The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% Season 8 Number 3 Podcast
So you have two groups of forces that you have to deal with. You have stuff that happens inside of you, and then you have the stuff that happens outside of you. And your strategy for managing that is all based on your structure. So how you are made. And so we are all made a little bit differently. And so we all have a little bit different strategy within certain parameters. So you have the same stuff that I do. It just might be organized a little bit differently. And so this is what you're recognizing is the strategy that you use to control your body in space and to manage these forces. And so some people turn more than other people do. And so that's what you're recognizing. So everything that you're describing is representative of this turning strategy. Okay, so it's not a side to side thing. It's a turn that you're going to have to learn how to manage. So especially when you bring up things like the differences in the thigh musculature. So if I twist one of your thighs in one direction and I twist the other one in the same direction, I have a different organization of those muscles that control your legs. And so you're going to use those muscles a little bit differently. So some are going to be positioned in a lengthened position. Some are going to be positioned in a more short position. And that's what you're recognizing. The strategy, the overall strategy that you need to use is to learn how to manage this strategy and then learn how to turn in the opposite direction enough that you start to offset it. This is not something that goes away. This is something that you learn to control and manage. Chances are the way that you're describing it, if it's accurate, okay? So if you have lost more external rotation on the right side than you have on the left side, then you definitely have a turn to the right and chances are your pelvis is anteriorly oriented. So it's tilted forward and it's probably tilted a little bit more forward on the right than it is on the left.
biomechanicsmovement strategypelvic tiltmuscle organizationforce management