About Your Core
Walking is a core event. In the FitzGordon
Method™ the core refers to three main muscle
groups: The inner thighs, the pelvic floor and the
abdominals. The psoas (our favorite muscle) is the
main engine of walking and when it is properly toned
and aligned it allows the body to move with the most
efficiency and ease. Without balance and tone in our
core the psoas won’t be free to function at
its best.
The inner thighs, known as the adductors
(there are five of them), tend to be weaker than
the outer thighs and in almost all cases need to
be awakened to their proper role in walking.
The pelvic floor, muscularly known
as the levator ani (three muscles), is called upon
to serve a different role in modern man than in
our predecessors. Our shift from quadruped to biped
has not been an easy one. If you think about four-legged
animals, the pelvis is the back wall of the body
so the abdominal wall supports the internal organs.
As a result of standing upright, our pelvic floor
has become responsible for holding up our organs.
This shift in responsibility is well deserved of
our attention.
The belly is made up of four abdominal
muscles all of which need balanced tone to function
properly as they are essentially connected through
assorted structures of the inner body (see fascia
in the archive). The average person will have much
more tone in one or another of these muscles for
different reasons. Classically we are way too developed
in the most surface of these muscles, the rectus
abdominus – otherwise known as the six-pack.
Proper tone and balanced function
in these groups allows for the correct alignment of
the legs, pelvis and lumbar spine, which creates the
best environment for housing the internal organs and
freeing the psoas to work at its best. Through a series
of exercises tailored to each individual we will build
an enduring strength to carry us through life •
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