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Feeding: Why the jaw matters for head movement

Uncategorized Mar 21, 2026

The lower jaw (mandible) connects functionally with several important structures:

  • Atlas (C1 vertebra) – the first vertebra that allows the head to nod and balance
  • Occipital bone – the base of the skull
  • Mastoid process – behind the ear, where neck muscles attach
  • facial bones such as the Zygomatic bone
 
When babies lift or rotate their heads, the jaw and these structures coordinate together. Early pressure experiences (like tummy time) help the nervous system learn how these pieces move relative to each other.

 

What is happening in this position

In the photo, the child is lying comfortably while I am gently contacting the mandible (lower jaw) and the upper chest and neck. My hand placement suggests you are encouraging two things at the same time:
 
1️⃣ Small compression through the jaw
2️⃣ Rotation of the head around the jaw
 
The jaw becomes a kind of stable reference point, while the skull and neck learn to...
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Feeding: Why Some Children Lean Backward

Uncategorized Mar 19, 2026

 All of us are constantly dealing with gravity. But there are two different ways the body can organize itself with it. 

 

1. Functional gravity organization. The body organizes with gravity.

That means:

  • the pelvis tilts slightly forward
  • the spine lengthens upward
  • the head balances over the body
  • movement flows forward and outward

This makes things like eating, reaching, swallowing, and speaking much easier, because the body is cooperating with gravity.

 

2. Compressive or defensive gravity organization

Some children develop a pattern where their bodies try to protect themselves from gravity instead of organizing with it.

When that happens, the body often:

  • leans backward
  • stiffens the trunk
  • pulls the head away from activity
  • tightens the jaw or throat

This can happen for many reasons, including:

  • medical experiences
  • tubes or procedures
  • muscle tone differences
  • neurological development

The nervous system is simply tryin...

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Why We Lean Forward When We Eat

Uncategorized Mar 17, 2026

Most humans naturally move toward food, not away from it.

 

When we eat, our body usually does a small sequence:

1️⃣ Pelvis tilts slightly forward
2️⃣ Pubic bone moves toward the table
3️⃣ The trunk lengthens and stabilizes
4️⃣ The head and jaw move forward to meet the food

This forward organization helps with:

  • swallowing
  • tongue movement
  • jaw control
  • managing the food bolus

Gravity actually assists swallowing when we are slightly forward.

It's like the body being on a small swing. The pelvis organizes first, then the upper body follows.

 

Why tube-fed or medically complex children often lean back:

Children who have had G-tubes or NG tubes sometimes develop the opposite pattern.

Their nervous system may associate the mouth or throat with:

  • discomfort
  • gagging
  • tubes
  • medical procedures

So instead of leaning toward the stimulus, the body protects itself by leaning away.

This creates a posture like:

  • pelvis tucked under
  • trunk leaning back
...
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How ChatGPT Works Best When Tracking a Child’s Medical Situation

Uncategorized Mar 14, 2026

 

When you’re using ChatGPT to help think through a child’s condition, it works best if the information is organized into separate topic-based conversations (feeds).

 
 
Think of each conversation like a separate notebook.
If everything goes into one notebook—medical history, food questions, medication questions, therapy ideas—it becomes harder for the system to keep the information organized.

 

So we usually recommend separating topics into a few main feeds.
 
 

1️⃣ Medical / Genetic Condition Feed

This feed is only for medical information about the child.
Things that belong here:
  • genetic diagnosis (like the CRELD1 gene)
  • infections or immune conditions
  • medications or treatments
  • test results
  • IVIG or other therapies
  • seizure history
  • doctor recommendations
This conversation becomes a medical record discussion, allowing ChatGPT to track the child’s health history...
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How Bees Actually Fly

Uncategorized Mar 12, 2026

For a long time, people said the Honey bee “shouldn’t be able to fly” because early aerodynamic models treated wings like airplane wings. By those simple equations, bees seemed too heavy for their wing size.

But the mistake was assuming fixed-wing aerodynamics.

Bees don’t fly like airplanes.

They fly using unsteady aerodynamics, which includes:

  • rapid wing rotation
  • vortices (small spinning air currents)
  • figure-eight wing strokes

The rotational mechanics bees use

A bee’s wings beat around 200–230 times per second.

Each stroke creates:

  • A downward push of air
  • A rotational flip of the wing
  • A swirling vortex above the wing

Those vortices temporarily lower the pressure above the wing, thereby increasing the amount of lift from the steady airflow, as in an airplane.

It comes from continuous rotational air disturbances.

 

Why rotation matters

When the wing flips at the top of each stroke, it creates what scientists call a leading-edge vortex.

That vor...

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Touch as a Gravity Conversation

Uncategorized Mar 10, 2026

 

Touch is not manipulation. Touch is a way to reveal how the body is organizing under gravity.

When touch is applied correctly, the body will show:

  • where load is held
  • where rotation is available
  • where rotation is resisted
  • how the nervous system organizes response

So touch becomes an observational tool, not a corrective one.

 

1️⃣ Touch Reveals Load Distribution

Observe how a light touch changes:

  • weight transfer
  • rotation through the pelvis
  • rib cage response
  • foot grounding

 

“What does the body do when it senses touch under gravity?”

 

2️⃣ Touch and Rotational Response

Use touch to see how the body organizes rotation through the midline.

Examples to observe:

  • Does the rib cage rotate or stiffen?
  • Does the pelvis respond first?
  • Does the body rotate as a unit or in segments?

This reveals movement organization patterns.

 

3️⃣ Touch and Sensory Awareness

When people suddenly feel touch, they often become more aware of the movem...

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Science of Structural Movement

Uncategorized Mar 07, 2026

Science of Structural Movement

Research the Movement LessonTM system

Presented at the Movement, Brain & Cognition Conference

Oxford University — 2017

Human movement does not arise randomly. It is developed through structural principles that begin in childhood and later influence coordination, spatial cognition, and physical performance.

Gravity is the first stimulus for the development of human movement.

At the beginning of life, the human being does not move intentionally; he must first learn to organize his body within the force of gravity. As the nervous system develops, the body learns to interact with this force through rotation, weight transfer, and midline integration.

Key Structural Principles:

Gravity

Gravity is the fundamental external force that shapes posture and movement. The human body must first organize its relationship with gravity before it can develop balance, stability, and locomotion.

 

Rotation

Rotation is the main mechanism by which the body org...

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What You Can and Cannot Change

Uncategorized Mar 05, 2026

Work with Movement Achievement vs a Diagnosis

 

You are not changing:

  • His diagnosis
  • His corpus callosum structure
  • His neurological wiring

 

You are influencing:

  • How his nervous system organizes under gravity
  • How efficiently he redistributes load
  • How rotation crosses his midline
  • How much gravity feels "dominant" to his system
That is a very important distinction.
 
 

Reframing "Low Tone"

 
Instead of saying: "He has low tone."
You are saying: "Right now, gravity is stronger than his rotational organization."
 
That is not pathology language, it's force language.
 
When gravity dominates:
  • He cannot initiate sit.
  • He cannot lift through the center.
  • He cannot transition smoothly.
  • He avoids midline.
  • He stays in positions that feel safer.
That is a load negotiation problem.
 
 
 

Why ...

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Visual Observations in Developmental Delays

Uncategorized Mar 03, 2026

1. Initial Engagement

When visual attention increases, I do not see a consistent axial lift through the sternum or upper thoracic spine.
Instead, I see:
  • Mild forward head drift.
  • The ribcage is not fully organizing upward.
  • Engagement appears more facial than axial.
There is visual interest, but it is not clearly recruiting the spine.
 
 
 

2. Midline Response

When the target moves closer:
  • I do not see a clear midline stabilization.
  • There is subtle lateral weight shifting rather than central stacking.
  • The trunk appears to reorganize side-to-side instead of compressing and lifting centrally.
This suggests the visual demand is not strongly coupling into axial midline.
 
 

3. Head vs Spine Strategy

There are moments where:
  • The head leads.
  • The trunk follows or compensates.
  • Cervical movement precedes thoracic engagement.
I...
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Imitation Does Not Equal Replication

Uncategorized Feb 28, 2026

Why Copying/Patterning Fails

High-level athletes often copy surface form.
 
They copy:
  • Posture
  • Muscle tone
  • External mechanics
But they do not copy:
  • Internal load timing
  • Axial spiral sequencing
  • Elastic recoil
Because those are not visible unless you know how to see them.
That’s a real issue in sports training. Surface imitation ≠ internal replication.
 
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