'Wide-hand' floor entrance & exit (FEN/FEX) from seated
Floor-entrance (FEN) & floor-exit (FEX) patterns
•
1m 8s
THE WHAT:
A variation on the fundamental ‘FEN/FEX from seated’, with which is it recommend to have already “embodied” through consistent practice before exploring this variation. The key difference here is in the mechanism & function of the arms upon entry/exit: whilst the primary ‘FEN/FEX from seated’ utilises a “folding” of the elbow which facilitates receiving the upper-body softly into the floor, this ‘wide-arm’ variation creates a rounded, half-arc of the back between the outstretched arm & hands along which it is possible to smoothly roll.
For this reason, the ‘wide-hand’ roll is more conducive to MOMENTARILY entering, and then immediately exiting, the floor in a quicker and more efficient manner than its arm-folding counterpart, which integrates more readily with ongoing floorwork patterns such as lateral rolling variations and other transitions.
LEARN MORE (subscriber-only):
https://drive.google.com/file/d/12Ur7L7wzOLH-o29QWldtrGfd-GiKiH1e/view?usp=drive_link
_____________________
For programming, guidance, & support for your physical practice:
FREE fundamental prehabilitation program: https://www.movemoremp.com/
Online Support (1 to 1 coaching): https://movemoremp.com/onlinesupport/
Elements (standardised programs): https://www.movemoremp.com/elements
[email protected]
Up Next in Floor-entrance (FEN) & floor-exit (FEX) patterns
-
The 'Shoulder-stand'
THE WHAT:
The ‘shoulder-stand’ establishes an essentially diagonal axis of balance, from the base shoulder through the opposite side hip and leg. It is initially supported by the free hand planted on the floor, although can later be incrementally removed as alignment and balance calibration devel... -
Seated pike to prone (& back)
THE WHAT & HOW:
A charming little context which "maps" both the anterior & posterior "circle of the hips", or, rather, the full-circle. It comes from the perspective of "circles of the body", by which we can use them, just like wheels, to move both in and through space.In oder to place it withi...
-
The wall "Undercut"
THE WHAT:
A 2-point, ipsilateral (i.e. same side hand/foot) wall-supported transition pattern which practices “threading” the body under and through itself. A significant part of this practice, then, is developing the STRUCTURAL AWARENESS to support one’s structure with only two points of support...