
Most people think tummy time is about building strength.
It’s not. Strength is not what organizes a baby, movement is.
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Before a child becomes strong, their body has to learn how to distribute force.
How to connect the head, the ribcage, and the pelvis.
How to organize through the midline.
If that organization is not there, force doesn’t transfer; it stays local, and when force stays local, movement becomes harder, not easier.
 
This is why some babies tolerate tummy time and begin to move, while others resist, compensate, or get stuck. Tummy time is not a position; it is an opportunity for the body to organize.
When the system organizes, strength follows. Not the other way around.
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These movements build spatial awareness, gravity reference, midline organization, and rotational control. The child is not learning skills.  The child is learning how their body works in space.
When this stage is missed, you may see  fear of movement, poor coordination, limited balance, and/or slower skill development
 The key principle is that rotation drives development. At Movement Lesson, we don't train positions; we build a system that works in every position.
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 If the structure is organized, the function transfers to any position.
If the structure is not organized, the function exists only under specific conditions.
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This is not about posture. This is not about skill.
This is about the transferability of function
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The child has:
So the brain can:Â Â map movement anywhere
That means:
The function still works

The brain is not memorizing positions.
It’s doing:  adaptive mapping
So instead of:  “This is how I sit and write.”
It becomes:   “I understand how my body works in space.”
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Now the system becomes:Â Â position-dependent
You’ll see:
They work through the head.
In early development, the eyes follow the head. Later, they separate—and that’s where higher-level function begins.
If you want to improve vision, you don’t start with the eyes.
You start with movement.
Then you add counter-response.

Just like riding a bike—you don’t steer in the same direction. You counter-steer.
That’s how the system organizes.
If a child only has short vision, they don’t explore. They go straight to what’s in front of them.
If they can see long, they start scanning, remembering, and interacting with space.
That’s intelligence.
It’s not behavior. It’s not attention. It’s vision organizing the system.Â
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Yes, there are children whose hips look similar, and they are crawling, sitting, or even walking. But, that does not make the situations the same.
In Movement Lesson™, we don’t compare body parts—we look at how the system is functioning.

The difference here is not just the hips.
The difference is:
breathing
system stability
ability to organize under gravity
Breathing is not just a function—it is the first way the body opposes gravity.
If a child is working to get their next breath:
- The body will prioritize survival
- not movement
- not milestones
So yes—another child may have similar hips and still move.
But if that child has stable breathing, visual engagement, and system organization, they are in a completely different place developmentally.

We’re not looking at what something looks like.
W...
First, please seek immediate medical attention with your baby's Ear, Nose, and Throat ENT and/or go to the Emergency Room ER.
Did you know that your baby’s ability to breathe and swallow in rhythm is one of the earliest signs of healthy nervous system development?
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But when something like laryngomalacia is present (that soft, floppy tissue above the vocal cords), this rhythm breaks down.
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Because breath-swallow rhythm isn't just about air — it's about timing and integration. It’s how the brainstem ...
Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal recessive disorder that causes alpha motor neurons in the spinal cord to die. This progressive neurodegenerative disease affects the motor nerve cells in the spinal cord and impacts the muscles used for activities such as breathing, eating, crawling, and walking. SMA is a genetic disorder starting in the central nervous system (CNS) and affects all the muscles in the body.
Movement Lesson techniques provide central nervous system input that reintroduces weight transfer, momentum, rotation, and buoyancy (within the laws of gravity), improving function in activities such as sitting and breathing. Movement Lesson™ offers training and exercises you can do at home to help your child move as efficiently as possible, tailored to their needs.
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Movement Lesson™ is a modality that offers newborns, children, and adults opportunities to exp...

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