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Glossary›Sensory Awareness

Glossary

Sensory Awareness

A somatic practice developed by Charlotte Selver emphasizing direct sensory experience through everyday activities like walking, sitting, and breathing, rooted in the work of Elsa Gindler.

What is Sensory Awareness?

Sensory Awareness is a somatic practice that cultivates direct, non-conceptual attention to sensory experience through exploration of simple, everyday activities. Practitioners work with fundamental movements—sitting, standing, walking, lying down, breathing—with sustained, quiet attention to what the senses perceive in the present moment. Unlike techniques that prescribe correct postures or specific outcomes, Sensory Awareness investigates the natural functioning of the organism through guided experiments, allowing participants to distinguish conditioned habits from organic responsiveness. The practice emphasizes receptivity over achievement, sensation over interpretation, and trusting the body’s inherent intelligence.

Origins & Lineage

Sensory Awareness has its origin in the work of the gymnastics and exercise teacher, Elsa Gindler (1885–1961), and the Swiss music teacher, Heinrich Jacoby (1889–1964). They never gave their ‘work’ a formal name. What Gindler had called Arbeit am Menschen (work on the human being) emphasised self-observation and growing understanding of one’s individual physically related condition. Gindler developed her approach in Berlin beginning in the 1920s, reportedly after recovering from tuberculosis through focused attention to her breathing.

Charlotte Selver (April 4, 1901, in Ruhrort (Duisburg), Germany – August 22, 2003, in Muir Beach, California; née Wittgenstein) was a teacher of the Gindler/Jacoby method of awareness and exercise, a somatic bodywork method she further developed and taught after her arrival in the United States in 1938 as Sensory Awareness. In the 1920s, Charlotte Selver encountered Elsa Gindler in Berlin, who together with the students in her courses, researched how the natural gifts of people could be developed, even at an adult age. Up until she emigrated to New York in 1938, she studied with Elsa Gindler and the music teacher, Heinrich Jacoby, and she reestablished contact with them in the 1950s.

In 1950 she introduced Sensory Awareness at the New School for Social Research in New York, and in 1963 at the Esalen Institute in California. Selver had a deciding influence on the “Human Potential Movement”, which was cultivated and named at the Esalen Institute, where she taught as of 1963. In 1971, the “Sensory Awareness Foundation” was brought into being.

How It’s Practiced

In our work of Sensory Awareness, we experiment with all the simple activities of daily life, all the things which we have been doing since we were born, or which we have learned in our earliest infancy, such as walking, standing, sitting, lying, moving, resting, seeing, speaking, listening, etc. Sessions typically occur in small groups led by a trained leader who offers “experiments”—guided activities accompanied by questions that direct attention without prescribing results.

In Sensory Awareness classes, we work with the simplest of activities, like scientists or explorers journeying through unknown territory eager to discover what they find. There is no map or prescribed routine. Each class is different and unfolds in its own unique way. The classes are composed of “experiments”… activities offered by the leader with guided questions to help students explore their own experiences. These might include feeling the weight of the body while standing, noticing the texture of breath, or sensing contact with the floor while lying down. Participants often work with partners, exploring touch and responsiveness. The emphasis remains on sensing rather than doing, allowing rather than achieving.

But when one says “sensory”, that includes all the senses. The whole nervous system is impregnated by anything that happens, and one must be quiet enough and receptive enough so that this can happen, so that no thought and no words interfere with it. One is just being open for the experience itself.

Sensory Awareness Today

Sensory Awareness continues through workshops, retreats, and weekly classes offered by certified leaders worldwide, primarily coordinated through the Sensory Awareness Foundation. Workshops offered in Europe, the United States, Mexico, Canada, and beyond. Each year, the Sensory Awareness Foundation offers in-person workshops in different locations around the world. Online classes expanded availability beginning in 2020.

The practice profoundly influenced the development of somatic psychology, body psychotherapy, and contemporary mindfulness approaches. Because of that, she also had influence on Humanistic Psychology and the therapies based on it. Aspects of her work, especially the conscious sensing of the body and the following of physical sensations (Sensory Awareness), flowed into many of the methods of physical work, physical therapy, physical psychotherapy and psychotherapy which still exist at Esalen and other venues today. Notable figures who studied with Selver include Erich Fromm, Alan Watts, Paul Reps, Fritz Perls, Richard Baker, Shunryu Suzuki Roshi, Ruth Denison and Zoketsu Norman Fischer.

Common Misconceptions

It is not therapy. She clarifies how Sensory Awareness, even though often having therapeutic effects, is not meant to be therapy. The work is educational—an exploration of how we function, not treatment for dysfunction, though many report therapeutic benefits.

It is not mindfulness meditation. While both cultivate present-moment awareness, Sensory Awareness works specifically through sensory and movement exploration rather than seated meditation or formal contemplative techniques. “These findings indicate that the programs are working through different neural mechanisms,” says Sevinc. “The relaxation-response program is working more through deliberate control mechanisms, while the mindfulness program is working more through sensory-awareness mechanisms.”

It has no technique. There is no prescribed way to breathe, sit, or move. The practice investigates how each person actually functions in the moment, not how they should function according to an external standard.

It is not about achieving a special state. The work focuses on recovering ordinary, natural functioning, not accessing altered consciousness or spiritual experiences, though deepened presence naturally emerges.

How to Begin

The most direct entry is through a workshop or ongoing class with a certified Sensory Awareness leader. The Sensory Awareness Foundation (sensoryawareness.org) maintains a directory of teachers and events. For independent exploration, Charles Brooks’s book Sensory Awareness: The Rediscovery of Experiencing (Viking Press, 1974) documents Selver’s workshops in detail. The more recent Reclaiming Vitality and Presence: Sensory Awareness as a Practice for Life (2008), edited by Richard Lowe and Stefan Laeng-Gilliatt, presents Selver and Brooks’s teachings in an accessible format designed to guide readers through experiential exercises. The Foundation also offers free audio recordings introducing basic experiments.

Related terms

somatic practicesbody awarenessmindfulnessembodimentfeldenkrais methodhuman potential movement
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