How injuries or other trauma affects our body
Have you experienced a traumatic injury, surgery, or fall? One side of the body will respond to protect you from pain. This protective reflex is not voluntary. And you may well find that long after recovery is complete, that involuntary protective pattern is still there.
Let’s talk about the role of injury and how it affects us at a somatic level.
Have you experienced a traumatic injury, surgery, or fall? One side of the body will respond to protect you from pain. This protective reflex is not voluntary. And you may well find that long after recovery is complete, that involuntary protective pattern is still there.
This one-sided protective muscular response could have formed from a repetitive action you’ve done, such as playing an instrument, carrying a bag or a baby on the same side hip or shoulder, or even being right or left handed. While you may not have had to recover, the one-sided (lateralized) pattern is there.
This can also be an avoidance pattern, where we twist and rotate away from whatever we’re trying to avoid.
To move forward (or backward) efficiently, we call on a diagonal pattern. When the body is stuck in a tilt and twist pattern, the diagonal pattern doesn’t work as efficiently. In some extreme cases, it breaks down almost entirely.
Somatic movement can help us regain our diagonal movement
Try this short movement practice to notice how one-sided contraction affects the smoothness of your walk.
You’ll need need a bit of space so you can walk freely without turning too frequently.
You’ve experienced how significantly a small contraction in one side of your body can affect your walking. Try to notice your diagonals as you do other symmetrical activities, such as running, cycling, swimming freestyle or paddling a kayak. Can you create more freedom in your diagonals by letting go of any gripping in one side of your body? Can you find more efficient movement? Does noticing your diagonals help you move with more ease and power?