Movement

Reading Your Own Movement Before You Try to Change It

By Ajith Jagadish · 2 min read

Most people come to me already wanting the fix. Tight hips, a shoulder that clicks, a knee that complains on stairs. I understand the instinct, because I have it too. But I have learned to slow down before offering a single corrective drill, because the more interesting question is rarely what should this person do, it is what is this person's body already doing, and does anyone including them actually know.

I ask new clients to walk across the room before we do anything else. Not to perform a good walk, just to walk the way they always do. Most people, once they realize they are being watched, immediately change something. That reaction alone tells me something. It tells me the person has a relationship with how their body looks more than a relationship with how it feels, which is common, and worth naming gently rather than correcting.

Reading movement first means noticing before judging. Where does someone hold their breath. Which side do they favor without knowing it. What happens to their shoulders when a task gets slightly harder than expected. None of this is diagnosis. It is closer to listening, the same way you would let a person finish a sentence before responding to it.

I bring this back to clients directly, because I think the awareness is more valuable long term than any single drill I could give them. A person who notices their own breath-holding under stress can interrupt it in the moment, at work, in traffic, anywhere, long after our session ends. A person who was simply handed a breathing exercise to do for ten reps has a tool, but not necessarily the awareness to know when it is needed.

The correction is not the hard part. Noticing accurately, without immediately trying to fix what you notice, is the hard part. Most of us are so used to evaluating our bodies that we skip straight past observing them.

This is slower than people expect coaching to be. It can feel, in the first session or two, like nothing is happening. But I would rather spend real time here than hand someone a stretch for a tight hip that is tight for reasons the stretch cannot touch, whether that is a hundred sedentary hours a week, an old habit of bracing against something, or simply a body that has never been asked to notice itself before being asked to change.

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