Art of Walking
Class Two Exercise List
Build on exercise to master abdominal breathing. Objective is to add
focus on the feet to experience being able to move energy out of the
shoulders and send it down to the feet and hands for use in routine
movement.
Step 1. Lie down with back flat,
tailbone down, legs flat on the floor slightly apart aligned with hips,
feet turned in, for males, left big toe is placed over right toenail,
for females right big toe covers left big toenail.
Step 2. Place hands on abdominal area
in order to feel the movement, preferably below navel (or just above
navel if that is more comfortable.) Hands should be in either position
learned in Class One: thumbs touching, one hand covering the other,
making a circle; or thumb and middle finger touching, index finger
pointed straight.
Step 3. Inhale pushing abdominal
muscles out, starting at the lowest part of the abdominal area and
rolling the movement up into the chest as you inhale. Focus on feeling
your breath travel from your nose to deep into your abdominals on the
front side of your body. At the end of the inhalation, pause before
exhaling. Focus on dropping/relaxing the shoulders as you pause.
Step 4. Exhale slowly, about four times
longer than the inhalation or longer. As you exhale, focus on the
shoulders to relax them during the exhalation. Play at relaxing the
shoulders. Focus on feeling the air travel primarily on the backside of
your body from your abdominal muscles around the tailbone, and up the
spine, around the head and out the nose.
Beginning exercise to develop arched back posture for balance and
strengthening lower back. Objective is to gain balance in posture to
facilitate free flow of energy and prevent storing energy as tension in
the shoulders.
Step 1. Lying down, on one side. With
thumb and middle finger touching and index finger pointing straight,
cradle head and neck in the arm on the floor. The arm on top should be
relaxed, hand on floor or under face (maintain finger position on both
hands.) Feet together, knees together, bend knees slightly. Relax all
joints.
Step 2. Isolate lower back and
abdominal muscles through slight movement coordinated with breathing.
Put a slight inward arch in lower back by pushing abdominal muscles out
as you inhale. As you exhale, squeeze abdominal muscles in a way that
maintains the arch in your lower back.
Step 3. When you are ready, engage your
feet in coordination with breathing. On an inhalation, point big toes
of both feet down in unison (like a ballet dancer). As you exhale, pull
both big toes in unison up toward shins.
Beginning exercise to develop effective shoulder blade position
especially in sitting position. Objective is to gain balance in posture
to facilitate free flow of energy and prevent storing energy as tension
in the shoulders.
Step 1. Sit on the edge of a chair,
feet on floor, legs slightly apart, dropped straight from the hips, arms
relaxed, hands in lap using either the hands together thumbs touching
position or thumb and middle finger touching position.
Step 2. On an inhalation, push
abdominal muscles out, roll hips forward and arch lower back slightly in
(toward abdominals.)
Step 3. On exhalation, squeeze
abdominal muscles taut; drop shoulder blades straight down into mid
back. With abdominals engaged, naturally and without effort, the lower
back will be arched and neck will pull straighter, lifting head.
Step 4. (For driving posture) Grasp
steering wheel at 4 o’clock and 8 o’clock positions with the thumb
resting on the outside of the wheel (side nearest you) middle, ring and
little fingers curled around the wheel, and index finger pointing toward
windshield. Relax the middle finger; hold the wheel with tension in the
thumb, the ring and little fingers. Use the posture and breathing
techniques in steps one through three while driving. Drop shoulders on
each exhalation.
Build on exercise to develop Art of Walking by engaging feet and focusing
energy out through the feet to propel the body in normal walking.
Objective is to expend the same or less energy to achieve a given
activity.
Step 1. Review the walking exercise
from Class One. Assume the correct standing position from Class One,
including the hand position with thumb and middle finger touching and
index finger pointing.
Step 2. Standing still, inhale. As you
begin exhalation, focus on the foot you will move forward first as you
begin walking. Before you move, focus on the other foot you are leaving
on the ground. Press the big toe of that foot (the one you are leaving
on the ground) firmly into the ground and propel your body forward with
the ball of the foot and big toe. Land the foot you are moving by
landing on the heel (naturally, on the outside of heel) and rolling the
foot from back to front concentrating on this foot (which is now the
foot planted on the ground) and beginning to press the toe and ball of
the foot to lift the other leg off the ground.
Step 3. The idea is to take as many
steps as you can during an exhalation. Continuing to exhale, and
experience “walking with your feet” not your legs. You are pushing off
the ground by driving your energy into your feet and not by lifting your
feet with your thigh muscles.
Step 4. Practice this method until you are able to blend your breathing
into this method. Strive to inhale on two to four steps and exhale on
as many steps as you can, up to the number of steps it takes to walk a
city block.