number of movements or exercises used to assess attitudes to certain memories and then use various verbal and non -verbal techniques to repair and pack any problems discovered.
by psychotherapist Louisa Howe from 1990 moving psychotherapy , published an online official website Pesso Boyden System, monitors the official origin of psychomotor therapy by paired Walston Dance Center in Quincy, Massachusetts. On this dancentrum CE on ko koThe 1950s. The 20th century were taught by some of the most basic exercises that would be the spine of what would happen to psychomotor therapy. In the early 1960s, as both Albert and Diane became professors of dance at Emerson College, the exercise became more formalized into the technique used in 2011 by therapists around the world.
Until 1963, Albert Pesso was ready to write the first tract about discipline, an essay called "New Perspectives in Generating Motion: with the consequences of dance composition, criticism and recognition". In it he described three main components or "modality" of psychomotor therapy: a natural, initial attitude of relaxation; Voting or improvisation movements said they were developing abstract thinking and allowing a sense of control or mastery; and emotional movements that hatch out of the inner healing. This latter modality reportedly gives the therapists nARAGES FOR EMOCIAL LEAVE LEASTS.
Howe's essay describes several psychomotor therapeutic exercises used to penetrate into the emotional well. One that describes is called the type, or "Reflex relaxed", an attitude that is often the first posing that the teacher will have, assume students. This is perhaps the most basic position and includes the state as much relaxed as possible without going to the knee, sitting or lying. Other exercises continue from this moment to different directions, depending on the problems or emotions experienced by students.
In 1969, the Albert Pesso movement in psychotherapy was published. The book is still used as a guide for therapists who are interested in using tactics. However, psychological elements of therapeutic techniques have since evolved since then, because couple and other adherents have applied exercises to their own emotions and emotions.