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Archive for category: Main Content

MODES OF MOVEMENT INTO TEFILLAH: part one / wordplay with Asher Yatzar

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Recently I completed a residency at Heritage Academy, a Jewish day school in Longmeadow, Massachusetts. I first came to work only with the Judaic staff on bringing movement into their curriculum. I ended up not only working with the staff, but also with the middle school students finding ways to embody (and thereby enhance and re-member) their tefillah, or prayer.

MODES OF MOVEMENT INTO TEFILLAH

Three distinct modes of how movement and text, in this case the text of tefillah, were used with the middle school with varying levels of success. The three are: wordplay, the essence, and personalizing question. These are modes I have worked with in any situation using text and movement.

With the Asher Yatzar prayer, the one Jews say after going to the bathroom… yes, way… we used wordplay.

Wordplay
Wordplay is quite simple and literal. Find, or have the students find, key words in the text. These could be action words, (verbs), descriptors (adjectives), or just the main words that are repeated or have import in the context of the text. Using just these words, make either hand gestures (if students are sitting down), or body shapes, or even movements that describe these words. The students can do this in pairs, solo, or in small groups. Or, as we did in Asher Yatzar, we started as soloists, moved to pairs, and then worked with the whole group. Once the gestures or movements are made, then perform the movements while saying, singing, or having someone in the group say or sing the prayer.

Lesson 1A:
Mode: Wordplay
Text/Prayer: Asher Yatzar
Players: middle school students in Jewish day school

The Asher Yatzar prayer is one of Judaism’s most basic, literally. It is said every time one uses the toilet, right after washing the hands and leaving the bathroom. It is basic in that it deals with an act that is so basic, and is said in gratitude to HaShem for first making us in such wisdom, making us perfectly so that if one opening was closed, or a closing was opened, and they shouldn’t be, we wouldn’t be able to stand before HaShem in gratitude. Or to stand at all.

There were a few students in this class that didn’t know the prayer, or when or why it was said. The lesson plan was, and can be, the following:

1. Explain the prayer.
a. Write down various organs they couldn’t live without. (heart, brain, etc.)
b. Write down actions that if they didn’t do, they wouldn’t survive. (eat, sleep, go to the bathroom…)

2. Look at the prayer and choose most important words for the class.

3. This class chose openings and cavities, and blocks or closings.

4. Make a gesture with just your hands that shows both an opening and a closing at the same time.

5. Now choose a partner, and make a gesture with your arms and hands together that shows both an opening and closing at the same time.

6. Now see if the whole group can make a shape that is both and opening and closing.

7. Rehearse all three shapes and transitions from one to the other.

8. Recite the prayer, as a group, while first doing the solo, then duets, then the group. Recite the prayer first in English, then in Hebrew.

9. Decide as a group which gesture will be performed where in the prayer, which works as a solo, as a duet, as the group gesture? This may change the order: perhaps students want to start off as a group, and then become soloists, to signify standing alone before HaShem, or they might find key words that the gestures align with, such as Haloolim Haloolim with the duet gesture, to show how many of the cavities or openings are possible…

10. Decide as a group what the final pose should be. Perhaps it is whatever pose was the third one, or perhaps all stand Laamod lefanecha, standing before HaShem, and the rest of the prayer is recited standing still.

11. Ask the students if they understood the prayer in a different way.

a. Some of the Heritage students did not know the prayer, so they said they had learned a lot.
b. Some were more conscious of the meaning of the prayer, as normally they are taught it in Hebrew, and are focused on the words more than the meaning.
Some had stories to share about illness and being grateful when an illness is over: this has direct correlation to the Asher Yatzar prayer.

February 19, 2009/by Jodi Falk
https://movingwisdom.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moving-wisdom-logo-white-1-300x300.png 0 0 Jodi Falk https://movingwisdom.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moving-wisdom-logo-white-1-300x300.png Jodi Falk2009-02-19 20:55:172021-01-08 10:30:11MODES OF MOVEMENT INTO TEFILLAH: part one / wordplay with Asher Yatzar

Biology and Dance in a High School Class: Embodying the Body

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Teachers: Jeanne Powers, Biology Teacher at PVPACHS, and Jodi Falk, Dance Director at PVPACHS

Authors: Jodi Falk and Jeanne Powers
October, 2008

Jeanne Powers, Biology teacher at the Pioneer Valley Performing Arts Charter Public School in South Hadley, Massachusetts, and Jodi Falk, Director of Dance at PVPACHS, created and implemented a short series of classes that used physical movement exercises to help teach some basic principles of the workings of human cells.  This idea grew from wanting to integrate the performing art of dance into the academic discipline of biology; the result was an integrated class, informed discussion, and essays by the students on the nature of equilibrium, not only in the cells, but also in their lives and on the planet.

It has been well documented that engaging the kinesthetic intelligence of children in primary and elementary education is a powerful tool for learning many subjects in the academic curriculum (Gilbert, Jensen, Overby, Pica, Griss, and Zakkai).  However, there is very little written about this for high school age children, and whether this kind of intelligence is still a meaningful vehicle for gaining understanding.  This class does not prove nor disprove the possibility that it is meaningful; however, it does serve to ask the question and bring up this possibility in educational discourse.

Ms. Powers’ wanted to help solidify her students’ understanding of the ways material can move in and out of a semi-permeable cell membrane.  Along with this is the notion of equilibrium, or how a cell balances its materials inside and outside of the cell membrane.  The specific topics she wanted to cover were: DIFFUSION, ACTIVE TRANSPORT with channels, ENDOCYTOSIS and EXOCYTOSIS.

DIFFUSION occurs when there are particles on either side of a cell membrane and the particles are not equal on both sides.  The particles want to move to equilibrium where the concentration can be the same on both sides of the cell membrane.  The particles will move only from high concentration to low concentration because no energy is used during diffusion.

In ACTIVE TRANSPORT, energy is used with the help of pathways or channels inside the cell membrane.  This energy, called ATP, helps to “carry” the material across the cell membrane. Because there is energy, the particles can move against the concentration gradient from low to high.

ENDOCYTOSIS is the ability for a cell to engulf a particle by changing its own shape and bringing it into the cell. EXOCYTOSIS is the opposite, it is the ability for the cell to release material to the outside of the cell.  Both processes involve the cell changing its form to move the particle or material along.

Ms. Falk decided to do at least one movement exercise for each of the four processes.  For diffusion, Ms. Falk named the process before describing the movement activity; for the others, Ms. Falk had the students move and create and then decipher which process they were embodying.  Discussions followed each exercise.

Handshake warm-up

For diffusion, Ms. Falk first led a warm-up where each student shook the hand of another student (this can be done with scarves or gloves on if touching skin is not permitted or practiced) and then another, always keeping one hand connected.  The “game” is to only have one hand, in other words to not be without a hand, or to not be with two hands.  This exercise can reveal some social cues: if someone is too quick to let go of a hand, or highly concerned with another who doesn’t have a hand.  In any case, the idea here is to get used to moving and seeing how movement can be looked at as a metaphor for processes not directly involved in the exercise.  Diffusion is partly depicted in this activity by very little use of energy to move from one person, or cell, to another.

Bumper car jam

A more detailed movement game for diffusion followed the handshake warm-up.  Students were asked to connect arm-in-arm two or three across.  When Ms. Falk said “go”, the students were asked to run across the room, and, if they were three across, they were to drop one person onto a two across team, so that the greater number would “diffuse” to a lower number, and equilibrium would be reached.  At least, it would be reached for a moment.  Then, of course, the two across team would now be a three across, and would need to repeat the dropping off action.  This drop-off and pick-up action continued until Ms. Falk said “stop”.  The obvious short-lived nature of equilibrium was truly seen in this exercise.  This point became the basis for essays that the students wrote later in the unit.

“Me” game

Without explaining that the next exercise was about active transport, Ms. Falk placed a line of blue tape across the floor.  On one side of the tape, she mentioned that it was the “in”side or “cool” group, and the other side, the “out”side or not as cool group.  This led to a fun discussion about which side was better.  Ms. Falk then asked that if people wanted to go from the “out” to the “in” group, they needed to lean back towards the “in” group, yell out “ME” and the people in the “in” group line up in two lines across from and near to each other, like a channel, and catch the person who said  “ME”, carry them, and bring them into their side.  This “transfer” of a person happens with a good deal of energy used to pick up and carry, as well as coordinate with each other.  This energy represented the much needed ATP for active transport.  When there are too many people in the “in” group, (like too much real estate development on the shore), people from that group do the same to move to the “out” group.

Cell Volleyball

Two groups of students get into a circle holding hands, facing outward.  These two circles make two teams, and these teams play a game with a large physioball.  The ball is thrown from one team, without anyone in the team using his or her hands.  The opposite team catches the ball, also without using hands, and passes the ball through the group, which means the circle changes its forms a little, and then shoots it to the other team.  Points are won if the group can catch the ball, and if the group can pass the ball through the group, keeping their hands connected to each other.  As different groups got better at catching and passing, they also seemed to help their opponents get better at it.

Discussion and feedback:

Much of the discussion centered around how much teamwork was needed for most of these processes.  Ms. Powers described that indeed teamwork was a central part of the workings of our cells in our bodies.  Students also commented on how the cells need to communicate with each other, and when there weren’t enough helpers in the Active Transport game, others needed to come in and help.  Ms. Powers explained that this happened inside the cells as well; sometimes extra proteins were called on to aid the transport process.  The discussions of each game helped to clarify further the cellular processes inside each of our bodies.

Student responses:

Students were then asked how doing the movement games may have helped them reinforce their learning the material of the biology class.  They were also given the option of saying if it didn’t help them at all.  Where there were a few students for whom this was not a helpful method, many comments centered around the following statements:

“This class reinforced what we learned in the biology class.”

“I got to see it in action; this helped me know it.”

“This class brought it full circle; I learned it, I read it, and now I did it.”

“This class made me realize I knew it more than I thought I did.”

“It made more sense to me because of how it feels.  It’s not just memorizing.”

“I learned it because I am it.”

“I’m not going to lie – I thought you would make us choreograph the cytoplasm.  I wasn’t looking forward to this class.  But, I had fun and I really learned something.”

Stability and Instability Essays:

In the following week, Ms. Powers focused the class on the aspect of equilibrium. If cells are constantly looking for equilibrium, are we? Do we find it? Would we like it if we did?

Ms. Powers states: “In class, we brainstormed about the stabilities and instabilities of both themselves and the world.  They were to write about these stabilities and instabilities and think about what the world would be like if everything were stable (at equilibrium).  Then their final task was to write about how stability and instability in the world was similar to the instabilities and stabilities (equilibrium) in cells.

I believe that the majority of them made the connection from what we did with Jodi (Ms. Falk) and the in class brainstorming.  The movement exercise with Jodi allowed many of them to make the connections that they had not made from just the in-class work.”

Excerpts from Stability Papers:

Student A:

“Nothing can ever become truly stable. It’s almost like saying something is perfect, nothing is ever perfect. Life can’t ever be perfect or stable because everything can be improved upon, no matter what. It’s a good thing that nothing is stable, because if everything was, there wouldn’t be anything to look forward to or work towards. If the world did magically become stable, I feel like everything would soon become extremely bland and boring. There wouldn’t be anything to change. All people learn from their experiences and their mistakes, and if the whole world became stable, there wouldn’t be anything to learn from.

We need instability to thrive. We need to feel something different all the time, we need to encounter new problems and find a way to work through them. All this just makes us stronger people and allows us to know how to approach new things in the future. I wouldn’t have much to do with my time if the world was stable. I really have no idea what I would do because it’s just so unrealistic. I can’t imagine a stable life, a stable world.

These questions relate to the stability and equilibrium in cells. Cells are extremely hectic, and are not very orderly. It relates to how life is; nothing is ever perfect, and there is always something going on. Nothing stays the same; the chemistry of the cell is constantly changing and evolving. Just like life.”

Student B:

“I think that it is impossible for the world to become stable if we are also stable. Because when the human population is stable that means that all of us are using the world’s resources, and most of us do not give back to the world, most just take. But if there were no humans the world would thrive, it would be a forest rather than a slowly increasing industrial world.”

Student C:

“So, I think that the world and the people in it basically work on the same principle on which the cells do when they form equilibrium or balance out. Cells even out to create balance, or some kind of harmony, and that is for the most part how human life works. Just like the cells.”

Student D:

“What is stable in about the world: there is really not much that is stable about the world. However, I can honestly say that the socioeconomic diversity of our world is stable. It’s not really a good thing to have this kind of diversity, because is means that there will be poor people; those who get less than their share of the world’s resources.”

Student E:

“The world is loaded with stability, though it’s sometimes hard to identify because of the instability masking it.”

Student F:

“Cells are constantly searching for equilibrium, much like people are.”

Student G:

“Let’s go with that – the world becoming stable. Would life become pointless if it did become stable? Is the point in life to try and “equalize” who we are and all around us? How I think of stability in our world is peace. Once we have stability, we’ll have peace. I just think it’d be kind of hippy-esque, almost. Playing music, singing, laughing, joking, dancing . . . “

Student H:

“Stability and equilibrium in cells is very similar to the stability and instability of the world around us. Cells have to work very hard to achieve stability, and when they do, the stability changes rapidly. This is like the world, because the stability in the world is also changing rapidly.”

Student H:

“I don’t think we could be stable even if we tried, although I do think one of the faults of the human race is the inability to accept instability.”

Student I:

“All of these questions I have answered in this paper relate to the stability and equilibrium in a cell, because cells are hardly ever stable. It is incredibly difficult for cells to be stable, because they are constantly changing. This relates to the real world, because everything around you in the world is also constantly changing, whether you notice it or not.”

December 25, 2008/by Jodi Falk
https://movingwisdom.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moving-wisdom-logo-white-1-300x300.png 0 0 Jodi Falk https://movingwisdom.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moving-wisdom-logo-white-1-300x300.png Jodi Falk2008-12-25 18:32:102021-01-08 10:30:11Biology and Dance in a High School Class: Embodying the Body

Morning Prayers in Movement: a Jewish Yoga Class

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There are wonderful resources from Rabbis and other learned people in the Jewish tradition that speak to spirituality of the body (Nachman, Finkel, Michaelson) and the holiness of movement (Michaelson, Bloomfield, Nachman and students). There is an emerging field of Jewish yoga and creative dance (Bloomfield, Klotz, courses at Elat Chayyim, the dance program at the religious women’s college Orot in Elkana, Israel). And, there is still a gap between those ideas, which prove a more movement-filled Jewish origin (dancing after crossing the Red Sea, David dancing wildly by the Ark, the daily shuckling by minyans across the continents and centuries, Psalms which uphold dancing as a glorification of the One), and … reality.

The other weekend I taught a four-day course at Elat Chayyim on Embodied Relationships, relationship to oneself, to others, to prayer, and to G-d. Embodied prayer was the first idea I had for the course and I focused on that in many of the sessions. As per usual at Elat Chayyim, the spiritual wing of the Isabella Freedman Retreat Center in Falls Village, CT, there were many inspiring teachers and leaders of heart awakening and love-filled Shabbat services. Shabbat morning, Amichai Lau-Lavie, Executive and Artistic director of Storahtelling, led a rousing Dvor Torah which included Bnai Mitzvah teenagers and their parents. In the beginning of the services, Amichai said something quite simple that complemented my Jewish yoga practice and helped uplift my Shabbat teaching that day.

Simply put, the morning services, and the morning in general, as we wake, start with Thank You.We say Modeh/Modah Ani upon waking, which is one big Thank You for keeping me alive and waking me up, and go on to the morning prayers which say Thank You for opening eyes, mine and others, for straightening the bent, my body and others, for guiding my steps, etc.The prayers can be seen as an analogy for all humanity but also for getting me out of bed and just, well, thanks.

Then, after the grateful blessings, we say “Wow”. All the Songs of Praise follow, the “wow” of the wonder of it all, and of G-d. Isn’t that amazing? We say thank you BEFORE we say wow. We don’t say, wow, thank you. We say thank you, wow. It’s not so new age after all to have the “attitude of gratitude” and then magically we have the eyes to really see, to really receive the wonders that exist, that we “have”.

So, what does this have to do with Jewish Yoga?I use this map, this framework already handed down to Jews for thousands of years, to thematically and literally order the class.First, is thank you.Even if we are tired, cranky, or have the early morning body stiffness.We say thank you.We actually speak our thanks as we begin our class.We become aware of our bodies, sitting on our cushions or mats, and as we stretch and moan we also say thank you for the arms to stretch, for the breath that runs through us, for straightening our bent bodies and even for the pain we experience, since the pain will lead us to our own relief of pain if we learn how to listen.

Then, as we move more into the first postures of the class, we say “Wow.” Wow, we can stretch that much more, wow, we can balance in that lunge, wow, we can be like a cat or dog, and wow, we can stand.

Then, as in the service of our tradition, after the wow, is the most important prayer of Judaism. It is said that if you cannot study Torah on any given day, then at least you must say this prayer, in the morning, and in the evening. This is the Shema. The most important prayer of a highly verbal (people of the Book) tradition, a tradition of arguing and wrestling and questioning, is the prayer that tells us to listen. Listen, O Israel, the Lord is Our G-d, the Lord is One. This is what Jews brought to the world, monotheism, and to truly hear this, and live by the example of its teaching, is supposedly the life’s work of all Jews.

The Shema in the body is a wonderous practice. I have developed a whole morning tradition just on this practice alone. When do you actually listen to your body? What are the results when you do, and when you don’t? At this point in the yoga class, we are standing, and we begin to listen. What does my body need now? Right now? And now? The repeated question is always answered if you let the body speak, and release from your mind making the choice. I don’t believe that the body and mind are separate, but I do believe that in our 21st century western culture we have created a separation that often is detrimental to the body.Rumi, a poet mystic of a much earlier century, agrees: “If you start doing something against your health, your [body] intelligence will eventually scold you.”The question of what my body needs now, not what my mind thinks it needs, can lead to surprising results.When we “think” we are tired, we think that our response will be to lie down.Often if we really hear our bodies, our “tiredness” is our body’s way of asking for attention, and when we give it, our fatigue may give way to joyous opening or soft soothing swaying.Surprise is what happens; we allow ourselves to go into the unknown.And, isn’t that where G-d is?

This practice is like a known practice in the dance world, Authentic Movement ™. However, we don’t always use a partner as witness, and I bring in questions and images at times into the practice to work with. However, it is interesting that the last letter, ayin, of the Hebrew word shema, the first word in the shema, and the last letter, daled, in the Hebrew word echad, the last word in the shema, spell ed, which means witness. We witness our own silence, our own listening, and our own G-d.

After the Shema is the Amidah, which literally means standing. We stand to bless G-d, and then hear our thoughts alone, our own connection to the Divine. And, we listen. The Shema practice can bring such great insights that I often bring these two parts of the service together as one on the mat. And in the Amidah, we finally get to, except on Shabbat when all is perfect and we don’t need anything, ask G-d for what we want. That is also perfect; we listen, and then ask, instead of asking, then listening. Just as we say thank you before saying wow, we assert our connection to G-d through listening, and then ask for what we or loved ones, or the world at large, needs.

On certain mornings, the Amidah is followed by study. We study the words of the Torah. Here, if there is a theme for the class that is based on the parsha shavua, or another text, we work with that text in movement and in words. For instance, with parsha Toledot, we may work with partner counterbalance movements and perhaps a bit of contact improvisation to look at the relationship between Jacob and Esau. We might find the warrior poses in yoga correspond to one of the brothers, while the child’s pose corresponds to the other. Which one corresponds to which is a question of interpretation, and everyone on the mat is encouraged to find their own interpretation based on their movement discovery.

Finally, at the end of a Jewish prayer service we say Kaddish. This is the prayer that is said for anyone who has died recently, or for an anniversary of someone’s death. Some people say it for those who didn’t have anyone to say it for them, such as those who died in the Shoah, the Holocaust. Interestingly enough, at the end of a yoga class, we do savasana, the corpse pose. We practice dying. In both traditions the body knowledge of death is honored and given a place. It is notable that the Kaddish doesn’t speak of death, but is more praise for G-d. I recently heard a beautiful teaching that the words of praise are actually the words of those souls for whom we are saying Kaddish, rising to their Creator.

The above is a general outline of what my version of a Jewish yoga class is like. The movement to combine these two traditions is relatively new, considering the age of the traditions, and the field is open and growing. What is your experience?

September 3, 2008/by Jodi Falk
https://movingwisdom.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moving-wisdom-logo-white-1-300x300.png 0 0 Jodi Falk https://movingwisdom.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moving-wisdom-logo-white-1-300x300.png Jodi Falk2008-09-03 06:04:442021-01-08 10:30:11Morning Prayers in Movement: a Jewish Yoga Class

The Ineffable: The Way of Knowing…or not

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For me, dance is a pathway, a method, not unlike Buddhist meditation or other spiritual practices, for knowing oneself, the world, the connection between the two, and the … ineffable.

There are two instances I can recall at this moment which epitomize this perspective. One is when I first knew dance was my calling, and one, several years later when working with CandoCo, a mixed ability company in the U.K.

As a teenager in the late ‘70’s, I strolled into a dance class expecting the usual series of exercises. Instead, the teacher stopped us in our tracks and asked, “What is one movement, just one, that can warm up your entire body?” A simple question. Or is it? Is there really only one? Is there even the possibility of one? Isn’t it all “One”? What is oneness? What is warm? How fun! My body, brain, soul and heart were fully engaged in the process. The other students found a movement. I couldn’t stop.

Dance then and forevermore became an investigation, a ritual of questioning, a path to knowing and then not knowing. I use this idea of investigation when I become complacent or too inside my own head, to shake myself up and remember to not know.

A time when an outside impetus shook me up in that way was when I began teaching at the Laban Centre, a dance conservatory in London, England, in 1992. My colleagues asked if anyone would “mind” working with David Toole, a man who started dancing in his late 20’s, who didn’t have legs. Again, how, and what, are legs, to dance? What is dance if it is not embodied by a body I know? How can arms become legs; how can his “dis”ability give him more abilities? Aren’t we all disabled in some way, big or small? My work with him led to a solo at a faculty concert; that led to a commission by CandoCo for that solo with a dancer added to make a duet. How does a more “normal” dancer’s body, in the second dancer, compare or connect with David’s body onstage?

I describe dance as a method or pathway. The vehicle is the body; the tool for the method is questioning. Not knowing. What could it be if …? Both of these examples have given me the gift of staying open to the deep wisdom of the unknown. Or perhaps what is truly known, on some level, but to our everyday selves, is, ineffable.

September 1, 2008/by Jodi Falk
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Welcome!

Moving Wisdom: Sharing Stories and Changing Lives Through Movement



Welcome! May You Be Moved.

Moving Wisdom believes that wisdom resides in our human bodies and uncovering that wisdom, one gesture at a time, allows us to reclaim ourselves and our communities. With dance, yoga, theater and more, we can heighten our resilience and change the conversations we have with others and ourselves.

Moving Wisdom has worked across the globe in bringing our first language, movement, to places of conflict, people with challenges, classrooms of all subjects, and first-class artists. Thank you for visiting this site. Let’s start the conversation today.


About Jodi P. Falk


jodi p. falk

Jodi P Falk, MFA, CLMA, PhD, has had a 35-year career as a professional dancer, yogi, arts educator, international choreographer, as well as years of leadership and fundraising in the arts, community engagement, and social justice activism through the arts.


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Workshops


sunset

Classes, residencies and workshops in dance, dance as a tool for social justice, finding your voice, and dance for vulnerable populations.


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Testimonials



“Keep this professor!”

“Jodi was super high energy, individualized the lessons for all of us, and was wonderfully flexible, supportive, and fun!”

“Jodi is the most inspiring professor. She is always positive and is extremely knowledgeable in teaching children across the curriculum.”

“You have so much Light. I study these big words in the Torah, like Emet, and not sure where/what they are – you ARE them.”

“You give specific instructions for improvisation, so I can really learn and play.”

“For the first time in dancing, I felt my whole body breathing. I felt the air flow throughout my body.”

“I feel relaxed after your classes, like I can be and am myself.”


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Latest Posts by Jodi P. Falk

Transforming healthcare through movement and storytelling: “This is the root of healthcare.”

Dance
dancers in silhouette against the sunset

The MW/HL project focused on enhancing healthcare education by teaching emerging medical professionals how to use movement, music and storytelling with elders in healthcare facilities to sharpen cognition, activate motion, and engage socially.

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December 31, 2020/by Jodi Falk
https://movingwisdom.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/javier-allegue-barros-Kr3Ls8Tw8h4-unsplash.jpg 1159 1920 Jodi Falk https://movingwisdom.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moving-wisdom-logo-white-1-300x300.png Jodi Falk2020-12-31 11:17:542021-04-14 16:17:07Transforming healthcare through movement and storytelling: “This is the root of healthcare.”

Dancing matters: authentic holistic education

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As a dancer I believe my body speaks, as a choreographer I believe my body communicates, and as a teacher I believe my body, and the bodies of my students, are vehicles for not only a culturally diverse creative art form, but also for building a socially sensitive and communally aware worldview.

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February 21, 2016/by Jodi Falk
https://movingwisdom.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moving-wisdom-logo-white-1-300x300.png 0 0 Jodi Falk https://movingwisdom.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moving-wisdom-logo-white-1-300x300.png Jodi Falk2016-02-21 15:22:462021-01-08 10:30:10Dancing matters: authentic holistic education

INTRODUCING: JEWmba™ and Parsha Yoga™ in your community!

Dance, Dance in the Bible, Jewish Education, Main Content, Yoga

Introducing two new classes that are filling up!  Invite Moving Wisdom to come to your event to teach JEWmba™ or Parsha Yoga™ in your community…

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June 14, 2012/by Jodi Falk
https://movingwisdom.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moving-wisdom-logo-white-1-300x300.png 0 0 Jodi Falk https://movingwisdom.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/moving-wisdom-logo-white-1-300x300.png Jodi Falk2012-06-14 14:26:472021-01-08 10:30:10INTRODUCING: JEWmba™ and Parsha Yoga™ in your community!

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Moving Wisdom

1 week 6 days ago

Thankful to Springfield Symphony Orchestra for choosing me as one of 10 Fearless Women in their Fearless Women Concert. #WomensHistoryMonth #internationalwomensday #fearlesswomen #makeadifference

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Moving Wisdom

Moving Wisdom

3 months 1 week ago

Thankful to receive the 2022 Woman of Impact Award with 7 other amazing women - thanks to BusinessWest! A certificate from Senator Eric Lesser was

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Moving Wisdom

Moving Wisdom

3 months 1 week ago

#Reunion!!!! Dancing (second from left) as the original cast of Lifeline by Carolyn Dorfman Dance, and us 30 years later. When you lean on each

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Moving Wisdom

Moving Wisdom

6 months 2 weeks ago

Looking at my past reviews in The London Times - My choreography on Candoco Dance Company at Queen Elizabeth Hall early on when we made

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Moving Wisdom

6 months 3 weeks ago

What It's Like to Live With Dementia

Teepa Snow - work with dementia helps us work with ourselves. Moving WisdomHidden Lives project reimagines healthcare through storytelling and movement. #movement #movementismedicine #dance

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Moving Wisdom

Moving Wisdom

1 year 7 months ago

Sharing movement keeps us all feeling alive, aware, connected. Connection is key to belonging.

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Moving Wisdom

1 year 7 months ago

Yoga is the new chiropractic... and dance is an ever-present healer

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Moving Wisdom

1 year 9 months ago

Feeling like moving

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Moving Wisdom

Moving Wisdom

1 year 9 months ago

We have all the wisdom we need in our bodies. Move to unlock it.

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Moving Wisdom

1 year 11 months ago

Now it's easier to contact Moving Wisdom.

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August 26, 2008/by Jodi Falk
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Critical Acclaim

QUOTES FROM THE PRESS for Falk’s choreography: ABOUT To Please the Desert: (On CandoCo, a Mixed Ability Company) The London Times, 1994: “Falk creates intense, still beauty in a duet which some enterprising film-maker should put on celluloid.” The Guardian, 1994: “Simple, poignant beauty.” Scotland on Sunday, 1995: “…it was Jodi Falk’s To Please the […]

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August 12, 2008/by Jodi Falk
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Testimonials

Feedback from secular and spiritual arenas: Secular: “Keep this professor!” “Jodi was super high energy, individualized the lessons for all of us, and was wonderfully flexible, supportive, and fun!” “Jodi is the most inspiring professor.  She is always positive and is extremely knowledgeable in teaching children across the curriculum.” “Jodi was one of the most […]

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August 12, 2008/by Jodi Falk
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Workshops and Residencies

Classes, residencies and workshops in dance, dance as a tool for social justice, finding your voice, and dance for vulnerable populations. Write to movingwisdom for more information, to commission a residency or to inquire about our schedule. Also… Workshops and Residencies Please discover both areas of interest below. Dancingsoul This class offers the absolute freedom […]

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August 12, 2008/by Jodi Falk
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About Jodi P. Falk

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August 12, 2008/by Jodi Falk
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Jodi P Falk, MFA, CLMA, PhD, has had a 35-year career as a professional dancer, yogi, arts educator, international choreographer, as well as years of leadership and fundraising in the arts, community engagement, and social justice activism through the arts.

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