Dynamic Headstands (HeSt) 1
Headstands
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3m 18s
THE WHAT:
Foundational contexts for developing the headstand (HeSt) and increasing structural and proprioceptive awareness and adaptability in the form. Where fear exists, it is recommended to practice on grass rather than back-to-wall (unless absolutely necessary, i.e. a rolling exit is not available). In adding greater consequence, it encourages the practitioner to truly work on balance correction rather than outsourcing to a wall, which can lead to over-reliance. It also develops the confidence to roll out of the headstand when overbalance occurs.
Resource contents (MS = ‘milestone’):
0:05 - Base and loading
0:59 - Tuck-balance / MS: 30"
1:33 - Tuck-headstand extensions / MS: 10x
1:56 - HeSt straight-line / MS: 30"
2:19 - HeSt tuck to straight-line ext. / MS: 10x
2:46 - HeSt pike-extension / MS: 10x
Beyond this, the headstand is not simply a “regression” or precursor to the likes of the handstand, but a distinct and valuable position in its own right. It develops proprioception of the lower body, as the legs must constantly self-organise above a relatively stable base, refining awareness of position, tension, and balance. This has direct transfer to handstand development, where similar organisational demands are present but with a narrower base.
At the same time, the headstand serves as a referent configuration (zero point) within inversion, providing a reliable position from which to enter, stabilise, and exit the floor. As such, it belongs directly within the vocabulary of ground acrobatics, where the head can be used as a legitimate point of support alongside the hands. This expands the practitioner’s ability to orient and reorganise the body through space, especially when transitioning between upright and inverted positions.
In focusing on transitions between straight-line and tuck-forms, the emphasis is on managing the most common sagittal shifting of the center of mass over the base of support (forward and backward). Notably, the hips shift more toward the head in tuck and more toward the hands in straight-line. This teaches the practitioner to keep the equilibrium point centred with weight distributed evenly between the bases of support despite positional change, building foundational stability for both static and dynamic headstand work.
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