FREE Parent Plan Workshops - The Ultimate Parent Plan for Your Child's Development - CLICK HERE

Blog

 
 

Beyond Mental Health — What Smartphones Do to the Body’s Movement Intelligence

Uncategorized Nov 04, 2025

The research is right — early smartphone exposure affects emotional and cognitive development.

But what's missing is how it reshapes the way the body organizes movement, which in turn reshapes cognition itself.
 
Here's what most people overlook 👇
 
 

1️⃣ Vision Without Convergence

Healthy vision depends on active and passive convergence — shifting focus smoothly from near to far.
Phones trap the eyes in a flat, 2D focal plane, stripping away the natural momentum and depth transitions that build visual intelligence.
When that happens, visual midlines collapse — peripheral vision narrows — and you see movement patterns identical to early Alzheimer's and spatial disorientation.
 
 

2️⃣ Midline Lockdown

When attention is fixed forward on a phone, rotational and crossing midlines shut down.
That means less coordination between the left/right hemispheres, poor reflex integration, and diminished postural adaptation.
You stop moving th...
Continue Reading...

When Movement Is Blocked: Gravity, Genetics, and Trauma

Uncategorized Nov 01, 2025

Every child learns to move by entering a dialogue with gravity.

From their first breath to their first step, gravity is both the teacher and the resistance that builds organization.
 
When genetics, trauma, or medical intervention interrupts this process, the body loses its ability to negotiate force, rotation, and stability — the same principles that collapse in astronauts during microgravity exposure.
 
 

Gravity as the Missing Teacher

A healthy nervous system constantly compares how it moves within gravity:
• Rolling teaches rotation.
• Crawling teaches cross-lateral organization.
• Sitting and standing teach vertical balance.
 
 
When a child can’t perform these movements — because of muscle tone irregularities, brain injury, or premature birth — the brain never learns how to oppose gravity efficiently.
It begins building “workarounds” instead of a true organization.
 
Learn more about Movement Lesson HERE.
 
 
Continue Reading...

Breakthrough: Balance Over Strength

Uncategorized Oct 30, 2025

✨ Breakthrough: Balance Over Strength ✨

This past summer, I broke every rule — and a little girl sat for the first time in her life.
  • Not because we made her "stronger."
  • Not because we forced posture or used equipment.
  • But because we gave her room to balance.
 
First, we adjusted her position — a side sit with one foot off the table. Her pelvis finally had enough space to breathe, and from there… everything changed.
 
Before, she used her head to balance — tossing it backward, overcorrecting, unable to stabilize.
But now, with skeletal buoyancy kicking in, the pelvis could do its job, and her head floated like a balloon.
 
I tilted her slightly.
To the right: her head stayed.
To the left: it gently corrected to center — a reflex, not a strain.
 
👉 This isn't about strength.
👉 This is about balance.
👉 This is how the body remembers gravity — and how movement begins again.
 
You can't be strong enough to balance.
But when you ha
...
Continue Reading...

Context Matters: What the Stanford “Autism Reversal” Study Really Means

Uncategorized Oct 28, 2025

You may have seen headlines claiming that scientists at Stanford “reversed autism.”

 
 

Let’s clarify.

 
This  study was conducted in mice, not humans. Researchers calmed hyperactivity in the reticular thalamic nucleus (RTN) — a sensory “gatekeeper” that filters incoming information. By stabilizing that system, the mice showed fewer autism-like behaviors.
 
What’s important isn’t the idea of a cure — it’s the confirmation that autism involves organizational changes in how the brain regulates input, not just isolated genetic or chemical “defects.”
 
This research also strengthens the link between autism and epilepsy, showing they may share underlying circuitry. It’s not about fixing what’s wrong — it’s about understanding how systems lose balance and how we might gently restore it.
 
As always, progress comes when science moves from control to comprehension — from treating differences as disorders to studying them as variations of organization.
 
Le
...
Continue Reading...

Three Ways to Help This Baby

Uncategorized Oct 25, 2025

How to help this baby:

Not all advice on the Internet is what you need to help your child.
 
In this case, the baby should:
 
First:  be taken to the doctor for evaluation of Laryngomalacia. This is a condition in which the valve in the throat is either damaged due to hospital care or overgrown. So, respiratory and swallow responses may tend to keep their neck up high and back.
 
 
Second: This is a common sign of cerebral palsy. Not only are you  trying to attract the child’s gaze, which this person is doing unsuccessfully, but the child should also be recommended for neurology. You have to remember that your child’s health and stability are first.
 
Third: the child’s vision should be checked because if the child doesn’t have good vision, they’re not going to attend to an item, no matter how much you play with it.
 
Now, this person should also have the object higher to start catching the gaze, and then bring the head down. But a baby isn’t going to move on
...
Continue Reading...

Movement Lesson and Your Child's Learning

Uncategorized Oct 23, 2025

This is the structure of Movement Lesson and your child’s learning

 
This image of a neuron isn’t just “a tangle of fibers” — it’s a rotational architecture, just like a galaxy, a root system, or the magnetic flux lines of Earth.
 

Rotational Equivalence: From Neuron to Cosmos

This  is the most detailed view of a human neuron ever captured — a single cell receiving 5,600 connections. What we see isn’t chaos; it’s organization through oppositional rotation.
 

The neuron mirrors the same principles found in:

• Plant roots, where growth follows opposing spirals to balance gravitational pull and nutrient flow.
• The solar system, where planets orbit through counter-rotational dynamics that stabilize the system’s energy.
• Human cognition, where oppositional neural circuits (excitatory/inhibitory, hemispheric balance) generate coherence and awareness.
 

In Turner physics, this is the Law of Biological Gravity:

Life sustains itself not by static s
...
Continue Reading...

Gravity is the First Teacher of Movement

Uncategorized Oct 21, 2025

Gravity is the First Teacher of Movement

Every movement you’ve ever made — from your first breath to walking — has been organized against gravity.
• Gravity gives your nervous system a constant reference point.
• It tells your body up from down, load from unload, effort from ease.
  When you lose that pull, your brain loses its anchor for proprioception — the sense of where your body is in space.
 
 

Reflex Disintegration

Primitive and postural reflexes depend on gravitational resistance.
• Head-righting reflexes fail first — the brain no longer knows which way is “upright.”
• Vestibular–ocular reflexes destabilize, making the eyes drift or oscillate.
• Rotational reflexes (used for balance and locomotion) go dormant because there’s no force to oppose.
Without those, coordinated movement collapses into disorganization — it’s like rebooting your entire motor system.
 

Loss of Axial Tone and Midline

In microgravity, muscles that stabilize
...
Continue Reading...

Child Motion Assessment: 7-year-old pitcher

Uncategorized Oct 18, 2025
 
Child Motion Assessment – 7-Year-Old Pitcher
 
 

1. Posture & Setup

• The child sets up with good stance width and balance.
• Shoulders are slightly elevated, indicating early tension before movement.
• Glove and throwing hand are positioned correctly, but lack complete rotational preparation.
 

2. Wind-Up & Leg Lift

• During the knee lift, there is good height, but the torso leans slightly back rather than keeping a centered axis.
• The standing leg is stable but shows signs of “locking,” reducing flexibility for rotational transfer.
• Independence between the standing leg and the lifted leg is developing, but balance is still prioritized over freedom of motion.
 
 

3. Rotation & Torque

• The throwing sequence uses mainly arm speed rather than full trunk rotation.
• Hips open after the shoulders, showing a delayed chain reaction.
• This reduces efficiency and could later increase strain on the shoulder and elbow.
 

4. Stride & Groun...

Continue Reading...

Child Movement Assessment: 8-Year-Old Soccer Player

Uncategorized Oct 16, 2025

General Observation

The child shows excellent rhythm, coordination, and confidence. Her motion is highly rotational — using the whole body to create momentum rather than only the legs. She displays an intuitive sense of balance and gravitational timing, key to dynamic athletic movement.

 

1. Rotational Integration

Strength: Rotation begins from the pelvis and flows upward through the trunk, shoulder, and head — a complete kinetic chain.

Observation: The turn through the spine is fluid, showing reasonable control through midline transitions.

Suggestion: Encourage rotational practice in both directions to balance the body’s preference; this supports ocular and vestibular development.

 

2. Weight Transfer & Lower Body Coordination

Strength: Excellent shifting of weight between feet; she releases one foot fully before engaging the next, showing mature pelvic organization.

Observation: The kick finishes with a strong spiral, demonstrating both grounding and lift through the su...

Continue Reading...

Athletic Forward Lunge with Hands Overhead

Uncategorized Oct 14, 2025

Movement Lesson AI Assessment 

Athlete: Male, 32, former professional football player
Task: Forward lunge, overhead hand position

 

Observations

  • Foot Strike & Spiral Control
  • On landing, the forward foot shows a dip/roll indicating incomplete spiral engagement.
  • Instability in midfoot loading reduces the ability to anchor ground force cleanly.

  • Knee Tracking
  • Knee tracks slightly medial on descent, a compensation for loss of foot control.
  • Torque is dissipated rather than transferred up the chain.
  • Hip Stability
  • Forward hip shows delayed stabilization → “catching” rather than “driving” through motion.
  • This reduces the efficiency of rebounding into the next gait step.

  • Core & Trunk Control
  • Hands-up position masks instability below—core is working overtime to “hold pattern,” not dynamically stabilize.
  • Small trunk shifts appea...
Continue Reading...
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Close

FREE Movement Lesson™ Boot Camp

What you need to know to use Movement Lesson™ successfully at home.