About Natural Mobility
Natural Mobility is about developing the freedom to move your body pain-free in an unrestricted way. This means developing strong, resilient joints, practical flexibility, and greater efficiency in natural movement patterns. If we think of our health as a progression, we start with relieving abnormal pain and tension and restoring more balanced structural alignment before strengthening weaknesses and focusing on expanding functional flexibility. Finally we apply these rebalanced attributes to athletic abilities to expand our movement potential.

We may not all need to focus on everything. The chart below shows us where to start depending on how we are feeling in our bodies.
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If you are tense and suffer from pain in your body, or even if you have no pain, but are very inflexible, you'll want to start with the restorative, therapeutic modalities as your focus. Skipping ahead just creates deeper imbalances and compensations. The restorative modalities include Shiatsu, Sotai, and Meridian Stretching, and focusing on these will restore your natural alignment while relieving abnormal pain & tension.
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If you are not in pain, and are flexible enough, you can focus more on foundational modalities such as injury prevention (breakfalls, rolling, balancing, etc...) and Natural Movement Strengthening (bodyweight exercises like single leg strengthening, hanging, ground movement, etc...). A focus on these modalities builds our resilience against injury and builds our capacity to support more advanced movement skills.
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No matter how you feel, you should spend some time focusing on all of these aspects, but you should spend some extra time focused on what will address your biggest limitations.
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You'll notice there's no straight path to the athletic modalities, and one should always be focusing on deepening their foundation (and restoration when needed), even when there is an athletic goal to achieve.
Our Approach to Training Progression

Discover the Facets of our Movement Practice

The facets of our practice are interrelated. First we need to cultivate our health and balance. Then we need to reinforce our resilience against injury. Finally we need to be able to move freely. These are vital life skills:
A Restorative Focus with Sotai & Shiatsu Therapy
Self-healing doesn't mean magically healing yourself, rather it refers to doing everything you can to facilitate your body's own natural healing process through the wisdom of Japanese Shiatsu, & Sotai self-regulation techniques, along with natural movement principles.
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This facet of a balanced movement practice includes both treatment administered by a professional therapist, and self-care techniques to maintaining the momentum of your healing process.

The self-care elements involves learning how to use palm and finger pressure to treat your own muscles and joints, stretches and joint mobilizations that you can do to make your joints more limber and free of restriction or pain, and special techniques to bring balance to your postural alignment. This is both preventative and complimentary medicine while being adaptable and suitable for everyone.
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This is delivered in the form of Sotai/Shiatsu Therapy sessions, Personal Mobility Training, Online Coaching, and Workshops every few months.
A Foundational Focus with Natural Movement Strengthening & Injury Prevention
Injury Prevention includes learning the techniques of safely falling and rolling, but it is also concerned with our range of motion and the strength and resilience of our joints. The elements of Ukemi (Breakfalls and Rolls), Junan Taiso (Flexibility Conditioning), and the strength and joint stability to control our bodies (bodyweight strengthening) such as lowering ourselves to the ground on one leg with control, balancing, and transitioning to support ourselves on our hands (as in a cartwheel) all fit into this category.

This facet of our practice is the foundation for safe practice of all more advanced movement, and this is where we should all focus a significant amount of our attention when we are feeling pain-free and fairly flexible.
An Athletic Focus with Natural Movement Training
This includes ground movement, the obstacle traversal skills shared with Parkour, and manipulation techniques of lifting, carrying, throwing and catching. It also includes combatives and aquatic skills. MovNat is the owner's manual for human movement in the real world. Even the Foundational stuff is mostly MovNat-based, but we really get to explore it when we start playing with more athletically demand aspects of training.

MovNat is a system to cultivate natural fitness and better movement in the body by reconnect with your innate movement capability as a human being. This training introduces you to the full spectrum of human movement skills, and imparts an approach to improving these skills that empowers you to continue to lead your own improvement.