This is a critical distinction, and should be used in sports medicine, pediatric PT, neurology, and astronautics. Let's define the difference clearly with Movement Intelligence Insight:
To the untrained eye, both the girl and the neurotypical boy "jump off the box." But their internal forces of movement — and what the body must do to recover from those forces — are fundamentally different.
What You See on the Outside:
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Girl:
Boy:
Because it's the first time your baby experiences breath-supported spinal lift, cranial articulation, and rotational skeletal buoyancy — all in gravity.
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The chin doesn't just lift the head. It activates cranial counter-rotation, jaw-to-tailbone vectoring, and sets the stage for oral-motor sequencing (speech, swallowing, feeding). "The jaw is gravity in. The tailbone is gravity out." This early dynamic links posture, reflexes, and even sensory processing. No fused skull? That's a feature, not a flaw. Unfused cranial plates allow buoyancy-based adjustments that fuel milestone gains.
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Often trace back to missing skeletal inputs in early tummy time. This isn't about strength. It's about setup.
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 Join our course or upload a short clip for a personalized movement read.
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When people hear “vision,” most think about one thing: glasses. Do you need them or not?
But vision is more than 20/20. In fact, most of what we do as humans relies not on clarity of sight, but on how we function with our vision. That’s where functional vision comes in.
Functional vision is how a person uses their eyes to take in, process, and respond to their environment — and how that vision integrates with movement, learning, and development.
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If I place a simple pair of glasses against a complex background, you might struggle to see them. Now imagine what that’s like for a child with vision challenges.
It’s not about bad eyesight. It’s about how the brain processes the visual environment:
   •   Can the child handle indoor light but struggles outside?
   •   Do they freeze in busy rooms or open spaces?
   •   Are they OK at home but overwhelmed at school?
This is the start of ori...
What you need to know to use Movement Lesson™ successfully at home.