Bill Hartman 12:04–14:40
And so this is a little bit of that. You'll see me talking through the group as we're working on this position. So hopefully this will be useful for a lot of people, like I said, especially students that have trouble understanding these concepts. All right. So if you would like to participate in a 15-minute consultation, please go to askbillhartman@gmail.com, askbillhartman@gmail.com. Put 15-minute consultation in the subject line so we don't delete it. We will arrange that at our mutual convenience. As I said, yesterday, I'm a little behind because of the intensive, so hang in there. I'll get to you. Just be patient. Everybody have an outstanding Tuesday, and I will see you tomorrow. Early representation of the foot. So let's bend your knees and let's keep the feet on contact with the foot. Okay. So, he really likes to be in an ER representation. We've got a super pronator on top of this. Okay, so where am I going to start to cue the foot? He really likes to be supinated. He doesn't know how to feel the movement in the subtalar joint. He can't separate. So do what you would naturally try to do. Don't think like a therapist. Think like a normal human being. Yeah, it's going to be hard. Okay, but so if I say put, yeah, if I say do it on this side so they can see them. So if I say put pressure on the inside edge of your foot, on your first met head and inside heel, you're going to try to do this hip thing and you're going to turn, that's anterior orientation. So that's an ER representation of the foot with pressure on the medial side. If you were making a cut off of your right foot, I'd probably be okay with that at one moment in time, right? Okay? But we want relative motion in the subtalar joint. So I take my little wrench that fits right over the talus, and I jam it right down on top of it. So the talus is going to be right there. And that's my measure for subtalar neutral. I can grab the calcaneus, and I grab the talus, and I can actually hold that in that middle representation. If I take your foot and I push it straight down, do you feel how it will pick up your first metatarsal head and your heel? Well, I got you heavy on your heel. So if I do that, but I don't want to teach you to load your first met head more in this position, right? So early is going to be heel to first met head, so the heel is always going to be a little heavy. Yeah. Okay. But what I want to do now is I want to teach you to find that. So I'm going to take you where you love to be, and then a little bit farther so you can feel the subtalar motion, but I don't want it to come through the hip. So I'm just going to put my hand on your knee and I'm going to roll you out. So I still got my wrench on the talus. I'm grabbing the talus. I'm just going to roll it out. So I, see how I push the, my thumb is pushing you into the ER representation of the talus. And then I'm going to roll you back in. I'm going to take you past where I want you to go because all I'm trying to teach you is the excursion, because I don't want maximum pressure on the medial border of your foot. I want the optimal pressure. So I roll you out. I roll you in. I roll you out. I roll you in, and then I'm going to say, now, when I roll you back in, why don't you tell me when you start to feel that inside to the heel and the first metatarsal. Okay. And then I'm going to load it. I'm going to say, are you a little heel heavy there? Yeah. Awesome. Okay. Cool. Yeah. Hold that for me. Okay. If I push down, you still feel a heel heavy. That's going to be that's going to move the hand towards a more max P moment.
foot mechanicssubtalar jointfoot positioningpronation/supinationbiomechanical cueing