
Decoding Posture: Post 6
Most people think of posture as a position you “hold”, but as movement professionals we know better. We spend much of our time observing our clients whilst they perform the exercises which reveals a great deal! Posture is not a statue — it’s a behaviour, a constantly adapting strategy created by the nervous system to keep the body upright, efficient, and safe.
Static posture gives us useful information, but it only tells part of the story. If we want to understand a client’s true alignment, load strategies, and compensations, we must look at posture in motion.
This is where real postural correction begins.
Why Static Posture Isn’t Enough
A client may appear symmetrical in standing, yet show clear asymmetries the moment they begin to move. This is because static posture reflects habit and a certain amount of knowledge of how it should be, but dynamic posture reflects function.
When we assess movement, we see:
- how the joints organise under load
- how the myofascial system distributes tension
- how the nervous system chooses stability
- where compensations appear when the body is challenged
This is the information that matters for effective, long‑term posture correction.
Dynamic Posture Reveals the Truth
During movement, the body can no longer “pose”. It must organise itself honestly.
Common dynamic patterns you’ll see in clients include:
- A pelvis that shifts or drops during gait (glute medius weakness, lateral chain imbalance)
- A ribcage that rotates more to one side (thoracic mobility asymmetry, dominant oblique patterning)
- A knee that collapses only during load (valgus strategy, foot pronation, hip instability)
- A foot that stiffens during push‑off (reduced ankle mobility, over‑reliance on global stabilisers)
These patterns don’t always appear in stillness — they emerge when the body must coordinate, stabilise, and transfer force.
This is why dynamic assessment is essential for Pilates teachers, yoga teachers, and movement professionals working with posture correction.
What Dynamic Posture Tells Us (Biomechanically)
When you observe posture in motion, you gain insight into:
1. Joint Stacking Under Load
How the ankle, knee, hip, pelvis, ribcage, and head align when the body is moving — not just standing.
2. Myofascial Continuity
Where tension travels, which lines dominate, and which lines under‑perform (e.g., superficial front line vs deep front line).
3. Neuromuscular Control
How well the client can stabilise, decelerate, and coordinate movement.
4. Breath + Posture Interaction
Breathing patterns that collapse the ribcage, flare the ribs, or stiffen the diaphragm.
5. Habitual Motor Patterns
The “autopilot” strategies the nervous system uses to feel safe and efficient.
This is the level of detail that allows us to create targeted, intelligent corrective exercise using matwork and simple props.
Your Posture Story: A Useful Reflection (But With Purpose)
While posture is influenced by history, emotion, environment, and experience, our goal as educators is not simply to observe — it’s to guide change.
A reflective, somatic approach helps clients understand their patterns, but it also helps us direct them toward better alignment.
Useful questions to explore with clients:
- Where do you feel supported when you move?
- Where do you feel effort or gripping?
- What changes when you breathe differently?
- What shifts when you slow down or reduce load?
These reflections give clients agency, but they also give you diagnostic clues.
Posture Correction Without Fear or Perfectionism
Although most of us are far from the idea of “ideal posture”, there are more efficient, less stressful ways for the body to organise itself without feeling we have to strive for perfection.
Posture correction isn’t about forcing a shape — it’s about:
- improving joint alignment
- restoring balanced muscle recruitment
- increasing mobility where needed
- building stability where lacking
- retraining movement patterns
- supporting the nervous system to adopt new strategies
This is the heart of modern, science‑based postural work.
How to Teach Dynamic Posture Assessment (Mat‑Based)
You don’t need reformers or large apparatus to assess or correct posture. Matwork and simple props give you everything you need.
Effective dynamic assessments include:
- Gait observation (frontal + sagittal views)
- Sit‑to‑stand (hip strategy, knee tracking, spinal sequencing)
- Overhead reach (ribcage control, scapular mechanics)
- Forward fold + return (lumbar‑pelvic rhythm)
- Single‑leg balance (hip stability, foot mechanics)
- Cat/Cow (spinal flexion/extension patterning)
- Bridge variations (posterior chain recruitment, pelvic control)
Each of these reveals a different layer of the client’s postural strategy.
Why This Matters for Teachers and Trainers
When you understand dynamic posture, you can:
- identify the real source of a client’s pain or limitation
- design more effective corrective programs
- cue with precision instead of guesswork
- progress clients safely and confidently
- teach with authority and clarity
This is the difference between “teaching exercises” and teaching bodies.
CTA
If you want to learn how to assess posture dynamically — and how to correct it using matwork, props, and evidence‑based biomechanics — my Postural Assessment Course walks you through the entire process.
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