By Josef DellaGrotte Ph.D.
What is it in a person's way of walking that looks good, that
resonates with us, that has a certain elegance to it, a sense of
togetherness, confidence, power, endurance, yet is relaxed and
seemingly, attractive and enjoyable?
As a somatic practitioner, therapist, and personal trainer, a veteran
of many thousands of miles of walking on this planet, I have observed
many clients who experience pains and difficulties relating to walking,
Over the years-and working on developing my perception to see beyond
treatment into how things interact and interconnect. I am more often
able to see what is often elusive, yet obvious (as Dr. Feldenkrais, F.
M. Alexander, Ida Rolf and others have pointed out), namely that all
components of movement are not just parts but are all interconnected as
one functional structural, and yes, even psychophysical entirety.
The walking experience is primordial. All land based creatures, great
and small, do it. Humans have been relying on this primary functional
activity of daily life for as long as we have been around. Some peoples
have developed it into a high-grade level of functional movement, an
exercise that can combine performance with art, with health and fitness.
Walking is uniquely human. Though on two legs we cannot match the speed
of most animals, We nevertheless can move with direction, determination,
purpose and intention. The actions are simple yet wondrous-this art of
walking upright with ease, efficiency, and power to go almost anywhere,
anytime. Here the abstracted image ends and the real somatic feel
begins.
Walking cannot really be described. To know about it, to have a
feeling for it, you must experience the quality of flow, or resonant
frequency of motion, within yourself. The talk must be walked, and like
the Velveteen rabbit, rubbed into reality, embodied in ourselves. A few
years ago, a research group from MIT decided to study African women and
the way they walk. Unique to them and by extension to Indian and South
American women even men, was their ability to self organize in such a
way that they could maintain biomechanically erect posture for miles on
end. And, they walk at average speeds far excelling what we generally
are able to do. All this while carrying heavy objects on their head! And
yes, no known cases of cervical strain! What they had learned over
millennia was to sense how to organize around the center of gravity
which is a point of neutralizing forces and feeling light in the gait. .
We now have a growing trend in the west, sparked by walking styles
from Sweden, Finland, Switzerland and other countries, that actually
achieve a similar effect without even the load on the head and is
referred to sometimes as "power walking". Taken to extremes, it has even
become an Olympic event, race walking, like running, yet with much less
stress injuries to the body.
How does walking really work?
While it may seem natural, most of us who live and get shaped by the
sedentary conditions of sitting do not get the real benefits of walking.
Some even have increasing difficulty walking as they get older-all
unnecessary!
For an upright creature with only two legs, all the ground reaction
force must find its way through a vertical segmented body, that is, via
all the joints of the legs, the hips, and the spine. No easy task. That
is, every time I push the ground with my straightened thrusting leg I am
structurally designed to be able to direct the vector of force across
these segments linking muscles and connective tissue (which we will call
myofascial pathways) in such a way as to maintain an effortless erect
posture that is also moving my entire body through space. And, all this
is happening because these forces are also moving through my spinal
segments. Sounds difficult? How am I going to control this? It isn't
difficult. It does take practice.
The African men and women who had to travel distances in hot
climates, and perhaps similar folk like the American Indians who
continuously moved long distances to summer and winter camps, not only
walked at a sustained clip, but had to learn ease efficiency and
resistance- free gliding movements. To do this they intentionally
arranged their movements so that their hips could perform a powerful
energy generating actions much like a camshaft that turns an engine or a
spinning octopus ride at an amusement park. The action has even been
described as three propeller-like actions of the pelvis.
The reference here is to the simple physics of generating force. When
the hips are synchronized in three directional actions dictated by their
very structure, the kinetic energy so generated can travel up through
the spine and articulate with the ribs. This generates a spiral force
which turns the torso and is carried through the shoulder girdle and
arms. The walker who knows how to access this pathway of vector energy
experiences an elongation of the spine and the neck. (Ever noticed how
certain peoples look tall and beautifully extended in walking, dancing,
and performing.)
This happens naturally by the very design of our body, but the
program has to be activated by learning, which is how humans make
progress in all fields. Then and only then we human beings walk true to
our potential nature.
Sad to say, ever since we started bending from the upper body
forward at a young age, usually associated with the early imposition of
school; ever since sitting and bending became part of the new industrial
life style, problems with muscular skeletal pain soared. Walking was
compromised. The age of sitting with all its inherent structural
problems has also generated muscular, skeletal, myofascial and joint
disorders on a near epidemic scale.
Today the vast majority of the population that walks can be observed
to be lacking an efficient and working cooperation between the lower and
the upper body. Some of this is due to cultural inhibition of moving the
hips, especially for women, but the inescapable reality is this: the
hips must move in all the directions dictated by their structure. Some
essential points:
1. not only must the hips move but the action must connect directly
into the upper body via the spine
2. When the spine is rotating it actually generates spiralic energy
3. The few people who walk or run this way, appear tall, elongated,
aligned, and even graceful. They appear to be on the edge of gliding
over the surface with a light rebounding touch of the feet.
Watch the great efficient runners, like Michael Johnson, and you see
the same phenomena. Well, here is the good news. Such walking is
available to almost anyone, young or old. Over many years of working as
a therapist, a somatic educator, a practitioner of the Feldenkrais
method, a personal trainer, I have helped reeducate many clients with
painful hip and spine disorders. I could have said "treat it" which I
certainly did, but treatment only of spinal, hip and shoulder disorders
is just a way of helping a person maintain their own body situation. The
key ingredient is to help the person find a better way of doing the same
thing. Otherwise, repetition of the problem, reappearance of the problem
will be the order of the day.
One of the key pieces of this puzzle of transforming pain and
problems into opportunities that actually improve with results that will
last a lifetime. One of the missing pieces of this puzzle was to be able
to teach walking to anyone in an easy and simple way. Once people have
learned the basic fundamental movements by doing it themselves there is
inevitably actual improvement that does continue for life. This
improvement has been recorded in my own files, with people who have had
problems of hip replacement, near hip replacement, knee problems, lower
back problems, and physical conditions involving surgical fusion's and
these people have been able to improve their walking. Because of the
very structural basis of walking and what it can do for you, it is the
best exercise available to you, requires no special equipment, can be
solo or with partners, and costs nothing.
Power walking with ease: from hips to spine to arms:
Walking upright requires an alignment with central gravity that is
unique to humans. This connecting link starts from the hips, the strong
bony structure and articulations of the pelvis generate three actions
which are essential to getting lift and forward power. The hips have to
rotate laterally bend and extend and flex. That power is then
transmitted to the spine and the ribs, which need to be in the best
alignment to transmit the vectors of force. So what if it isn't in the
best alignment? First, Imagine a car trying to up hill in high gear.
There is not enough power, the engine over heat and damage soon occurs.
It is the same in a human body. If the hips are not generating the
"horse power" because of restrictions in action , then you walk harder
using the legs. The legs become stressed often manifesting this stress
as knee problems. Second, The hips are doing okay but the spine is
curved either in a lower back curvature (lordosis) or a mid back
curvature (kyphosis). Problem: The vector of force has to travel through
mobile moving joints of the spine. If it can't the hips work harder
carrying the load of the upper body on them. Does this sound
discouraging? Look at it this way, if you recognize you are working too
hard to walk, it is only matter of some sensing, learning and movement
awareness to shift out of a poor habit into a better way of walking, an
upgrade, to get the system functioning the way it was designed to do.
Try this Exercise:
1. Face a door or wall. Place your fingers on it and organize
yourself to be standing close and in the vertical plane. Avoid any
leaning forward or putting pressure on your fingers.
2. Now Stand on one leg. Keep that leg straight and push through that
leg as if you were pressing into the ground and generating a ground
forces, a spring like action that runs up your spine and gives you the
feeling of uplift. (getting taller)
3. Think of directing the force through your body and notice how the
body starts to turn. While you are doing this your other leg should have
no weight on it. It can be touching the ground with the toes with the
heel lifted to maintain your balance. Practice this activity on one leg,
rest, and then do it with your other leg.
The key to this exercise is trial by experiment in order to sense
differences and notice connections. Simply by doing and noticing, you
start to activate your innate ability to feel the connection between
pushing through a straightened leg and following that force as it
travels through your body. It will probably rotate you slightly through
the left if you are standing on your right leg or to the right if you
are standing on your left leg.
Follow the force of this thrusting until you are clear where the end
point is. Simply by doing this exercise you are already developing
movement awareness, (a process developed to an easy but high level of
skill by the late Dr. Moshe Feldenkrais) of sensing limbs, joint
actions, resonant motion, lengthening and strengthening in an
interconnected way. Once you start to cultivate the sensing of such
connections, your walking will improve automatically.
The benefits:
Walking provides much needed "resonant movement" through many of the
axial joints. It is essential in maintaining spinal flexibility and
upright posture.
Walking provides needed elongation to the spine, plus strengthening,
endurance, relaxation and perhaps most important, confidence building.
Walking is the basic foundation of fitness.
Walking is known to reduce cardiac problems, stroke, and arthritic
conditions with a host of other benefits to the entire body.
If you would like more information about how you can learn the
five basic lesson-exercises based on the Feldenkrais Method, exercise
physiology and biomechanics, in a one day workshop format to improve
your walking, please contact Josef DellaGrotte.
About the Author
Josef DellaGrotte, Ph.D. is a Feldenkrais practitioner, muscular/
massage therapist, and trainer. He has been in private practice for more
than twenty-five years. Josef conducts training and programs in
Integrated Fitness-Wellness at the Body Mind Integration Center, 118
Main Street, Watertown MA, 02472