The 'Meia-lua' (ground-acro skill)
Ground-acrobatic skills
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3m 16s
THE WHAT:
The 'Meia-lua' (“half moon”) is a ground acrobatic context derived from the world of Capoeira, originally a kicking technique but here fully abstracted from its combative intent. The kicking action is removed and reorganised as a spiralling or directional leg pathway used to generate lift, rotation, and spatial redirection through the body.
In the 'Meia Lua dupla', however, the emphasis shifts. There is less visible rotation and more of a direct diagonal trajectory, with both feet leaving and returning to the ground together. The landing is heavier and more committed, and the movement takes on a more linear cutting quality through space. In this sense, it can feel like a structural reverse expression of a 'Macaco' (dupla), where instead of rising through circular organisation, the body drops and resolves through a sharper diagonal descent back into the ground.
Resource contents:
0:05 - Entering the 'Meia-lua'
0:36 - Grounded 'Meia-lua'
1:30 - 'Meia-lua' (única)
2:19 - 'Meia-lua' (dupla)
THE HOW:
The main focus is developing the ability to transform rotational kicking mechanics into upward or diagonal movement organisation. The leg acts as a “tail” that guides force, shaping trajectory from grounded control into progressively more airborne expression, depending on the variation.
Three variations define the progression. In the grounded variation, the leg swings as a tail while the opposite foot remains rooted, developing awareness of directional force without leaving the floor. In the 'Meia-lua (única'), the same tail action is combined with a small hop, introducing light airborne expression while maintaining grounded continuity. In the 'Meia-lua' (dupla), both feet leave the floor, requiring greater force injection, with a stronger commitment to aerial expression and a more decisive landing.
Across all variations, a key principle is the reverse-hinge completion through the head. The hinge must resolve sequentially all the way up to the crown of the head, re-stacking the body from feet through spine to head. In the grounded and única variations especially, this reverse-hinge quality is also expressed as a spiralling release through the head, allowing the movement to unwind rather than terminate abruptly.
Execution across all forms should prioritise continuity of trajectory, clear organisation of force through the leg “tail,” and a consistent sense that movement is being shaped through space rather than segmented into isolated phases.
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