
That means:
This makes things like eating, reaching, swallowing, and speaking much easier, because the body is cooperating with gravity.
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:
This can happen for many reasons, including:
The nervous system is simply tryin...
Most humans naturally move toward food, not away from it.
When we eat, our body usually does a small sequence:
Pelvis tilts slightly forward
Pubic bone moves toward the table
The trunk lengthens and stabilizes
The head and jaw move forward to meet the food
This forward organization helps with:
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:

So instead of leaning toward the stimulus, the body protects itself by leaning away.
This creates a posture like:

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:
The rotational mechanics bees use
A bee’s wings beat around 200–230 times per second.
Each stroke creates:
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...
When touch is applied correctly, the body will show:
So touch becomes an observational tool, not a corrective one.
Observe how a light touch changes:
“What does the body do when it senses touch under gravity?”
Use touch to see how the body organizes rotation through the midline.
Examples to observe:
This reveals movement organization patterns.

When people suddenly feel touch, they often become more aware of the movem...
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.
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...
What you need to know to use Movement Lesson™ successfully at home.