Fundamental 'Lizard-crawl' progressions
'Quadrupedal' locomotion: foundational patterns & conditioning
•
4m 8s
THE WHAT & HOW:
The 'lizard crawl' is a quadrupedal locomotion pattern which develops understanding of movement through space as close to the floor as possible, WITHOUT touching the body. Before entering these lower regions, however (i.e the 'Low-lizard'), coordination, structural-awareness, strength & conditioning are developed in a range of straight & bent-arm strength (SAS/BAS) progressions, and sometimes a combination of both (i.e. 'Reach +. pushup'). Whilst beginning as a strength & conditioning-development context, the ultimately objective here is development of EFFICIENCY, i.e. learning how to make the pattern EASIER, rather than harder.
LEARN MORE (subscriber-only):
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1evMt5VIvIcF4hQv23pl1_iDdYyP0Zi5Z/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 'Quadrupedal' locomotion: foundational patterns & conditioning
-
Lizard-crawl step-under
THE WHAT:
A variation on the fundamental 'lizard-crawl' to widen the vocabulary & possibilities of close-floor, bent-arm strength (BAS) quadrupedal locomotion. Whilst the 'step-under' expresses greater transverse rotation of the body, most notably it serves to keep the HIPS as CLOSE to the floor ... -
Bridge walking (forward & back)
THE WHAT:
Whilst a simple conditioning context expressing capacities in the fundamental ‘High-bridge’ form, ‘Bridge-walking’ also challenges the practitioner’s structural-awareness & coordination. This is namely with regards to the SIMULTANEOUS stepping of the OPPOSITE hand/foot, making it a CONT...