Fredrik's Journey to a Pain-Free Back

Fredrik's Journey to a Pain-Free Back

Esther Gokhale

Fredrik Prost’s journey in posture is a poignant one. Restoring one’s natural architecture is a return home for anyone - a return to one’s personal past, ancestral past, and genetic past. For Fredrik, it’s additionally a return to his living Sami relatives and those alive in his memory.


Fredrik's late father, Sigurd, on Lake Vettasjarvi in the very north of Sweden.

The Sami are an indigenous group of reindeer herders living in Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia.


The Sami use sleds, dogs, and snowmobiles to herd their reindeer

Fredrik is a traditional Sami handicraftsman working with reindeer antler, metal, and wood.


Fredrik Prost, traditional Sami handicraftsman


Engraved knife + sheath made from antler, metal

Being of a younger generation and between a traditional lifestyle and a modern one, his working posture included hunching over his work. As a result he had developed upper back pain for which conservative treatment failed to give him relief. He discovered my book, and the pictures and philosophy resonated for him - I was describing things he had seen with his own eyes. So he traveled from his home and workshop in Kiruna, Northern Sweden to attend my June 2014 Gokhale Method Foundations course in Bonn, Germany. 

Fredrik was an unusual student - he hip-hinges naturally, his pelvis anteverts, and he has a quiet dignity about him.  

During the breaks between classes he shared an anthropology book with me that showed photographs of his grandparents and grand uncles, tallstanding with open chests, hip-hinging with flat backs, and emanating the self-possession and poise that is so characteristic of indigenous people.


Fredrik's great grandmother Inga-Marja Seva with his grandmother


The baby on the right is Fredrik's mother, Ingrid

I was fascinated and we kept in touch through regular Skype meetings. I asked questions about his family, community and the Sami people, getting more intrigued in every conversation. I learned about the kind of tepee his mother was born and raised in (in temperatures that dropped below -55 degrees F), what part of a reindeer’s fur is warmest, how he forges steel for his carved knives, how the Sami dogs know that to attack a human would be their last mistake,... Sensing my interest, Fredrik asked if I would like to visit their community for the marking of the reindeer calves in July (joining a moose hunt in the Fall or counting the calves in the winter might be a tough entry into the culture, he reckoned). And so it has come to be… this summer I will travel to Sapmiland in Northern Sweden for this adventure. 


Fredrik's great grandparents Itsa and Susanna Prost

I have several goals for this visit. Of course, I will learn about traditional body ways and movement. I also hope to taste what it means to be rooted in nature, to yoik (traditional singing/chanting) the wind and be the wind,


Note added July 29,2015: Fredrik informed me that videos of this type, created by the Finnish government to promote the tourist industry, is not authentic and is, understandably, problematic for the Sami

and to live communally without ownership of the land. I want to see and experience what it means when logging companies and mining interests threaten one’s livelihood.

 

And I would like to figure out how best I can give back to this and other communities from whom I have gotten so much. These people hold alive a treasure for those of us in more modern settings - I know this to be true for musculoskeletal health; I suspect it is also true for other aspects of life. 

 

I will hire a videographer to document what I see and experience. I will communicate what I can from the field and bring it home to those of you who are interested. If this sounds good to you, please leave a comment below. If there are particular questions you would like me to research, or pictures you would like me to capture, please let me know. My adventure has already begun. I have a packing list, I speak with Fredrik, I watch videos on YouTube and read articles on the internet.

 

I will keep you posted as this unfolds. 

 

In a couple of weeks Fredrik departs for Jokkmokk, the Sami winter market held annually since 1605. He will be displaying his art. 

 

Here is a link to his website for those of you who are interested.


Box (birch and reindeer antler)

Best,

Esther

 

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Comments

Submitted by EstherG on Mon, 01/19/2015 - 20:31

This will be my first time in Scandinavia - I wish I could be there longer than one short week. I will be doing the first European teacher training in the Netherlands in July. The rest of my schedule is undecided as yet. 

Submitted by WendyM on Tue, 01/27/2015 - 08:43

I have a high school friend who went on to become an ICU pediatric nurse, moving to Norway many decades ago.  For those of you interested in their footwear, below is what she recently emailed to me:

Thanks for this. It was very interesting. Yes, I do have some familiarity with the Samis. They're all over the top of the world in Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia. We had a little boy pt. years ago who only spoke Sami, not yet Norwegian. He was a real cutie and when it was time for him to go home his parents dolled him all up in his Sami costume, much to our delight. The part of Norway where they and their reindeer live is called Finnmarksvidda - a huge inland plain where it's colder then cold in the winter and swarming with mosquitoes in the summer. A couple of weeks ago it was -44 degrees up there and the school children were out in the snow playing soccer in their reindeer boots. These boots are for use in snow and have no soles as we know them, just reindeer skin all the way around so there's nothing to grip with. The kids weren't complaining about the cold but the fact that it was so slippery. All is relative!

Submitted by EstherG on Tue, 02/03/2015 - 21:37

Thanks for this communciation, Wendy! Pls convey my thanks to your friend. I'm very intrigued by their shoes. Fredrik has held a pair of summer shoes (most people don't wear these because you tend to stub your toes in them) and winter shoes (no commercial ones compare) made from reindeer skin (the warmest part that comes from the shins). The toe section curls up to provide easy fastening to skiis. Can't wait to see them and try them on.

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