Marguerite Brodie with her dogs Kermit and Moe in Kuala Lumpur. Thanks to decades of dancing and tennis, Rolfing and daily Dharma practice, she stays fit and healthy.At 78, she carries herself with admirable strength and grace, and it’s the result of decades of dancing and tennis, combined with Rolfing and Dharma practice .
“But I was a young mother, afraid of losing him and I felt the intense pressure from his family, so he did end up getting an operation in the UK, where surgeons removed his spleen, a kidney and part of his pancreas,” says Brodie. “I have always loved dancing,” she says. “By the time I was able to dedicate time to myself again, I got into folk dancing, signed up for Latin ballroom dance school and went out on Fridays to dance.”
Also known as structural integration, Rolfing is based on the idea that the human body’s “energy field” benefits when it is aligned with the Earth’s gravitational field.In Rolfing, practitioners stretch and manipulate the body’s network of connective tissues called fascia. After her experience of Rolfing, Brodie went to study structural integration in the US state of Hawaii, and graduated from the Guild for Structural Integration in the state of Colorado in 2004.
She lined up with his devotees and, when she reached the altar where the master was sitting, he took her hand and ritually cut a lock of her hair. It was at that moment that something happened to her.
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