Imagine, if you will, 3 bowls. These bowls are inside you, one stacked above the other.
The first is your pelvis. Already described as a bowl, it supports and holds all above it.
The second is your diaphragm. Separating the organs in your chest from the organs in your abdomen, it forms the top of the abdominal cylinder and should move gently as you breathe.
The third is in your upper chest, at the top of your lungs and about the same level as your collarbones.
This being a conceptual experiment, fill them with water. Then, think about the way you are standing or sitting. Are those bowls going to overflow? Is the water going to run out of the front, the back, even the sides?
Stand easily if you can, weight distributed in the centre of your feet. Soften your knees and ankles.
Then, come up to the pelvic bowl. Tilt it forwards and backwards, until you find the centre, neutral position.
For the diaphragm, you can feel if it is forward or backward and correct.
Ditto the shoulders. Allow them to open, don’t force, allow. A subtle external rotation and lengthening of the clavicle.
Once reflected and considered individually, check in again with all three.
This is probably one of the quickest ways of achieving optimal posture smoothly, balance the bowls, check how they move when you breathe and then, get on with the business in hand.
Of course, if you need help balancing the bowls, can’t find a neutral position or are struggling to fix it in any other way, please book in, we are happy to help.