Private treatment sessions available on weekdays in Newcastle - Somatics and Dance-Movement Therapy.

move the body to move the mind

Movement Therapy is a general term referring to a broad range of Eastern and Western movement approaches used to promote physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual well-being. Movement is an essential part of many healing traditions and practices throughout the world. Somatics is a field within movement studies and bodywork which incorporates movement experiences for internal physical perception. In movement therapy it refers to approaches based on the soma, i.e. the body according to how it is perceived from within. In dance, somatics refers to techniques based on the dancer's internal sensations and observations associated with movement.

The cultivation of mindfulness in movement therapies is founded on artistic-kinesthetic action, or artistry of the body in movement. The body holds the hidden stories of life experiences and with the aid of movement experientials and specific movement training, the individual can draw these experiences to the surface, giving them shape and form, and change life stories to produce different endings, resulting in therapeutic benefits.

Movement training that is grounded in mindfulness positively impacts psychological and physiological physical health, improves self regulation, and cultivates the capacity for subjective well-being and self-awareness through attentiveness. Integral to mindful practices that are movement-based is the development of kinesthetic awareness, proprioception and interoception.

Active, autonomous and intentional engagement in motion is core to the sense of feeling in control over actions and their consequences, which in turn is fundamental to the development of a sense of identity and purpose, providing opportunities for self-empowerment and self-transformation.

dance-movement therapy

Bodyfulness talk by Christine Caldwell

Bodyfulness…

“Bodyfulness is about working toward our potential as a whole human animal that breathes as well as thinks, moves as well as sits still, takes action as well as considers, and exists not just because it thinks but because it dances, stretches, bounces, gazes, focuses, and attunes to others”

Christine Caldwell (PhD), Bodyfulness, 2018

an invitation to move

Helen Ilich is a Somatics & Dance-Movement Therapist and Multi-disciplinary Movement Coach.