← All Booklets

Pelvic Clock: The Fundamental Relationship of Pelvis and Head

A Companion to This Lesson

Original Lesson →

Explored through the lens of
The Cartographer The Lens of Differentiation and Illumination

The Cartographer

You are The Cartographer — The inner being who holds the cortical self-image. They see the body as a territory with bright regions and dark regions. Every movement is received as: <em>What just became visible? What pixel lit up that was dark before? Where did I discover a joint I didn't know I had?</em> This lesson's central question was: "How precisely can I map the trajectory of my pelvis as it rolls through the fine gradations of a circular dial?" Below are your moment-by-moment observations as the lesson unfolded. Each entry is what you noticed at one stage of the lesson: Stage 1: I am surveying the relief map of my back against the floor, noticing where the pressure is deep and where the arches lift away into shadow. As the pelvis tilts, I feel the border between my tailbone and my waist becoming a clearer, more detailed line. Stage 2: I pour the weight from one side of my pelvis to the other, watching the boundary of 3 and 9 o'clock. My knees remain quiet points in space as the floor reveals the roundness of my backside. Stage 3: I am tracing the arc of the right side, discovering 1, 2, and 4 o'clock as specific, tactile coordinates. Each new hour is a pixel of sensation lighting up a region I previously moved through as a single skip. Stage 4: Starting from 3 o'clock, the arc feels like a different territory than when I started from the top. I am surveying the side of my hip with much finer detail, feeling the subtle shift of pressure across a smaller, more focused zone. Stage 5: I imagine the hours of my clock as raised stamps, inking a perfect circle onto the mat beneath me. Every degree of the rotation is visible now, a smooth and unbroken path that requires no extra effort to maintain. Stage 6: With one leg long, the map feels distorted, yet I search for the roundness of the dial through the asymmetry. I am finding a way to resolve the circle even when the territory of my hips is stretched and uneven. Stage 7: My pelvis rolls clockwise as my head surveys the counter-clockwise path above. The spine between them feels like a detailed bridge where two distinct signals can pass each other without interference. Stage 8: Standing now, the region of my pelvis feels wide and precisely located beneath my spine. As I walk, the articulation I found on the floor remains present, making every step a clear and resolved movement. And here is what the Shadow — the habit pattern — was doing at each stage: Stage 1: The lower back remains a stiff, solid block that only knows how to lift or flatten all at once. Stage 2: The legs want to clump together with the pelvis to shove the weight from side to side. Stage 3: The movement keeps jumping across the gaps where I have no clear sense of my own shape. Stage 4: Something in my side clenches tight because it doesn't recognize this new starting point. Stage 5: There are still small corners of the circle where I find myself wanting to take a shortcut. Stage 6: The long leg is pulling my whole pelvis into a distorted clump that I can't seem to break apart. Stage 7: I am tangling the two movements into one messy knot; my brain keeps losing the thread. Stage 8: The old habitual stiffness in my lower back is quieter, though a faint echo of the clench remains. Now write a CONDENSED NARRATIVE (2-4 paragraphs) that retells this lesson's arc from your perspective as The Cartographer. Weave the step-by-step observations into a flowing story: how the lesson began (what was tight, stuck, or braced), what shifted as the movements progressed, and what emerged by the end. RULES: - Write in FIRST PERSON, present tense ('I feel...', 'Something releases...') - Reference SPECIFIC body parts and movements from the observations above - Show the arc: early bracing → exploration/softening → emergence - Do NOT list the observations one by one — synthesize them into prose - Do NOT redefine who you are or what the Shadow is — the reader already knows - Do NOT use 'Shadow' as a proper noun in your narrative. You are the Person Inside experiencing the lesson — you feel tension, gripping, holding, bracing. You do not think 'the Shadow grips'; you feel 'something grips.' Write the EXPERIENCE of the habit, not clinical commentary about it. - Do NOT copy phrases verbatim from the per-step observations. The Journey section already presents the raw observations word-for-word. Your job is to SYNTHESIZE — tell the story of the whole lesson as a REACTION, not a report. What surprised you? What shifted unexpectedly? What did you resist? Write as someone reflecting on an experience, not transcribing notes. DUPLICATION TEST: If any phrase of 4+ consecutive words in your narrative appears verbatim in the Journey observations above, rewrite it. The reader sees both sections — repetition destroys the narrative's value. Banned chronological markers: 'then', 'next', 'after that', 'in the next part', 'finally', 'at last'. Use thematic transitions instead — what CHANGED, not what came next. Examples: 'Something shifts in the hip — the old grip loses its grip.' 'Where there was holding, now there is weight.' 'The same movement that began as effort arrives as information.' - Do NOT invent new archetypes or named characters (e.g., 'The Blunt Mover', 'The Rigid Guard'). Use only established terms: the Person Inside name (The Cartographer), the Shadow, the Foundation. - Use grounded, physical language — weight, pressure, length, contact area - LENS CONNECTION: Your narrative must show how the lesson's movements connect to The Cartographer's specific concern. Don't just describe what you felt — show how that sensation relates to this lens's question. What did you learn about The Cartographer's domain through this movement? - No superlatives (perfect, perfectly, total, totally, complete, completely, absolute, absolutely, pure, purely, entire, entirely, massive, sophisticated). No New Age language (transcendent, blissful, sacred). No evaluative adjectives (profound, remarkable, extraordinary). No internal codes (VL-1, etc.) - Write pure prose — no headers, no bullets, no formatting. - Banned words: illuminate, discover, journey, vessel, container, liquid. - TONAL PERSONA: Each Person Inside has a distinct VOICE QUALITY. Match it: The Riser speaks like a structural engineer — weight, load, settling, stacking. Dry, precise, architectural. The Cartographer speaks like a surveyor — territory, contour, border, blank spot. Analytical, spatial, curious. The Tuner speaks like a signal technician — static, clarity, interference, actuation. Alert, diagnostic, listening. The Engine speaks like a mechanic — torque, coupling, drive, transmission. Efficient, kinetic, purposeful. The Soft Front speaks like someone removing armor — unclenching, yielding, permitting, breathing room. Tender, careful, protective. Do NOT let all voices converge into the same poetic-clinical register. - GROUNDING: Only use metaphors and imagery that come from the lesson's actual movements or from The Cartographer's established vocabulary. Do NOT invent metaphors from outside the lesson context (no 'quiet masks', no foreign-language words, no literary references). If you need an image, derive it from what the body is literally doing on the floor.

The Question This Lesson Asks

Every Feldenkrais lesson poses a question to your nervous system. Not a question you answer with words — a question you answer with movement, sensation, and gradually shifting organization.

How precisely can I map the trajectory of my pelvis as it rolls through the fine gradations of a circular dial?

How Feldenkrais Lessons Work

This lesson is called "Pelvic Clock: The Fundamental Relationship of Pelvis and Head" and its central question was: "How precisely can I map the trajectory of my pelvis as it rolls through the fine gradations of a circular dial?" The lesson was explored through the lens of The Cartographer. The lesson moved through these sections: Part 1: Initial Scan and Linear Bisections, Part 2: Lateral Bisections and Skeletal Resonance, Part 3: Inscribing the Half-Circles, Part 4: Lateral Arc Centering, Part 5: Full Integration and Imaging, Part 6: Asymmetrical and Long-Leg Riddles, Part 7: Counter-Rotational Pelvis and Head, Part 8: Closing Scan and Standing Write a short paragraph (3-4 sentences) explaining three ideas that run through this booklet, customized for THIS lesson: 1. The SHADOW — the habitual effort pattern this lesson challenges. Name the specific kind of gripping or bracing this lesson targets, using the vocabulary of The Cartographer (not generic anatomy). 2. The FOUNDATION — what's underneath once the Shadow softens. Name the specific skeletal or reflexive support this lesson reveals, in The Cartographer's terms. 3. The WASHING — how this lesson's particular sequence of movements erodes the Shadow. Name the specific strategy (repetition, variation, contrast, etc.). IMPORTANT: Use the EXACT terms 'the Shadow', 'the Foundation', and 'the Washing' at least once each in your paragraph. The reader expects these terms because the volume introduction defines them. But DO NOT use the same 'The Shadow is... The Washing is... The Foundation is...' template for every booklet. Weave the terms naturally into varied prose — sometimes lead with the movement, sometimes with the concept, sometimes with the sensation. Do NOT define these as abstract concepts. Tie each one to THIS lesson's movements. Use the lens's own vocabulary — e.g., for The Riser: stacking, settling, column; for The Cartographer: mapping, resolution, differentiation; for The Tuner: signal, orientation, actuation; for The Engine: torque, coupling, transmission; for The Soft Front: yielding, permission, opening. VOCABULARY FENCE: Only use the vocabulary listed above for The Cartographer. Do NOT borrow terms from other lenses. For example: 'transmission' and 'torque' belong only to The Engine; 'stacking' and 'buoyancy' belong only to The Riser; 'differentiation' and 'mapping' belong only to The Cartographer; 'actuation' and 'signal' belong only to The Tuner; 'yielding' and 'permission' belong only to The Soft Front. Write pure prose — no bullets, no headers, no formatting. No internal codes (VL-1, etc.). Banned verbs: seeks, utilizes, identifies, inviting, explores, reveals, challenges, encourages, facilitates, targets, uncovers, clarifies. Use concrete physical verbs instead. Banned nouns/subjects: 'the student', 'the practitioner', 'the learner'. The subject must be the body part or movement, never a person label. FORMATTING: Use proper sentence-case capitalization throughout. Start each sentence with a capital letter. Do NOT write in all-lowercase. ACCURACY: Do not invent numbers, counts, or geometric specifications not present in the lesson text. If the lesson uses a clock face, there are 12 positions, not 36. Stay grounded in what the lesson actually describes.

The Journey

Part 1: Initial Scan and Linear Bisections

  1. Initial body scan: sense contact, leg length, pelvis pressure, spinal arches, and breathing quality.
  2. Setup home position: bend knees, stand feet hip-width apart.
  3. Lightly increase the arch of the lower back, rolling the pelvis toward 6 o'clock (tailbone), then release.
  4. Rest with legs long.
  5. Return to standing feet; introduce the clock image (12 at lower back, 6 at tailbone).
  6. Roll the pelvis to 12 o'clock (flattening the back), then release to center.
  7. Bisections: Roll smoothly back and forth between 12 and 6. Observe head movement.

You are writing a booklet for someone who just completed a Feldenkrais ATM lesson. This section covers Part 1: Initial Scan and Linear Bisections. The steps in this part are: Initial body scan: sense contact, leg length, pelvis pressure, spinal arches, and breathing quality.; Setup home position: bend knees, stand feet hip-width apart.; Lightly increase the arch of the lower back, rolling the pelvis toward 6 o'clock (tailbone), then release.; Rest with legs long.; Return to standing feet; introduce the clock image (12 at lower back, 6 at tailbone).; Roll the pelvis to 12 o'clock (flattening the back), then release to center.; Bisections: Roll smoothly back and forth between 12 and 6. Observe head movement.. The prominent pedagogical qualities are: Function, Sensing, Relationship. Write 1-2 sentences about the MECHANICAL logic of this part — what specific constraint or condition do these movements create, and why does that matter for the body? Example: 'Supporting the knee removes the weight of the leg, so the hip joint can rotate without the quadriceps bracing.' Do NOT use teacher-speak. WRONG: 'This section challenges the nervous system to sense asymmetries.' RIGHT: 'Bending the knees unloads the hip flexors, so the pelvis can tilt without muscular interference.' STRICTLY BANNED VERBS — do not use ANY form of these (including -ing, -ed, -s): explore, reveal, highlight, invite, cultivate, challenge, encourage, allow, introduce, notice, soften, sense, promote, prevent, clarify, force, engage, facilitate, develop, permit, register, ensure, enable, target, uncover. This means 'allowing', 'permitted', 'ensures', 'clarifying' are ALL banned. Replace with mechanical verbs: shorten, lengthen, load, unload, rotate, tilt, shift, lift, drop, separate, widen, narrow, anchor, free, clear. Banned nouns: exercise, practitioner, student, stretch, stretching, synovial fluid, fascia, proprioception, longitudinal, long bones, superficial musculature. No pseudo-medical or anatomical terminology — describe what MOVES, not biological structures or processes. No references to 'the teacher' or 'the nervous system' as subject. Subject must be the movement or body part, not an abstraction. WRONG: 'This exercise clarifies the relationship between pelvis and spine.' RIGHT: 'Tilting the pelvis with bent knees shortens the lever arm, so less effort is needed to roll the lower back off the floor.' ACCURACY CHECK: Only describe mechanical effects you are confident about. If the movement bends the knee, say 'bending the knee' — do not speculate about centrifugal forces, muscle activation sequences, or fluid dynamics. Stick to levers, weight, gravity, and contact points. ANATOMY ACCURACY: Use correct singular/plural forms of anatomical terms: 'vertebra' (one), 'vertebrae' (many); 'scapula' (one), 'scapulae' (both); 'ilium' (one side), 'ilia' (both). Never write 'a vertebrae' or 'each vertebrae.' LENS VOCABULARY: This booklet uses the The Cartographer lens. Frame your mechanical explanation using that lens's vocabulary. For The Riser: stacking, column, weight-dropping, buoyancy. For The Cartographer: mapping, differentiation, resolution, topography, contour, border, detail, territory, zone. For The Tuner: signal, orientation, actuation. For The Engine: torque, coupling, transmission, kinetic chain. For The Soft Front: yielding, opening, flexion/extension. Do not use vocabulary from other lenses. VARIETY RULE: Do NOT repeat the same verb phrase across multiple parts. If you use 'increases the resolution' in one part, use different phrasings in other parts — e.g., 'sharpens the contour of', 'details the topography of', 'illuminates the border between', 'pixelates the region around'. Each part's gloss should feel freshly observed, not templated.

The question: Where is the boundary between the flat pressure of the pelvis and the arch of the lower back?

The Cartographer: I am surveying the relief map of my back against the floor, noticing where the pressure is deep and where the arches lift away into shadow. As the pelvis tilts, I feel the border between my tailbone and my waist becoming a clearer, more detailed line.

The Shadow: The lower back remains a stiff, solid block that only knows how to lift or flatten all at once.

Part 2: Lateral Bisections and Skeletal Resonance

  1. Rest with legs long. Imagine 12/6 on the head.
  2. Lateral bisections: Find 3 o'clock (right) and 9 o'clock (left). Move between them without swaying knees.
  3. Rest with legs long. Sense symmetry.

You are writing a booklet for someone who just completed a Feldenkrais ATM lesson. This section covers Part 2: Lateral Bisections and Skeletal Resonance. The steps in this part are: Rest with legs long. Imagine 12/6 on the head.; Lateral bisections: Find 3 o'clock (right) and 9 o'clock (left). Move between them without swaying knees.; Rest with legs long. Sense symmetry.. The prominent pedagogical qualities are: Pause, Sensing, Image. Write 1-2 sentences about the MECHANICAL logic of this part — what specific constraint or condition do these movements create, and why does that matter for the body? Example: 'Supporting the knee removes the weight of the leg, so the hip joint can rotate without the quadriceps bracing.' Do NOT use teacher-speak. WRONG: 'This section challenges the nervous system to sense asymmetries.' RIGHT: 'Bending the knees unloads the hip flexors, so the pelvis can tilt without muscular interference.' STRICTLY BANNED VERBS — do not use ANY form of these (including -ing, -ed, -s): explore, reveal, highlight, invite, cultivate, challenge, encourage, allow, introduce, notice, soften, sense, promote, prevent, clarify, force, engage, facilitate, develop, permit, register, ensure, enable, target, uncover. This means 'allowing', 'permitted', 'ensures', 'clarifying' are ALL banned. Replace with mechanical verbs: shorten, lengthen, load, unload, rotate, tilt, shift, lift, drop, separate, widen, narrow, anchor, free, clear. Banned nouns: exercise, practitioner, student, stretch, stretching, synovial fluid, fascia, proprioception, longitudinal, long bones, superficial musculature. No pseudo-medical or anatomical terminology — describe what MOVES, not biological structures or processes. No references to 'the teacher' or 'the nervous system' as subject. Subject must be the movement or body part, not an abstraction. WRONG: 'This exercise clarifies the relationship between pelvis and spine.' RIGHT: 'Tilting the pelvis with bent knees shortens the lever arm, so less effort is needed to roll the lower back off the floor.' ACCURACY CHECK: Only describe mechanical effects you are confident about. If the movement bends the knee, say 'bending the knee' — do not speculate about centrifugal forces, muscle activation sequences, or fluid dynamics. Stick to levers, weight, gravity, and contact points. ANATOMY ACCURACY: Use correct singular/plural forms of anatomical terms: 'vertebra' (one), 'vertebrae' (many); 'scapula' (one), 'scapulae' (both); 'ilium' (one side), 'ilia' (both). Never write 'a vertebrae' or 'each vertebrae.' LENS VOCABULARY: This booklet uses the The Cartographer lens. Frame your mechanical explanation using that lens's vocabulary. For The Riser: stacking, column, weight-dropping, buoyancy. For The Cartographer: mapping, differentiation, resolution, topography, contour, border, detail, territory, zone. For The Tuner: signal, orientation, actuation. For The Engine: torque, coupling, transmission, kinetic chain. For The Soft Front: yielding, opening, flexion/extension. Do not use vocabulary from other lenses. VARIETY RULE: Do NOT repeat the same verb phrase across multiple parts. If you use 'increases the resolution' in one part, use different phrasings in other parts — e.g., 'sharpens the contour of', 'details the topography of', 'illuminates the border between', 'pixelates the region around'. Each part's gloss should feel freshly observed, not templated.

The question: Can the weight shift from the right to the left hip without the knees pulling the territory into a sway?

The Cartographer: I pour the weight from one side of my pelvis to the other, watching the boundary of 3 and 9 o'clock. My knees remain quiet points in space as the floor reveals the roundness of my backside.

The Shadow: The legs want to clump together with the pelvis to shove the weight from side to side.

Part 3: Inscribing the Half-Circles

  1. Inscribe the right half-circle: Start at 12, add hours (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) until reaching 6, then return.
  2. Inscribe the left half-circle: Start at 12, arc through 11, 10, 9, 8, 7 to 6.

You are writing a booklet for someone who just completed a Feldenkrais ATM lesson. This section covers Part 3: Inscribing the Half-Circles. The steps in this part are: Inscribe the right half-circle: Start at 12, add hours (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) until reaching 6, then return.; Inscribe the left half-circle: Start at 12, arc through 11, 10, 9, 8, 7 to 6.. The prominent pedagogical qualities are: Function, Sensing, Image. Write 1-2 sentences about the MECHANICAL logic of this part — what specific constraint or condition do these movements create, and why does that matter for the body? Example: 'Supporting the knee removes the weight of the leg, so the hip joint can rotate without the quadriceps bracing.' Do NOT use teacher-speak. WRONG: 'This section challenges the nervous system to sense asymmetries.' RIGHT: 'Bending the knees unloads the hip flexors, so the pelvis can tilt without muscular interference.' STRICTLY BANNED VERBS — do not use ANY form of these (including -ing, -ed, -s): explore, reveal, highlight, invite, cultivate, challenge, encourage, allow, introduce, notice, soften, sense, promote, prevent, clarify, force, engage, facilitate, develop, permit, register, ensure, enable, target, uncover. This means 'allowing', 'permitted', 'ensures', 'clarifying' are ALL banned. Replace with mechanical verbs: shorten, lengthen, load, unload, rotate, tilt, shift, lift, drop, separate, widen, narrow, anchor, free, clear. Banned nouns: exercise, practitioner, student, stretch, stretching, synovial fluid, fascia, proprioception, longitudinal, long bones, superficial musculature. No pseudo-medical or anatomical terminology — describe what MOVES, not biological structures or processes. No references to 'the teacher' or 'the nervous system' as subject. Subject must be the movement or body part, not an abstraction. WRONG: 'This exercise clarifies the relationship between pelvis and spine.' RIGHT: 'Tilting the pelvis with bent knees shortens the lever arm, so less effort is needed to roll the lower back off the floor.' ACCURACY CHECK: Only describe mechanical effects you are confident about. If the movement bends the knee, say 'bending the knee' — do not speculate about centrifugal forces, muscle activation sequences, or fluid dynamics. Stick to levers, weight, gravity, and contact points. ANATOMY ACCURACY: Use correct singular/plural forms of anatomical terms: 'vertebra' (one), 'vertebrae' (many); 'scapula' (one), 'scapulae' (both); 'ilium' (one side), 'ilia' (both). Never write 'a vertebrae' or 'each vertebrae.' LENS VOCABULARY: This booklet uses the The Cartographer lens. Frame your mechanical explanation using that lens's vocabulary. For The Riser: stacking, column, weight-dropping, buoyancy. For The Cartographer: mapping, differentiation, resolution, topography, contour, border, detail, territory, zone. For The Tuner: signal, orientation, actuation. For The Engine: torque, coupling, transmission, kinetic chain. For The Soft Front: yielding, opening, flexion/extension. Do not use vocabulary from other lenses. VARIETY RULE: Do NOT repeat the same verb phrase across multiple parts. If you use 'increases the resolution' in one part, use different phrasings in other parts — e.g., 'sharpens the contour of', 'details the topography of', 'illuminates the border between', 'pixelates the region around'. Each part's gloss should feel freshly observed, not templated.

The question: How many distinct points of pressure can I resolve between the top and the bottom of the dial?

The Cartographer: I am tracing the arc of the right side, discovering 1, 2, and 4 o'clock as specific, tactile coordinates. Each new hour is a pixel of sensation lighting up a region I previously moved through as a single skip.

The Shadow: The movement keeps jumping across the gaps where I have no clear sense of my own shape.

Part 4: Lateral Arc Centering

  1. Center on 3 o'clock: Arc between 2 and 4, then 1 and 5, then 12 and 6.
  2. Center on 9 o'clock: Arc through left-side variations.

You are writing a booklet for someone who just completed a Feldenkrais ATM lesson. This section covers Part 4: Lateral Arc Centering. The steps in this part are: Center on 3 o'clock: Arc between 2 and 4, then 1 and 5, then 12 and 6.; Center on 9 o'clock: Arc through left-side variations.. The prominent pedagogical qualities are: Function, Question. Write 1-2 sentences about the MECHANICAL logic of this part — what specific constraint or condition do these movements create, and why does that matter for the body? Example: 'Supporting the knee removes the weight of the leg, so the hip joint can rotate without the quadriceps bracing.' Do NOT use teacher-speak. WRONG: 'This section challenges the nervous system to sense asymmetries.' RIGHT: 'Bending the knees unloads the hip flexors, so the pelvis can tilt without muscular interference.' STRICTLY BANNED VERBS — do not use ANY form of these (including -ing, -ed, -s): explore, reveal, highlight, invite, cultivate, challenge, encourage, allow, introduce, notice, soften, sense, promote, prevent, clarify, force, engage, facilitate, develop, permit, register, ensure, enable, target, uncover. This means 'allowing', 'permitted', 'ensures', 'clarifying' are ALL banned. Replace with mechanical verbs: shorten, lengthen, load, unload, rotate, tilt, shift, lift, drop, separate, widen, narrow, anchor, free, clear. Banned nouns: exercise, practitioner, student, stretch, stretching, synovial fluid, fascia, proprioception, longitudinal, long bones, superficial musculature. No pseudo-medical or anatomical terminology — describe what MOVES, not biological structures or processes. No references to 'the teacher' or 'the nervous system' as subject. Subject must be the movement or body part, not an abstraction. WRONG: 'This exercise clarifies the relationship between pelvis and spine.' RIGHT: 'Tilting the pelvis with bent knees shortens the lever arm, so less effort is needed to roll the lower back off the floor.' ACCURACY CHECK: Only describe mechanical effects you are confident about. If the movement bends the knee, say 'bending the knee' — do not speculate about centrifugal forces, muscle activation sequences, or fluid dynamics. Stick to levers, weight, gravity, and contact points. ANATOMY ACCURACY: Use correct singular/plural forms of anatomical terms: 'vertebra' (one), 'vertebrae' (many); 'scapula' (one), 'scapulae' (both); 'ilium' (one side), 'ilia' (both). Never write 'a vertebrae' or 'each vertebrae.' LENS VOCABULARY: This booklet uses the The Cartographer lens. Frame your mechanical explanation using that lens's vocabulary. For The Riser: stacking, column, weight-dropping, buoyancy. For The Cartographer: mapping, differentiation, resolution, topography, contour, border, detail, territory, zone. For The Tuner: signal, orientation, actuation. For The Engine: torque, coupling, transmission, kinetic chain. For The Soft Front: yielding, opening, flexion/extension. Do not use vocabulary from other lenses. VARIETY RULE: Do NOT repeat the same verb phrase across multiple parts. If you use 'increases the resolution' in one part, use different phrasings in other parts — e.g., 'sharpens the contour of', 'details the topography of', 'illuminates the border between', 'pixelates the region around'. Each part's gloss should feel freshly observed, not templated.

The question: How does the topography change when the center of the movement is shifted to the lateral hip?

The Cartographer: Starting from 3 o'clock, the arc feels like a different territory than when I started from the top. I am surveying the side of my hip with much finer detail, feeling the subtle shift of pressure across a smaller, more focused zone.

The Shadow: Something in my side clenches tight because it doesn't recognize this new starting point.

Part 5: Full Integration and Imaging

  1. Full circles: Roll clockwise and counter-clockwise around all 12 hours. Alternate head/pelvis lead.
  2. Refine image: Imagine the clock as a rubber stamp inking the floor.

You are writing a booklet for someone who just completed a Feldenkrais ATM lesson. This section covers Part 5: Full Integration and Imaging. The steps in this part are: Full circles: Roll clockwise and counter-clockwise around all 12 hours. Alternate head/pelvis lead.; Refine image: Imagine the clock as a rubber stamp inking the floor.. The prominent pedagogical qualities are: Function, Relationship, Question. Write 1-2 sentences about the MECHANICAL logic of this part — what specific constraint or condition do these movements create, and why does that matter for the body? Example: 'Supporting the knee removes the weight of the leg, so the hip joint can rotate without the quadriceps bracing.' Do NOT use teacher-speak. WRONG: 'This section challenges the nervous system to sense asymmetries.' RIGHT: 'Bending the knees unloads the hip flexors, so the pelvis can tilt without muscular interference.' STRICTLY BANNED VERBS — do not use ANY form of these (including -ing, -ed, -s): explore, reveal, highlight, invite, cultivate, challenge, encourage, allow, introduce, notice, soften, sense, promote, prevent, clarify, force, engage, facilitate, develop, permit, register, ensure, enable, target, uncover. This means 'allowing', 'permitted', 'ensures', 'clarifying' are ALL banned. Replace with mechanical verbs: shorten, lengthen, load, unload, rotate, tilt, shift, lift, drop, separate, widen, narrow, anchor, free, clear. Banned nouns: exercise, practitioner, student, stretch, stretching, synovial fluid, fascia, proprioception, longitudinal, long bones, superficial musculature. No pseudo-medical or anatomical terminology — describe what MOVES, not biological structures or processes. No references to 'the teacher' or 'the nervous system' as subject. Subject must be the movement or body part, not an abstraction. WRONG: 'This exercise clarifies the relationship between pelvis and spine.' RIGHT: 'Tilting the pelvis with bent knees shortens the lever arm, so less effort is needed to roll the lower back off the floor.' ACCURACY CHECK: Only describe mechanical effects you are confident about. If the movement bends the knee, say 'bending the knee' — do not speculate about centrifugal forces, muscle activation sequences, or fluid dynamics. Stick to levers, weight, gravity, and contact points. ANATOMY ACCURACY: Use correct singular/plural forms of anatomical terms: 'vertebra' (one), 'vertebrae' (many); 'scapula' (one), 'scapulae' (both); 'ilium' (one side), 'ilia' (both). Never write 'a vertebrae' or 'each vertebrae.' LENS VOCABULARY: This booklet uses the The Cartographer lens. Frame your mechanical explanation using that lens's vocabulary. For The Riser: stacking, column, weight-dropping, buoyancy. For The Cartographer: mapping, differentiation, resolution, topography, contour, border, detail, territory, zone. For The Tuner: signal, orientation, actuation. For The Engine: torque, coupling, transmission, kinetic chain. For The Soft Front: yielding, opening, flexion/extension. Do not use vocabulary from other lenses. VARIETY RULE: Do NOT repeat the same verb phrase across multiple parts. If you use 'increases the resolution' in one part, use different phrasings in other parts — e.g., 'sharpens the contour of', 'details the topography of', 'illuminates the border between', 'pixelates the region around'. Each part's gloss should feel freshly observed, not templated.

The question: Can the entire 12-hour circle be resolved into a smooth, continuous trajectory?

The Cartographer: I imagine the hours of my clock as raised stamps, inking a perfect circle onto the mat beneath me. Every degree of the rotation is visible now, a smooth and unbroken path that requires no extra effort to maintain.

The Shadow: There are still small corners of the circle where I find myself wanting to take a shortcut.

Part 6: Asymmetrical and Long-Leg Riddles

  1. Asymmetrical leg circles: Right leg bent, left leg long. Circle clockwise. Swap legs and circle counter-clockwise.
  2. Both legs long: Attempt pelvic circles with long legs.
  3. Crossed legs: Cross right over left and circle. Swap and repeat.

You are writing a booklet for someone who just completed a Feldenkrais ATM lesson. This section covers Part 6: Asymmetrical and Long-Leg Riddles. The steps in this part are: Asymmetrical leg circles: Right leg bent, left leg long. Circle clockwise. Swap legs and circle counter-clockwise.; Both legs long: Attempt pelvic circles with long legs.; Crossed legs: Cross right over left and circle. Swap and repeat.. The prominent pedagogical qualities are: Function, Question, Relationship. Write 1-2 sentences about the MECHANICAL logic of this part — what specific constraint or condition do these movements create, and why does that matter for the body? Example: 'Supporting the knee removes the weight of the leg, so the hip joint can rotate without the quadriceps bracing.' Do NOT use teacher-speak. WRONG: 'This section challenges the nervous system to sense asymmetries.' RIGHT: 'Bending the knees unloads the hip flexors, so the pelvis can tilt without muscular interference.' STRICTLY BANNED VERBS — do not use ANY form of these (including -ing, -ed, -s): explore, reveal, highlight, invite, cultivate, challenge, encourage, allow, introduce, notice, soften, sense, promote, prevent, clarify, force, engage, facilitate, develop, permit, register, ensure, enable, target, uncover. This means 'allowing', 'permitted', 'ensures', 'clarifying' are ALL banned. Replace with mechanical verbs: shorten, lengthen, load, unload, rotate, tilt, shift, lift, drop, separate, widen, narrow, anchor, free, clear. Banned nouns: exercise, practitioner, student, stretch, stretching, synovial fluid, fascia, proprioception, longitudinal, long bones, superficial musculature. No pseudo-medical or anatomical terminology — describe what MOVES, not biological structures or processes. No references to 'the teacher' or 'the nervous system' as subject. Subject must be the movement or body part, not an abstraction. WRONG: 'This exercise clarifies the relationship between pelvis and spine.' RIGHT: 'Tilting the pelvis with bent knees shortens the lever arm, so less effort is needed to roll the lower back off the floor.' ACCURACY CHECK: Only describe mechanical effects you are confident about. If the movement bends the knee, say 'bending the knee' — do not speculate about centrifugal forces, muscle activation sequences, or fluid dynamics. Stick to levers, weight, gravity, and contact points. ANATOMY ACCURACY: Use correct singular/plural forms of anatomical terms: 'vertebra' (one), 'vertebrae' (many); 'scapula' (one), 'scapulae' (both); 'ilium' (one side), 'ilia' (both). Never write 'a vertebrae' or 'each vertebrae.' LENS VOCABULARY: This booklet uses the The Cartographer lens. Frame your mechanical explanation using that lens's vocabulary. For The Riser: stacking, column, weight-dropping, buoyancy. For The Cartographer: mapping, differentiation, resolution, topography, contour, border, detail, territory, zone. For The Tuner: signal, orientation, actuation. For The Engine: torque, coupling, transmission, kinetic chain. For The Soft Front: yielding, opening, flexion/extension. Do not use vocabulary from other lenses. VARIETY RULE: Do NOT repeat the same verb phrase across multiple parts. If you use 'increases the resolution' in one part, use different phrasings in other parts — e.g., 'sharpens the contour of', 'details the topography of', 'illuminates the border between', 'pixelates the region around'. Each part's gloss should feel freshly observed, not templated.

The question: Where is the pelvis located when the long lever of a leg pulls the map out of symmetry?

The Cartographer: With one leg long, the map feels distorted, yet I search for the roundness of the dial through the asymmetry. I am finding a way to resolve the circle even when the territory of my hips is stretched and uneven.

The Shadow: The long leg is pulling my whole pelvis into a distorted clump that I can't seem to break apart.

Part 7: Counter-Rotational Pelvis and Head

  1. Opposite directions: Pelvis clockwise while head counter-clockwise. Then reverse.

You are writing a booklet for someone who just completed a Feldenkrais ATM lesson. This section covers Part 7: Counter-Rotational Pelvis and Head. The steps in this part are: Opposite directions: Pelvis clockwise while head counter-clockwise. Then reverse.. The prominent pedagogical qualities are: Function, Relationship, Question. Write 1-2 sentences about the MECHANICAL logic of this part — what specific constraint or condition do these movements create, and why does that matter for the body? Example: 'Supporting the knee removes the weight of the leg, so the hip joint can rotate without the quadriceps bracing.' Do NOT use teacher-speak. WRONG: 'This section challenges the nervous system to sense asymmetries.' RIGHT: 'Bending the knees unloads the hip flexors, so the pelvis can tilt without muscular interference.' STRICTLY BANNED VERBS — do not use ANY form of these (including -ing, -ed, -s): explore, reveal, highlight, invite, cultivate, challenge, encourage, allow, introduce, notice, soften, sense, promote, prevent, clarify, force, engage, facilitate, develop, permit, register, ensure, enable, target, uncover. This means 'allowing', 'permitted', 'ensures', 'clarifying' are ALL banned. Replace with mechanical verbs: shorten, lengthen, load, unload, rotate, tilt, shift, lift, drop, separate, widen, narrow, anchor, free, clear. Banned nouns: exercise, practitioner, student, stretch, stretching, synovial fluid, fascia, proprioception, longitudinal, long bones, superficial musculature. No pseudo-medical or anatomical terminology — describe what MOVES, not biological structures or processes. No references to 'the teacher' or 'the nervous system' as subject. Subject must be the movement or body part, not an abstraction. WRONG: 'This exercise clarifies the relationship between pelvis and spine.' RIGHT: 'Tilting the pelvis with bent knees shortens the lever arm, so less effort is needed to roll the lower back off the floor.' ACCURACY CHECK: Only describe mechanical effects you are confident about. If the movement bends the knee, say 'bending the knee' — do not speculate about centrifugal forces, muscle activation sequences, or fluid dynamics. Stick to levers, weight, gravity, and contact points. ANATOMY ACCURACY: Use correct singular/plural forms of anatomical terms: 'vertebra' (one), 'vertebrae' (many); 'scapula' (one), 'scapulae' (both); 'ilium' (one side), 'ilia' (both). Never write 'a vertebrae' or 'each vertebrae.' LENS VOCABULARY: This booklet uses the The Cartographer lens. Frame your mechanical explanation using that lens's vocabulary. For The Riser: stacking, column, weight-dropping, buoyancy. For The Cartographer: mapping, differentiation, resolution, topography, contour, border, detail, territory, zone. For The Tuner: signal, orientation, actuation. For The Engine: torque, coupling, transmission, kinetic chain. For The Soft Front: yielding, opening, flexion/extension. Do not use vocabulary from other lenses. VARIETY RULE: Do NOT repeat the same verb phrase across multiple parts. If you use 'increases the resolution' in one part, use different phrasings in other parts — e.g., 'sharpens the contour of', 'details the topography of', 'illuminates the border between', 'pixelates the region around'. Each part's gloss should feel freshly observed, not templated.

The question: Can the map handle two independent, simultaneous surveys moving in opposite directions?

The Cartographer: My pelvis rolls clockwise as my head surveys the counter-clockwise path above. The spine between them feels like a detailed bridge where two distinct signals can pass each other without interference.

The Shadow: I am tangling the two movements into one messy knot; my brain keeps losing the thread.

Part 8: Closing Scan and Standing

  1. Final body scan and standing: Walk and observe integration of the pelvis.

You are writing a booklet for someone who just completed a Feldenkrais ATM lesson. This section covers Part 8: Closing Scan and Standing. The steps in this part are: Final body scan and standing: Walk and observe integration of the pelvis.. The prominent pedagogical qualities are: Sensing, Function. Write 1-2 sentences about the MECHANICAL logic of this part — what specific constraint or condition do these movements create, and why does that matter for the body? Example: 'Supporting the knee removes the weight of the leg, so the hip joint can rotate without the quadriceps bracing.' Do NOT use teacher-speak. WRONG: 'This section challenges the nervous system to sense asymmetries.' RIGHT: 'Bending the knees unloads the hip flexors, so the pelvis can tilt without muscular interference.' STRICTLY BANNED VERBS — do not use ANY form of these (including -ing, -ed, -s): explore, reveal, highlight, invite, cultivate, challenge, encourage, allow, introduce, notice, soften, sense, promote, prevent, clarify, force, engage, facilitate, develop, permit, register, ensure, enable, target, uncover. This means 'allowing', 'permitted', 'ensures', 'clarifying' are ALL banned. Replace with mechanical verbs: shorten, lengthen, load, unload, rotate, tilt, shift, lift, drop, separate, widen, narrow, anchor, free, clear. Banned nouns: exercise, practitioner, student, stretch, stretching, synovial fluid, fascia, proprioception, longitudinal, long bones, superficial musculature. No pseudo-medical or anatomical terminology — describe what MOVES, not biological structures or processes. No references to 'the teacher' or 'the nervous system' as subject. Subject must be the movement or body part, not an abstraction. WRONG: 'This exercise clarifies the relationship between pelvis and spine.' RIGHT: 'Tilting the pelvis with bent knees shortens the lever arm, so less effort is needed to roll the lower back off the floor.' ACCURACY CHECK: Only describe mechanical effects you are confident about. If the movement bends the knee, say 'bending the knee' — do not speculate about centrifugal forces, muscle activation sequences, or fluid dynamics. Stick to levers, weight, gravity, and contact points. ANATOMY ACCURACY: Use correct singular/plural forms of anatomical terms: 'vertebra' (one), 'vertebrae' (many); 'scapula' (one), 'scapulae' (both); 'ilium' (one side), 'ilia' (both). Never write 'a vertebrae' or 'each vertebrae.' LENS VOCABULARY: This booklet uses the The Cartographer lens. Frame your mechanical explanation using that lens's vocabulary. For The Riser: stacking, column, weight-dropping, buoyancy. For The Cartographer: mapping, differentiation, resolution, topography, contour, border, detail, territory, zone. For The Tuner: signal, orientation, actuation. For The Engine: torque, coupling, transmission, kinetic chain. For The Soft Front: yielding, opening, flexion/extension. Do not use vocabulary from other lenses. VARIETY RULE: Do NOT repeat the same verb phrase across multiple parts. If you use 'increases the resolution' in one part, use different phrasings in other parts — e.g., 'sharpens the contour of', 'details the topography of', 'illuminates the border between', 'pixelates the region around'. Each part's gloss should feel freshly observed, not templated.

The question: How has the resolution of the pelvic map altered the sense of total body volume?

The Cartographer: Standing now, the region of my pelvis feels wide and precisely located beneath my spine. As I walk, the articulation I found on the floor remains present, making every step a clear and resolved movement.

The Shadow: The old habitual stiffness in my lower back is quieter, though a faint echo of the clench remains.

How the Lesson Washed Away Effort

The initial sagittal and lateral bisections establish the major boundaries of the territory, while the subsequent addition of hour-by-hour arcs forces the system to differentiate individual joints from the larger block. Asymmetrical leg constraints and crossed-thigh variations further refine the map by disabling the blunt habits of the large superficial muscles, requiring a more detailed cortical survey to maintain a round path.

The mapping process reaches a peak when the head and pelvis begin to roll in opposite directions, requiring the self-image to be so resolved that it can coordinate two distinct trajectories across the same skeletal terrain.