What is Feldenkrais Method?
The Feldenkrais Method is a form of somatic education—a learning-based approach that uses movement and sensory awareness to improve how humans function. Developed by Israeli physicist and engineer Moshé Feldenkrais (1904–1984) during the mid-20th century, it operates on the principle that movement, sensation, thinking, and feeling are inseparable aspects of human experience. Feldenkrais’ theory is that “thought, feeling, perception and movement are closely interrelated and influence each other.” Unlike physical therapy or exercise regimens, the method uses movement and real-time awareness of body sensations and is not a treatment, adjustment, or exercise program. Practitioners guide students through subtle, exploratory movements designed to make unconscious habits conscious and create new, more efficient options for action.
Origins & Lineage
Moshe Feldenkrais was born in 1904 to a Ukrainian Jewish family in Slavuta in the Russian Empire (present-day Ukraine) and immigrated to the British Mandate for Palestine in 1918. After receiving degrees in mechanical and electrical engineering, he earned his D.Sc. in Physics at the Sorbonne in Paris and subsequently worked for a number of years in the French nuclear research program with Joliet Curie. He studied with Jigoro Kano, the originator of Judo, and in 1936 became one of the first Europeans to earn a black belt in that discipline.
On slippery submarine decks during World War II, he re-aggravated an old soccer knee injury; refusing an operation, he was prompted to intently explore and develop self-rehabilitation and awareness techniques by self-observation, which he later developed as his method. It was in Britain in the 1940s that he began to develop his Method and wrote his first book on the subject. In the 1950s, Dr. Feldenkrais returned to Israel where he lived and worked until he died in 1984 in Tel Aviv. He gained recognition in part through media accounts of his work with prominent individuals, including Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion.
He trained the first group of 13 teachers in the method from 1969 to 1971 in Tel Aviv; over four summers from 1975 to 1978, he trained 65 teachers in San Francisco at Lone Mountain College; in 1980, 235 students began his summer teacher-training course at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts. Today, there is a thriving community of over 10,000 Feldenkrais practitioners worldwide.
How It’s Practiced
The Feldenkrais Method is expressed through two distinct yet complementary modalities.
Awareness Through Movement (ATM) consists of verbally directed movement sequences presented primarily to groups; there are several hundred hours of lessons, and a lesson generally lasts from thirty to sixty minutes. People engage in precisely structured movement explorations that involve thinking, sensing, moving, and imagining; many are based on developmental movements and ordinary functional activities, while some are based on more abstract explorations of joint, muscle, and postural relationships. Lessons may begin in lying on the floor, in sitting or in standing and are organized around a specific theme, like sitting more comfortably or walking with ease; the student is directed through a slow exploration and asked to pay attention to sensory feedback.
Functional Integration (FI) is a hands-on form of tactile, kinesthetic communication in which the practitioner communicates to the student how he/she organizes his/her body and hints, through gentle touching and movement, how to move in more expanded functional motor patterns. FI consists of the practitioner gently guiding the movements of the student; lessons are custom tailored to the unique needs of each individual. These one-on-one sessions are particularly useful for those with specific injuries, neurological conditions, or anyone seeking highly individualized learning.
A hallmark of both modalities is the gentleness and subtlety of the work; you develop an ever increasing refinement in awareness of movement, sensation, feeling and thinking, and learn about your existing, possibly outdated or unhelpful habits, and experience alternative patterns and new options for healthier action.
Feldenkrais Method Today
The method is increasingly used among high-level performers, such as musicians, actors, dancers, and athletes. Classes and workshops are offered through certified practitioners in private studios, community centers, and online platforms. In 1972, Feldenkrais presented an Awareness Through Movement program for human potential trainers at Esalen Institute, marking the method’s entry into the human potential movement. Today, seekers encounter Feldenkrais through weekly group classes, weekend workshops, multi-day intensives, and private sessions. Recordings of lessons—both from Moshe Feldenkrais himself and contemporary practitioners—are widely available. The method is also integrated into professional training programs for dancers, musicians, physical therapists, and other somatic practitioners.
Research applications have explored its use for conditions including chronic pain, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, and cerebral palsy, though there is no conclusive evidence for any medical benefits of the therapy. A 2022 report by the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care found a “hint” of benefit for people with Parkinson’s disease; evidence for helping chronic low back pain was inconsistent, and the report found no evidence for long-term benefit of FM, or benefit for other conditions.
Common Misconceptions
It is not physical therapy or bodywork. While practitioners may use gentle touch in Functional Integration, the Feldenkrais Method is an educational process, not a medical treatment. The aim is learning, not fixing or adjusting the body.
It is not exercise. There is no repetition for strength-building or cardiovascular conditioning. Movements are slow, small, exploratory, and designed to refine perception rather than build endurance.
It is not stretching or relaxation. While many people feel more relaxed and flexible after lessons, the goal is increased awareness and functional improvement, not mere muscle lengthening or stress relief.
It is not mystical or energy-based. Feldenkrais was critical of the appropriation of the term ‘energy’ to express immeasurable phenomena or to label experiences that people had trouble describing and was impatient when someone invoked energy in pseudoscientific ‘explanations’ that masked a lack of understanding. The method is grounded in neuroscience, biomechanics, and developmental psychology.
It is not a quick fix. Meaningful change requires attention, curiosity, and time. While some people experience immediate shifts, deeper reorganization emerges through sustained practice.
How to Begin
The most direct entry point is attending an Awareness Through Movement class. Many practitioners offer introductory sessions or free recordings online. The Feldenkrais Guild of North America (feldenkrais.com) and the International Feldenkrais Federation maintain directories of certified practitioners worldwide. For readers, Awareness Through Movement: Health Exercises for Personal Growth (1972) by Moshe Feldenkrais provides written lessons and context. The Potent Self (published posthumously) and Body and Mature Behavior: A Study of Anxiety, Sex, Gravitation and Learning (1949) offer deeper insight into his thinking. Those with specific pain or movement limitations may benefit from scheduling a private Functional Integration session. Many practitioners now offer virtual classes, making the method accessible regardless of location.