Amiyo Devienne:
Sacred Dances Method


Amiyo Devienne's approach to teaching the sacred dances can be summed up in the key to why the dances are called sacred in the first place:

1. They are used to preserve and transmit a great knowledge. They represent certain laws that govern the universe and thus, the lives of human being.

2. The inner development of those who participate in them is paramount.


Our sleep and slavery express themselves in the automatism and limitations of our feelings and thoughts, these being closely bound up with the automatism of our movements and postures. This is a vicious circle. On the other hand, our usual limited vocabulary of movements will keep us within the confinements of a restrictive routine way of feeling, seeing life, thinking. We do not realise how intimately connected our 3 functions of moving, feeling, and thinking are. They depend one upon the other. They result one from an other. One does not change without the others changing too. The attitude of our body is the outer reflection of our emotions and thoughts. An emotional change such as a sudden relief of worry will immediately affect our way of standing, the depth of our breathing, the movements in our eyes etc.


To each position of the body corresponds a certain inner space and to each inner space corresponds a certain posture. In our life we have a certain number of habitual movements and postures quite limited in regard to the immense potential of the body and we move through them most of the time without awareness. Taking new unusual positions enables us to observe ourselves differently from the way it is possible in usual conditions.

 

And the Gurdjieff Dances break the cycle of automatism by introducing non-habitual movements and sequences.


 

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