Thursday, May 15, 2014

Body Mechanics


The other day I was in the gym and noticed someone walking very oddly.

Noticing this person got me to thinking about the basics in this art and how they have changed my body mechanics in what I do in the gym and in my everyday life.  Let me give you some examples.

Breathing:  Are my fellow gym denizens using all of their lung capacity or are they chest breathing?  With chest breathing one doesn’t exchange as much air as one can when compared to the way we are taught in this art.

Walking: I see a lot of people walking with their toes splayed in or out or moving forward by falling onto their front foot.  The way we’re taught to walk helps prevent injuries and produces power -- why walk any other way?

Structure: So many people have poor posture and I’m no exception.  Just as I was typing this, I corrected my sitting.  We’re lucky because we know the right way to sit and stand while so many people don’t.  We learn this very early in this art.

Intent: In working out, why do it half-assed?  Focus on the task at hand and give it all you’ve got.  Most of the regulars that I see do this.  The newbies will become regulars if their intent is solid and unwavering.  Again, we learn this in class.

Imaging: When lifting a weight, doing a sit-up or some other exercise, I see so many people wearing ear buds, watching the TV monitors, or talking with their friends.  In doing any of these, they cannot picture their body structure to see if they are in proper alignment or imagine their muscles in their mind’s eye growing and expanding.  Doing this takes concentration and focus and being mindful, which is hard but will give one a better workout than focusing on anything else.  We know this from our classes.

Sung: I’ve seen someone who blazes away on the treadmill with his shoulders a little below the level of his ears.  This person is not sung.  In fact, it takes effort to get and keep his shoulders so high that he’s expending a great deal of needless energy in that effort.  It’s so much easier to move when one is at his/her ease, using only those muscles that are needed.  How often have we practiced this in the Dragon Rolling the Pearl posture?

We learn so much in this art that makes us more efficient in our body mechanics, which helps us stay healthier and be more effective in any type of physical labor.  And we get this as an addition to the martial training.  I think that’s really neat.

By the way, I make every one of these mistakes and am always correcting myself.  But I know when something needs to be changed because these basics been taught to me.  I don’t have to learn it on my own like a non-JBZ person would.  That’s another added benefit to this art.