Books about
Hellerwork
- Bodywise (1991)
- The Owner's Guide to
the Body : How to Have a Perfectly Tuned Body and
Mind (1999)
- The
Endless Web : Fascial Anatomy and Physical
Reality (1996)
Bodywise
by Joseph Heller, William A. Henkin (Contributor)
Paperback - 262 pages (May 1991)
ISBN: 0914728733
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- Order this
Book Now!
(You
can always remove/buy it later)
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- Canada
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Amazon.ca
- Europe
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Amazon.co.uk
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See 19 sample
pages at Amazon.com
Customer Comment (from
Amazon.com)
Here is the Owner's Manual, May 16, 2000
A reader from Bothell, WA
If "God" had to equip us with an owner's manual
for our bodies, this would be the book. This book is full
of usefull information from cover to cover. I highley
recommend it!
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The
Owner's Guide to the Body : How to Have a
Perfectly Tuned Body and Mind
by Roger Golten
Paperback - 186 pages (August
1999)
Thorsons Pub; ISBN: 0722537379
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Book Now!
(You
can always remove/buy it later)
- America from
Amazon.com
- Canada
from
Amazon.ca
- Europe
from
Amazon.co.uk
-
See 8 sample
pages at Amazon.com
Book Description
This inspiring body "work book" shows how
to undo the damage done by years of slouching, slumping
and hunching. Golten urges us to get up out of our ill-fitting
chairs and reawaken our freedom of movement. The Owners
Guide will help you to understand your body better and
remove aches and pains for good.
Book Info
(Thorsons) Practical, illustrated guide to improve
posture, energy, vitality, and confidence. Based on the
principles of Hellerwork. For consumers. Softcover.
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The Endless Web : Fascial Anatomy
and Physical Reality
R. Louis Schultz, Rosemary Feitis, Diana Salles
Paperback
(October 1996)
North Atlantic Books; ISBN: 1556432283
-
- Order this
Book Now!
(You
can always remove/buy it later)
- America from
Amazon.com
- Canada
from
Amazon.ca
- Europe
from
Amazon.co.uk
-
Customer Comment (from
Amazon.co.uk)
Great view of connective tissue as a
physical structure
Reviewer: mattobrien3@hotmail.com
from (real) Northern California , 25 December, 1998
Before I read this book I had never really considered the
functioning of connective tissue as a "web-like"
structure within which bone and muscle articulate. The
authors contend, starting with embrionic anatomy and
onward, that the c.t. forms a bed within which cells
differentiate. From this view point of c.t. being a
primary base for physical form, we are shown how all
parts of the web are connected, and create "bands"
that ideally are nether too tight or too loose. I didn't
know much about Rolfing either, but apparently this
bodywork deals specificly with c.t. Good book, great
publishing company.
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