The Legacy of Ron Kurtz
Ron Kurtz,
who died on January 4, 2011, is internationally recognized as the creator of
Hakomi and author of Body-Centered Psychotherapy: the Hakomi Method. Kurtz
pioneered, among other things, the use of mindfulness as a fundamental
ingredient of psychotherapy and realize the need for psychotherapy to be
experiential to be truly transformative. He also understood that nonverbal
expression reveals more than our verbal stories can ever tell about the core
material that organizes experience and that the body is a direct route to the unconscious.
In the
seventies Kurtz, who was trained as a scientist, began exploring psychology and
experimenting and creating a way of working with people that began to draw
attention for its innovative and imaginative approach. He was inspired by yoga
which taught him several basic ingredients that were to become an integral part
of how he worked, including the principle of ahimsa, or non-violence, the interconnectedness
of mind and body, the unity principle which is what the word yoga means, and a
way of doing little experiments in mindfulness for self discovery. Kurtz' s approach
was also informed by
Taoism, which
taught him about organicity and going with the flow, Bioenergetics
which contributed to his understanding of the bodymind
connection and how experience brings about change, and Gestalt, which showed
him a way to do psychotherapy with a focus on present experience.
In the 80's
Kurtz was greatly influenced and inspired by Moshe Feldenkrais
and how healing can be approached as learning. The genius of Feldenkrais was in bringing previously unconscious and
automatic habits patterns into conscious awareness (awareness through movement)
and facilitating the discovery for new possibilities of healthy alternative
ways of being and acting. What Feldenkrais did with
the body, Ron Kurtz adapted to psychology. One of the best ways to understand
the thinking behind Hakomi is to learn at least the basics of Feldenkrais.
By the 1980's
Kurtz was surrounded by several people who saw the genius in his way of working
and who wanted to distinguish it as a method in it's own right. They
brainstormed for a name for the method and came up with the word "Hakomi"
(which they found was a word in the Hopi language meaning "who are
you?") They created an institute (the Hakomi Institute) to offer trainings
in the new method. This group of well-intentioned followers spent years
attempting to bring order out of the sometimes seemingly chaotic way that Kurtz
did things, and began to codify the techniques and organize the method into a
form that could be practiced by and taught to others. They created a certification
process in order to have some control over who practiced and taught the method
and how.
Meanwhile
Kurtz himself continued to create and experiment and refuse to follow any kind
of formula or stay inside the box... which was, after all, how the
"method" came about in the first place. The more the folks at the
Hakomi Institute concretized and passed on the form of the method, the more
Kurtz was finding and using new forms to practice the spirit of the method. He
was notorious for certifying people in whom he recognized the spirit of the
work whether or not he'd seen them demonstrate the form. (His whole approach to
the certification process was as irreverent as his view of traditional medical
model psychotherapy. One Hakomi Institute trainer told the story of his own
certification. Apparently he was attempting to demonstrate a Hakomi session to
Ron who fell asleep during the session only to wake up at the end of it and
say, "well, I didn't see anything I didn't
like... You're certified!")
By the 90's
there were some in the Hakomi institute who told Kurtz that what he was doing
was not "Hakomi". A rift began to develop between them the more Kurtz
insisted, as he always had, on doing his own thing and not fitting into
anyone's idea of how psychotherapy, let alone Hakomi, should be done.
He
continually applied what he learned from clients and students and from his
voracious appetite for reading books - mainly about the newest research in
neuroscience - to his ongoing development of the work. In the 90's he realized
- as research has since confirmed – that the most important ingredient in
Hakomi, as in any psychotherapy process (after the client of course), is the
therapist's relationship with the client. He believed that a good therapeutic
alliance depended largely on the personhood and state of mind of the therapist.
With this realization, the focus in his trainings shifted from teaching Hakomi
as a method for psychotherapists to use on clients to using Hakomi to cultivate
those personhood qualities and skills that would help anyone to be a healing
presence for another. Kurtz recognized that there is an ideal state of mind, which
can be cultivated with practice, and he began to call this state of mind
of the helper "loving presence". By the mid 90's this became the
foundation of his way of teaching Hakomi to professionals and lay people alike.
He also saw the value of moving more quickly into the missing experience of nourishment
rather than staying in the old story and beliefs.
Neuroscience
confirms the importance of this shift of focus in psychotherapy.
By the start
of the new millennium, other new developments were showing up as Kurtz began to
feel his own mortality and wanted to refine his way of working and teaching his
way of working, still called Hakomi, to a more and more simple and elegantly
efficient approach. In the last ten years of his life, he preferred to call this
the "refined Hakomi method" as he moved further and further away from
any hint of pathologizing (changing the certification
to "practitioner" rather than "therapist" and dropping
entirely the use of the old Reichian-based character
system in favor of what he now called "indicators".)
Kurtz's way
of working and teaching became increasingly human and playful and deeply
compassionate as he moved more and more toward the appreciation of how vital is
the collaboration of practitioner and client (and ideally of a group) to
facilitating a nourishing experience of transformation and healing... for all
the participants of the process.
Right to the
end of his life, not a day went by that Ron Kurtz was not thinking about and
writing about perfecting and simplifying his life's passion, a way to help
reduce suffering through what he referred to as "Mindfulness-based
assisted self discovery"... what someone at Naropa
once called "applied Buddhism", what some of his followers are now calling
"Applied Mindfulness: the Hakomi Way"... the Legacy of Ron
Kurtz.