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Movement Lesson Is a Way to Understand How Your Child's Intelligence Becomes Organized Through Movement

Uncategorized Jul 06, 2026

Movement Lesson Is a Way to Understand How Intelligence Becomes Organized Through Movement

For years, people have asked me if Movement Lesson is a therapy.

It isn't.

Others have called it developmental training.

It is much more than that.

Some have asked whether it is designed for autism, cerebral palsy, stroke recovery, or neurological rehabilitation.

Again, no.

Those are populations we work with—not the science itself.

Movement Lesson begins with a much simpler question:

How does a living system become organized?

That question changed my life.

As a mother searching for answers, I quickly realized that movement was never simply about muscles.

It wasn't about stretching.

It wasn't about strength.

It wasn't even about learning a skill.

Movement was revealing something much deeper.

It was revealing organization.

An infant does not consciously decide to roll over.

A newborn does not understand balance.

A baby is not trying to improve coordination.

Yet through every...

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Potty Training Secrets 

Uncategorized Jul 04, 2026

- Does your child have what it takes to go?

Body Awareness

  • Core Movement
  • Midline Crossing
  • Gravitational Reflex Movement
  • Milestones
Those are not just toileting skills.
Those are organizational prerequisites.
 
At Movement Lesson, we are essentially asking:
 
Can this child negotiate increasing loads independently?
That's a very Movement Lesson way of looking at it.
 

1. Body Awareness

Can your toddler understand where their body is in space?

Look for:
  • climbing on and off furniture
  • exploring different heights
  • changing positions independently
If a child avoids moving between levels, independence may be limited.
⬇️

2. Load Management

Can your child manage changing demands?

Look for:
  • dropping and retrieving toys
  • carrying objects
  • putting items into containers
  • taking items out of con...
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What is a Gravitational and Primitive Reflex? How to Help Your Child

 

What is a Reflex?

A reflex is the body's earliest organized response to a condition.

It is not an isolated movement.

It is an organized response that helps the body learn how to interact with gravity, the environment, and itself.

Each reflex introduces a new movement experience.

As new movement experiences develop, they become organized into more sophisticated movement patterns.

A reflex is not the goal.

It is the beginning of organization.

Without organized reflexes, later movement is built on compensation rather than organization.

Movement Lesson™ views reflexes as the first movement vocabulary that teaches the body how to organize for future function.

A reflex is not a "flight or fight" response. It is the body's first lesson in organization.

Movement Lesson Gravitational Reflexes

A gravitational reflex in your work is distinct from a primitive reflex because it is organized through the force of gravity rather than simply being an automatic response to a stimulu...

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How Development Happens

Uncategorized Jul 02, 2026

Most developmental frameworks are milestone frameworks.

They ask:
  • Can the child sit?
  • Can the child crawl?
  • Can the child walk?
  • Can the child talk?
Movement Lesson asks a different question:
 
What load is the system learning to negotiate at this stage?
Those are not the same thing.
 A milestone framework measures outcomes.
A load framework measures organization.
 
We see the same architecture repeating:
 

Horizontal Stage: The system learns to negotiate gravity close to the ground.

Vertical Stage: The system learns to negotiate gravity away from the ground.

Transitional Stage: The system learns to negotiate changing gravitational states.

Functional Stage: The system learns to negotiate multiple loads simultaneously.

That is very different from:
 
Roll → Sit → Crawl → Walk
because those are events.
We're looking at the organizational burden underneath the event...
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The Difference Between Coming to Midline and Crossing Midline

Uncategorized Jun 30, 2026

Independent Sitting:

The Difference Between Coming to Midline and Crossing Midline

When parents hear the phrase "independent sitting," they often think it simply means their child can sit without falling over. From a developmental perspective, however, independent sitting represents something much more significant. It is one of the first major indicators that the nervous system has organized itself around a stable midline.
 
 
A child who has developed a responsive pelvis and established a functional pubic bone strike is no longer relying on the floor, furniture, or their hands for stability. Instead, their body has learned to organize itself through its own center. This stable foundation allows movement to emerge naturally rather than being used to prevent falling.
 
One of the most important signs of this organization is the ability to move through midline rather than simply to midline.
 
 
A child with a responsive sitting pattern can rotate their tr...
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Cortical Visual Impairment

Uncategorized Jun 27, 2026

CVI - Cortical Visual Impairment

A measurement is not the same as a function.

A milestone is not the same as achievement

For example, biomechanics often measures:
range of motion,
  • joint angles,
  • degrees of freedom,
  • muscle activation,
  • force plates.
Those are all valid measurements.
But none of them, by themselves, answer the functional question:
 
 
Can this person organize themselves to achieve the task?
That's a different level of analysis.
Take a child reaching for a toy.
Biomechanics might report:
  • Shoulder flexion: 110°
  • Elbow extension: 40°
  • Trunk rotation: 18°
  • COP displacement: 6 cm
All true.
But your question is:
 
Did the system successfully negotiate gravity, load, vision, prediction, and transition to acquire the object?
That's function.
The measurements are evidence.
The function is the ...
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Cortical Visual Assessment

Uncategorized Jun 25, 2026

Movement Lesson CVI Scale

Cortical Visual Assessment

Most CVI assessments ask:
"How much can the child see?"
 
We ask a different question:
"How does the visual system fail under load?"
 
 
When we began analyzing CVI through a functional movement and systems framework, a pattern emerged. Vision doesn't typically fail randomly. It fails through a predictable cascade.
 
🔹 ALMI – Axial Load Modulation Index
Can the body support vision?
If not...
⬇️
🔹 MCPL – Midline Coherence Phase Lag
Can vision organize around the visual midline?
If not...
⬇️
🔹 APAG – Anticipatory Postural Adjustment Gain
Can the system predict what is coming next?
If not...
⬇️
🔹 VER – Variance Export Ratio
Visual load gets pushed into movement, behavior, and emotional regulation.
⬇️
🔹 BMCR – Breath-Movement Coupling Ratio
Speech, movement, and vision begin competing for the same resources.
⬇️
🔹 RTC – Recovery Time Constant
Visual
...
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How Children Organize Fine Motor Skills Through Everyday Objects

 

From Turner AI - That’s a fascinating observation because it highlights something you’ve been trying to teach me all day:

The object is not the task. The organization required to negotiate the object is the task.

Most people would see:

  • Baby holding a phone.
  • Sister drops the phone.

And immediately conclude:

One has better fine motor skills.

But that’s not the observation you’re making.

You’re evaluating the organizational demands of the object.

The mother’s phone isn’t just a phone.

It’s:

  • weight,
  • shifting center of mass,
  • a hinged case,
  • credit cards changing the load,
  • rotational adjustments,
  • continuous negotiation with gravity.

When the 14-month-old handed it to you, you experienced an immediate load negotiation because the object behaved differently than expected.

Your organization had already predicted one thing.

The actual object required another.

You felt the mismatch instantly.


What’s interesting is that the younger child had already learned that ne...

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Vision Birth to One Month

Uncategorized Jun 23, 2026

Parents often assume:

 
baby sees me
baby recognizes me
baby is looking at me
when in reality the first month is largely about:
  • visual emergence
  • orientation
  • brief fixation
  • vestibular organization
  • weight transfer
  • horizontal positioning
Think about the power of the question:

"Can your baby see?"

versus

"How is your baby's vision organizing development?"

Those lead to completely different observations from parents.

A parent may say:

 
The doctor said vision is normal.
Meanwhile your assessment may reveal:
  • poor visual engagement
  • absent visual midline
  • limited gaze stabilization
  • poor convergence development
  • asymmetrical visual attention
  • lack of visual influence on movement
Those are often visible long before someone receives a diagnosis.
 
 
 
Click HERE to learn m
...
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Functional Visual Assessment

Uncategorized Jun 20, 2026

01 — Organization

Questions like:

* Where is the child’s reference?
* Has Horizon emerged?
* Has Vertical emerged?
* Has Midline emerged?
This is system organization.
 
 

 

02 — Movement: This is where vision becomes embodied. 

Questions like:

* Can the body move relative to vision?
* Can the child organize around visual information?
* Can movement adapt when vision changes?
This is movement vocabulary and stabilization.
 
 

03 — Development: This is your milestone layer.

Questions like:

* What should be available?
* What stage is emerging?
* What developmental references should exist?
This is developmental sequencing.
 
 

04 — Eye Function: This is where the Turner Eye Matrix belongs.

Things like:

* Tracking
* Fixation
* Conjugate gaze
* Blink timing
* Peripheral awareness
* Vertical/horizontal movement
This is what the eyes are physically doing.
 
Click HERE to learn more about Movement Lesson 
 And HERE...
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