Bill Hartman 19:05–20:59
Good morning. Happy Wednesday. I have neuro coffee in hand and it is perfect. All right. A busy Wednesday coming up. But first, today's Wednesday, tomorrow's Thursday, 6 a.m., tomorrow morning, coffee and coaches conference call as usual. Bring your coffee, bring your questions. A great group of people. If you've missed out on these, you're missing out on a great time and great information, so please join us at 6 a.m. tomorrow. The link will be on my professional Facebook page. Going into today's Q&A. This is with Clancy, aka Colin. Colin had a series of questions, and this is just one segment. It's actually a relatively short segment, but it covers a lot of ground. So a couple of principles. We move by a shape change. That shape change allows us to access spaces around us. That's how we move. If we only had a proxy measure that would tell us how we can access that space, and we do, and it's right there at the bottom of the rib cage, we finally call that the infraternal angle, ISA, if you will. This allows us to identify some structural biases that predispose people to being able to access certain spaces, our ability to move that ISA, the aka dynamic ISA, then represents an early goal to allow us to access more spaces. And that's what this discussion is about. So those of you that are still confused about it for external angles and its use, this will hopefully clarify some element of that. So thank you Colin. If you would like to participate in a 15-minute consultation, please go to askbillhartman at gmail.com, askbillhartman at gmail.com, put 15-minute consultation in the subject line so I don't delete it. We'll arrange that at our mutual convenience. Everybody have an outstanding Wednesday. I will see you tomorrow, 6 a.m. coffee and coach a conference call. Have an outstanding day.
infraternal anglerib mechanicsmovement principlesstructural bias