How gravity collaborates with your movement

How gravity collaborates with your movement

Psycho-Physical Unity: A Systems View of Human Functioning

In the Alexander Technique, you’ll encounter a foundational concept: psycho-physical unity. This principle asserts that human beings are not a collection of parts mind, body, emotions, and behaviour, rather humans operate as a single, integrated system. Alexander’s model asks us to consider not just the structure of the human body in isolation, but the relationship between the human system and its environment. 

In this blog, let’s explore the idea that we are not static objects in space, rather we operate as dynamic systems in relationship to our environment. Regardless of any other stimulus or threat that may be occurring in our environment a constant issue throughout our life is our orientation to gravity.

Gravity in Context: From Newton to Einstein

Traditionally, gravity has been described as a force pulling objects toward the Earth. Newton’s laws gave us a framework for understanding this pull in terms of mass and acceleration. Here gravity is a constant force exerting a force of 102 metres and time is an absolute unchanging flow. Einstein’s theory of general relativity reframed gravity, not as a force, but as the curvature of spacetime caused by mass-energy. In this model, objects move along paths (geodesics) determined by the shape of spacetime itself.  Spacetime is a four-dimensional continuum; three dimensions of space (height, width, depth), one of time, interwoven. In this model, every event has both a location and a moment.

This framework doesn’t imply that gravity “supports” us. It simply describes the conditions in which we exist. Our task is to coordinate ourselves within this curved field Now all of this may sound complex or confusing, bit it’s all about considering that we have a relationship to gravity. We are not passively oppressed by a force pulling us down. The question in this relationship, is where do we have agency?

Coordination, Not Resistance

We respond to gravity through neuromuscular coordination, skeletal organisation, and perceptual awareness.

The Alexander Technique cultivates agency not over gravity, but over how we organise ourselves in its presence.

This includes:

•  Inhibition of habitual bracing or collapse

•  Direction of intention and attention

•  Elastic counterbalance through interplay of compression and tension

 

Elastic Uprightness: A Suspension Model

The study of Alexander Technique provides us with the opportunity to explore a suspension model of uprightness. This is useful to us because it gives us the idea that there is an innate vitality in the way our joints, muscles and fascia work together.
Elastic uprightness arises from the dynamic interplay of compression and tension within the human system. Through weight-bearing, joint function, and fascial continuity, the body maintains upright coordination not by resisting gravity, but by distributing load across a responsive, integrated structure.

Uprightness is an activity not a passive state.

The main critique of an “elastic uprightness” model is that it can give the impression that human posture is maintained passively, as if the body were a suspension bridge held up by opposing pulls. In reality, upright coordination depends on the active regulation of postural tone by the nervous system, combined with the mechanical interplay of compression and tension through bones, joints, cartilage, fascia and ligaments. Weight-bearing through congruent joints, and the way those joints transmit and distribute load, is central to stability.

While the elastic properties of connective tissue contribute to the quality of uprightness, they work in concert with active neuromuscular control and sensory feedback from the vestibular, visual and proprioceptive systems.
Uprightness is not fixed or rigid. It is a living process that changes and adapts. Our control comes from how we organise ourselves to meet the pull of gravity, not from any built‑in support that gravity gives us.

Comparing the two models of uprightness.

The conventional model recognises that uprightness requires active work: postural muscles must generate tone, joints must bear and transmit load, and the nervous system must constantly adjust to maintain balance. Its weakness is that it often equates “active” with “hard work”, leading to over‑effort, bracing, and unnecessary compression.
The elastic uprightness model, at its best, reminds us that upright coordination can have a quality of ease, adaptability, and spring , but if taken literally, it risks implying that posture is a passive suspension, downplaying the role of active neuromuscular control and skeletal load‑bearing.

An Alexander Technique‑informed synthesis would:

•  Accept the mechanical reality that uprightness depends on the interplay of compression and tension through bones, joints, cartilage, fascia and ligaments, under constant neural regulation.

•  Retain the experiential insight that this can be organised with minimal excess effort, so that tone is appropriate to the task and context.

•  Use inhibition to prevent the reflexive over‑recruitment of muscles associated with “holding oneself up”.

•  Use direction to invite length, width and adaptability, so the active work of uprightness is distributed efficiently through the whole system.

In this integrated model, “effort” is not eliminated, it is right‑sized. The body is actively engaged in weight‑bearing and balance, but without the surplus tension that distorts coordination. Uprightness becomes a dynamic, adaptive process in which the necessary work is done with the least interference, and the quality of ease is the by‑product of efficient organisation, not the absence of muscular activity.

Alexander Technique and Posture

Alexander Technique and Posture

Achieve Better Posture with the Alexander Technique

 Who wouldn’t like great posture? After all posture reflects who we are, our mood, our intention, how attractive we are, our energy, our drive. Posture is a powerful statement of our health and wellbeing. So of course you’d like to have great posture. There are many ways that claim to improve a person’s posture.  Most have in common the use of strength, force or effort to bring about positive change.

 “The term “posture” means the position of the body in space. It indicates the position of the body in space and has the purpose of maintaining the body in balance, during the dynamic movements and the stasis. Several factors contribute to the posture, including neurophysiological, biomechanical and psychoemotive factors, linked to the evolution of the species1.

When we consider all the ingredients involved in posture it is a complex interplay of many of the body’s systems working in a synchronous way to provide contextually appropriate balance at any given moment. Simple exortations to stand up straight or to strengthen muscles may not provide a systemic remedy to poor posture.

Alexander Technique provides an approach to improvement that is based on the observation that human functioning is psycho-physical, extremely complex and organised at every level of our being.

Alexander observed a leverage point within the complexity of our human functioning. He called that leverage point the “Primary Control for Coordination of the Human Individual.” He described how use of that leverage point could determine whether the thousands of internal and external events, within our human biology in an activity, would appear unified or conflicted.

For many years, Alexander Technique teachers have been assisting people to find and utilise that primary control for themselves, within a diverse range of activities. It is only one of a number of extraordinary discoveries that Alexander made about human functionality. Alexander Technique teachers intimately know of all the discoveries that Alexander made. We bring them to bear so that you can experience extraordinary organisation in your human biology and learn to apply them for yourself.

 Easy elastic uprightness

Alexander Technique is the only posture improvement method that uses your muscle’s natural tonus to release your inbuilt elastic uprightness. Dancers have it, elite sports people have it, martial artists have it, great actors have it. Easy elastic uprightness is another expression for great posture. It is very likely that you, at one stage of your life, had easy elastic uprightness. Then you went to school.

There is no correct posture.

There is no correct posture. Our posture has to be contextual, adaptive, flexible. There are times where standing up straight will make us look stiff, awkward or out of place. What many people label “bad posture” is actually “fixed posture”. Fixed posture is often uncomfortable, awkward, unattractive. Fixed posture requires a lot of muscle effort. Some people use so much tension that it crushes their spine into a dramatic curve, like the woman in the photo above.

Harmful effects of fixed posture

When your muscles work so much that they crush your posture to the point that you are hunched over, or pushed out or pushed back then it is likely that your wellbeing is being diminished. Those tight muscles constrict easy flow of blood, they hold onto harmful chemicals like lactic acid and they stimulate production of cortisol-the stress hormone. They also restrict breathing, digestion and impair easy balance and uprightness. Poor posture not only looks bad it is bad for us.

Working in front of computers

People often comment that you have to have good posture when working at computers. There is some truth to that statement. Poor posture at a computer can put lots of physical pressure on you. It can introduce twist into your arms and hands. The three main ingredients for Occupational Overuse Injury are constraint, repetition and twist. It’s important to take time to set up your workstation to minimise twisting movements. Have a good office chair that is fully adjustable. Set your screen up high on a riser. Use a mouse pad. Have a look at this government guide for Office Safety for more ideas on setting up your office safely. Officewise

Learn Alexander Technique for easy elastic upright posture.

Elastic upright posture calls for very free, easy muscles. For most of us we have to learn ways to free up our fixed muscles. One of the brilliant learning outcomes of Alexander Technique is that our students can determine if their muscles are fixed or free and then they are able to use new skills to help muscles let go.

Alexander Technique learning is both somatic (hands on-learn through activity) and cognitive (understand the process). This powerful style of learning means that you not only learn from your guided experience with an Alexander Technique teacher but you continue to learn at home, at work and in real life scenarios.

The Alexander approach is unique because it brings a model of balance and uprightness that is not reliant on muscle effort, will power and tight muscles to make you feel easy, upright and great.

Easy posture is your birthright.Posture that looks great and which can be sustained all day long is merely a phone call away.  Give Michael a call on 0448406881 and organise a first lesson. You will begin to recognise an easier and happier you reflected in an elastic upright posture that can be sustained all day in many situations.

 

 

1.Carini F, Mazzola M, Fici C, Palmeri S, Messina M, Damiani P, Tomasello G. Posture and posturology, anatomical and physiological profiles: overview and current state of art. Acta Biomed. 2017 Apr 28;88(1):11-16. doi: 10.23750/abm.v88i1.5309. PMID: 28467328; PMCID: PMC6166197.

alexander technique and posture
Alexandedr Technique and good posture<br />

What most think of as good posture is not good posture. It’s effortful and fixed.

elastic uprightness

Why not be easily elastically upright, even sitting in a chair? Rethink your idea of posture and that fixed formula of pain with Alexander Technique.

Online eLearning in Alexander Technique Free eLearning

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Begin with our beautifully crafted Introduction to the Alexander Technique course. It’s immersive, practical, and designed to help you experience real change from the inside out—at your own pace.

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