I think the name sucks, and is super cringy :wtf: ...but most new agey thefts of old standbys are... as the concept itself is actually very solid. And very solid across several disciplines. Science, medicine, eastern medicine, arts & performing arts, athletics, military training, early childhood education, early childhood intervention, torture & interrogation... list goes on. The way we carry ourselves? (Or are allowed to carry ourselves). How we use our body in daily tasks? Affects not only how others see us, but how we perceive ourselves, and how we feel overall.
You’re a runner, so I’m going to ask you to do an experiment. The next time you’re about to go running? Already stretched out & warmed up... notice how you’re holding yourself. You’re probably standing shoulders back, chest expanded, head tilted, spine sinuous, weight more on the balls of your feet, but a very authoritative stance. Now slump. Slouch. Pull into yourself. Look down and away. You’ll probably feel instantly different. From relaxed / confident / ready / excited or determined to ... what the HELL just happened??? :eek:
Now play around with it a little bit. Ready to run, curled in on yourself, ready to run, curled in on yourself. Like a puppet with its strings cut, ideally.
It’s shocking the first time you shift to a pose that you regularly assume FROM a pose you regularly assume... out of context. Even actors, who do this for a living have to often shake their whole body out to clear the emotions and thought patterns that come along with different poses/body language.
And, yes. It works in the other direction, too. Assuming confident poses? Helps teach confidence. You see good parents, teachers, coaches making these adjustments all the time as they’re building the kids up (as well as the opposite, with shitty grownups). It’s not about faking confidence, it’s about learning a whole new level of it in the beginning, and pumping up! Let’s get ready! Driving emotions... when people are really solid in it. Think sports team pre game, or doing “muscle arms” with little kids who are nervous.
Okay, I could talk about this all day and I’ve blathered on enough. Point being, it’s a wicked cool thing when used for the powers of good.