Tai Chi Article 4 — Why Posture Comes Later

Tai Chi Article 4 — Why Posture Comes Later


Sooner or later, anyone beginning Tai Chi hears a familiar refrain:

“Your posture is wrong.”
“Align this.”
“Tuck that.”
“Hold it like this.”

Alignment matters — but when it is introduced matters even more.

This article explains why posture comes after internal continuity, not before.

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The Common Mistake

Many beginners are taught posture as something to achieve.

They are asked to:

Hold exact shapes

Freeze positions

Endure discomfort

Suppress natural variation


This trains endurance and obedience — but it does not train Tai Chi.

At best, it produces strong external form.
At worst, it teaches the body to brace.

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Why Early Posture Fixing Backfires

When posture is imposed too early:

Muscles compensate for lack of internal support

Fascia loses elasticity

Breath becomes restricted

Sensation dulls

The mind fixates on correction instead of listening


In other words:

> The student learns how to look right,
but not how to feel connected.


Tai Chi is an internal art.
Internal coordination must come first.

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A Useful Metaphor

Think of posture like the banks of a river.

If there is no water, shaping the banks does nothing.

But when water flows:

It naturally erodes obstructions

It finds efficient pathways

It settles into stable curves


Internal continuity is the water.
Posture is what forms around it.


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Comfort Is Not Laziness

This is important to say clearly:

Comfort does not mean collapse.
Comfort means absence of unnecessary strain.

If a beginner stands comfortably:

Some energy flows

Sensation develops

Awareness increases


If a beginner strains for perfection:

Flow is kinked

Awareness narrows

The body learns to override signals


A kinked hose still lets water through.
A crushed hose does not.


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Natural Alignment Emerges

As sinking stabilizes and buoyancy appears, the body begins to self-correct.

Without instruction, people often find:

Their spine lengthens

Their pelvis settles

Their shoulders drop

Their stance widens or narrows naturally


This is not coincidence.

It is the nervous system reorganizing around efficiency.


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When Posture Actually Matters

Posture becomes important after:

The body acts as a unit

Weight transmits cleanly

Tension releases under load

Movement originates from the center


At that point, small adjustments have meaning.

Before that, they are cosmetic.


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A Respectful Note

Some traditional schools emphasize strict posture early on as a filter.

This can build discipline and commitment — and it has its place.

But that is not the purpose of this curriculum.

Here, the goal is:

Accessibility

Longevity

Internal development

Trusting the body’s intelligence


Different paths.
Same mountain.


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Practice

Stand as before.

Choose a posture that is:

Comfortable

Stable

Easy to maintain


Do not improve it.

Let internal sensations guide change, if any change occurs.

Stand for two to five minutes.

That is enough.


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Stop Here

Do not self-correct posture.

Do not compare yourself to images or videos.

Alignment that matters cannot be forced —
it must be inhabited.


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Continue When Ready

The next article is #5, where we will address:

Why weight shifting feels difficult at first

Why pain can appear at “gates”

And how not to force your way through them


Return when standing feels honest rather than impressive.



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