With the Shoulder Roll: I understand it is to be performed one shoulder at a time, forward,up, and back. A person with whom I shared this technique, believes that bilaterally lifting the shoulders up, back, and down is equivalent. I wanted to know if and how these differ. I believe the one at a time is the recommended process. And would like to be able to clarify the "why". I know it helps me, yet I need more than how I feel to help explain to others.
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Shoulder roll: bilateral or uni-lateral?
July 20, 2017 - 8:55pm | 3 posts
#1
Shoulder roll: bilateral or uni-lateral?
3 years 10 months ago
03/21/2016 - 6:17am
Moving post to appropriate forum.
1 day 10 min ago
09/05/2014 - 6:51am
Hi Mary Elizabeth - We do teach students to do the shoulder roll one at a time. What I've observed in myself and others is that when I roll both shoulders at once, it is very easy to go a little too fast or a little carelessly and end up moving them through a full circle, landing right back where I started. It also makes it easy to introduce a sway in the back. Doing one at a time makes it easier for me to pay attention and notice how each shoulder feels as it goes a little forward, a little up, a lot back, and then make sure I relax and let it lower into its new position as I stop making effort.
Now that I've been doing shoulder rolls for a few years, maybe sometimes I do both at once. I have body memory of where each shoulder's best placement is. But I truly do a much better job one at a time. My goal is not only to put my shoulders in an optimal position but also to increase my posture awareness as I go through my daily activities, and rolling one shoulder at a time helps me develop that.
I notice in rereading your question that your friend's protocol doesn't include the initial "a little forward." This step helps the shoulder move more freely back into position and stay there once you relax. Page 42 in the 8 Steps book has an illustration that may be helpful.
I hope this answers your question well enough. Do check back with us here if you have more questions or comments.
Thanks for persisting with your question!
Doreen Giles
Gokhale Method Teacher