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The Internal Power Training Blog

Check out the latest info and research from Coach Chris' explorations in the Subject of Internal
Power.

The Quality of Stability


on May 19, 2017 in Alignment, Body Training, Koryu, Nei Jia by coach

Grab hold of any high-level Judo-Ka and try to drag them around the mat and you notice one
clear attribute, stability. In the grappling arts especially, the skill of stability is a core
component of the training methods and one of the main attributes that is built.

Stability can be thought of as our ability to maintain control of our posture, position, motion,
and mass, either when we move ourselves or when we move in association with a partner or
opponent.
In this article, I will explore a few concepts that combine to create stability in the individual,
concepts that often arise naturally out of good training, and that we focus on in the StableBody
section of the system.

Maintaining trained alignments

Improper alignment, more commonly called poor posture, is perhaps the most common way in
which stability is lost in most people. Our days spent behind desks or staring at our phones
cause our posture to slump or slouch, our shoulder position to deform and our spine to round.
When we apply this postural bias to the Martial Setting, and the external forces acting upon us,
these problems are easily taken advantage of by the trained opponent. The typical ‘text neck’
posture, for instance, will hang the weight of your head out in front of your body, and any good
Grappler would be able to use this to their advantage.

So, for us to become more stable we must address problems in our structure, like this forward
bias, through training the body so that it intimately knows when such imbalances are present
and naturally addresses them. The ‘trained’ alignments of the body are self-correcting and self-
resetting so that the practitioner, after some period of training doesn’t have to think about
maintaining good position, it simply occurs.

The primary marker for the general alignment of the body is the spine. The spine and the
associated muscle groups are perhaps the most susceptible to misalignment of all the parts of
the body. The back and torso is supposed to be supple, mobile and articulate but often it
becomes fixed or set in position. Once the spine develops more fluidity and a return to mobility
is achieved it requires much less effort for it to remain aligned optimally and the for the posture
to be corrected.

Secondly, we can associate and align the Shoulders to the hips. The role of these joints is similar
in our body however the alignment of them and the ‘body box’ that they create is a very useful
tool in the maintenance of stability, especially in motion. As we move around, we can put our
attention into how our shoulders are associating with our hips and note any misalignments or
sub optimal motions that occur. Normally this will be presented as excessive effort or muscular
activation, especially when interacting with a partner. Once we have the body box, we can then
also associate the elbows to the knees and the wrists to the ankles, but these associations are
often not necessarily alignments but expressions of motion and association.

It is important for us to realise that trained alignment is not a static thing. We are not talking
about making the body behave like a statue! The trained alignment is a state in which the adept
will be optimally positioned for support, efficiency, effort and power during any movement or
any-body position. Trained alignment is, in fact a key to dynamic movement in that it adapts to
the requirements present in the moment and is not confined to a particular ‘stance’ or body
posture.
The Stable Centre.

Common to many martial arts is the concept of the ‘centre’. Called by many names, the ‘Dan
Tien’, The ‘Tanden’, The ‘Hara’, This area of the body is normally located in the lower abdomen.
It can be thought of in many ways, and can represent many different ideas to many different
traditions, however, when we talk about Stability we can use this area as the defined ‘centre of
mass’ and as the juncture for the various lines of tissue that hold the body position in
alignment. It is from this combination of alignment and connection to the centre that we can
create stability to our motion.

The stable centre is extremely useful because it provides us with a location to turn around, to
lead from and to balance opposite directions through. The centre is a ‘ball’ of connection and
has all 6 major directions inherently present. This centre is dynamic and involved in every
motion we undertake, from agile leaping to solidity of root. The well-trained centre is the point
around which the body can rotate and turn, it is the point from which the body will align its
joints and limbs, and the point from which the web of tissue will stretch and coil.

Making this Central point stable is not simply to make it static however, indeed, that is not the
goal. The static adept is the adept getting punched in the face! The stable centre is in fact the
centre that can move, both through the planes of motion as well as in accordance with the
balance of opposite forces. The truly stable centre is the dynamic one.

However, it is common for us to see demonstrations of stability in static context, The Tai Chi
master rooting against pushes is a classic example, but how often does this skill feature on the
roadmap of combative exchange? Rarely. So, although a good marker for our ability to remain
stable, it is dynamic stability that is the attribute that we are interested in.
Stability through the balance of opposites.

The balance of opposites is the method that we use at the more advanced levels of practice to
deal with force such that it is cancelled out or remains in equilibrium.

An easy way to describe this balance is with the visual of a wheel in front of you, note as the
front of the wheel rolls up and away from you, the other side is simultaneously coming up from
underneath. Were you to touch the falling side you would fall, but on the same wheel, were
you to touch the rising side you would raise up. It is the same rotation, but dependant on the
position of your interaction you will experience 2 very different effects.

There is a lot to be said about this concept, that I call pairing, and that is for another time, but
the most basic idea highlights an interesting point. The action of opposites can maintain a type
of balance in a system. The wheel, because of its turning when forces are applied and the
presence of a central point of rotation maintains stability. This addressing of force, so as to
return to a neutral point, enables practitioners to appear extremely stable, because as the force
enters it is immediately balanced by its opposite and equalised.

In upcoming articles we will explore some of these concepts in more detail.

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