A sports scientist who is an expert on walking says that everyone walks wrong.
I’m not sure I’d go as far as saying that, but WalkActive founder Joanna Hall, who coaches people on walking, says that she sees lots of problems in the way people walk, and that they should focus more on technique.
She points out that while people will accept that there are skills and techniques you have to work at in other activities, walking is something nobody really bothers paying attention to. “When we walk, we don’t really think about it.”
Hall, who has worked alongside London South Bank University’s Sport and Exercise Science Research Center to test her walking methodology, points out four common walking mistakes most people make. These tips are super meaningful for dancers, as they will dramatically improve your dance technique.
1. Walk out of your space rather than into it
The first tip she gives is that we need to think more on walking out of the space we are in rather than the space we are moving toward. She says that most people “walk into their space,” becoming overly reliant on their hip flexors. These are the muscles you employ when bringing your knee forwards. As a result, they don’t properly engage their glutes and hamstrings.
“If we are too dependent on the hip flexors, it stops us using our glutes properly,” Hall explains. “Combine that with our lifestyles and the amount we sit down, and the hip flexors get very short.”
As she explains it, when we step forward into the space in front of us, we negate the posterior chain, the muscles that run down the back of the body, including the glutes and hamstrings.
Instead, she recommends walking out of your space. Asked to explain what that looks like, she said it like having a post-it note on the bottom of your shoes and leaving it visible for a fraction longer for the person behind you to read.
She explains that this engages your glutes and your hamstrings, and switches off your hip flexors. This safeguards your back and improves your posture. This same technique will improve your movement in swing dances such as the Waltz, Tango, Foxtrot and Quickstep.
2. Use your feet to flex your hips
The second tip stems from how you’re using your feet. As Hall explains, “People tend to walk with a flat foot, which is called a passive foot. But the foot has 26 bones in it.”
“Where we have a bone, it’s there because it’s actually a joint, and we’re meant to have movement in it. But as a consequence of walking with a flat foot, we don’t use the foot like that.”
Hall describes an easy way to fix it by imagining you have pieces of velcro on the bottom of your feet and on the path you’re walking on. As you’re showing teh post-it note to the person behind you, you’re peeling your back foot off the floor bit by bit. She says this is “great for your posture, and it’s great for your alignment.”
Again, this is a technique we use all the time in ballroom dancing, in both the traditional Ballroom genre and the Latin dances.
3. Pay attention to your head and shoulders
In today’s world, the prevalence of mobile technology causes lots of people to walk with a forward head position. Unfortunately, walking with your head leaning forward puts considerable pressure on the back, making it stiff. It’s said that for every inch your head comes forward, your back has to carry an extra 5Kg (10lbs) of weight.
Hall explains that “When the spine is stiff, the shoulder girdle actually starts to fall forward… This means you don’t get the opening of the shoulder when you walk, and that has implications on how the diaphragm works. It should move about 10cm with every breath, but it can only move about 4cm.”
Ballroom dancers are taught to keep their head up, properly aligned with the spine at all times.
4. Use of the arms
The use of Contra Body Movement, or CBM, is something we already do in everyday life. As I regularly joke in our group classes, you don’t see people moving the same arm forward as the leg that’s going forward, except for caricatures of gunslingers in Western movies. You automatically swing the arm opposite of the moving leg.
Dancers learn to use this technique to improve the look of their movement, especially in dances such Slow Foxtrot. Hall says we need to pay attention to this same action in normal everyday walking, by letting the arms swing freely.
So while I wouldn’t go so far as to say that everyone walks wrong, there are lots of things we can do to walk in ways that are more focused and intentional, improving our backs, our posture and of course, our dancing.
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