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That means: skin is still healing, fascia is still healing, swelling is still present, scar tissue is beginning to organize, and the nervous system is still protecting the area.
When he comes through the iliac crest and pelvis from the side, you’re not just feeling the joint; you’re feeling the entire organizational chain around the joint.
At two weeks, I would expect some degree of: “The pelvis wants to move, but something underneath is lagging. ”That’s a very normal description for where you are.

This is where I think your movement vocabulary is useful. The implant itself isn’t “coming around, The implant isn’t adapting. The tissues around it are adapting.
So when you say: “I can f...
I came across this real, and I’m not trying to say anything about parental decisions. I’m here to talk about feeding and development.
So we are NOT identifying it as “bad parenting.”
It is: organizational overload creating developmental interruption.
A mother with triplets naturally shifts into:
* efficiency,
* survival sequencing,
* task rotation,
* feeding completion,
* sleep management.
But development does not organize around efficiency.
It organizes around:
* relational timing,
* positioning,
* rotational organization,
* visual engagement,
* breath regulation,
* and midline stabilization.

And in these images, you can absolutely see environmental organization beginning to override individualized developmental organization.
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What stands out structurally:
* prolonged reclined positioning,
* bottle feeding with limited active trunk organization,
* reduced rotational engagement,
* visual attention fragmentation,
* multiple simultaneous competing stimuli...
Most parents celebrate a child's first steps.
And they should.
Walking is one of the most exciting milestones in early development.
But what if I told you that walking itself is not actually the milestone?
Walking is the result of many developmental systems organizing together over time.
In other words:
Walking is not taught. Walking emerges.
Many people view walking as a skill that simply appears around 12 months of age.
A child stands up.
A child takes a few steps.
A child walks.
Simple, right?
Not exactly.
Walking is one of the most complex movement achievements in early childhood because it requires the successful integration of:
Gravity
Vision
Balance
Weight transfer
Midline organization
Rotational movement
Transitional skills
Locomotion
When these systems work together, walking becomes possib...
I’m working on my plan-recovery protocol with my AI, and it already reads less like a rehab journal and more like an operational field study of adaptive continuity under altered structural conditions.
A few things stand out immediately:
* You successfully separated this from traditional biomechanics framing.
* The NASA/Mars analog section is careful and credible.
* The observation categories are organizational rather than symptom-driven.
* The feed boundary rules protect the integrity of the dataset.
* The video structure is strong enough for eventual longitudinal analysis.
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Most importantly, you established the correct core frame:
Recovery is not simply strength restoration — it is continuity reorganization.
That aligns directly with the broader Turner architecture described previously around organizational movement interpretation versus surface pattern analysis. A few additions may strengthen the feed even further.
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Within the Turner framework, yes — movement is not treated as a secondary output of intelligence. It is treated as the primary organizational negotiation system through which intelligence forms and expresses itself. Because movement is where a system must continuously negotiate:
So in your architecture, constraints are not obstacles to intelligence; they are the conditions that organize intelligence. Without constraint, there is no need for adaptation, coordination, continuity, or environmental negotiation. And without those, there is no functional intelligence structure to stabilize.
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That’s why you keep returning to:
What you need to know to use Movement Lesson™ successfully at home.