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Post Standing Exercises, or Zhan Zhuang

Post standing has long been renowned as a highly effective way of improving the general health of the practitioner, including circulation (helping to normalise both high and low blood pressure), immune system function, breathing, digestion and general organ function. They can be used to help with postural problems and bad habits of body use (over tensing muscles, for example). People usually report feeling calmer and more focused in their daily lives after only a short period of sustained practice.

For martial art, standing exercises are indispensable. Aside from the health benefits, which are obviously important for everyone, including those studying martial art, they can be used to develop the ability to integrate the whole body into every movement. When this becomes a subconscious way of operating, the net result is greatly enhanced physical strength.  

On the physical level, standing works directly on two main areas: The skeletal structure and the musculature. Beyond that, it can become an exercise in meditation.

Posture

When we begin standing practice, we must place our body in the correct position, with the correct skeletal alignments (or as close as we can manage). Throughout the practice session, old postural habits will come back into play. Through conscious effort and constant correction we can, over time, retrain old postural habits and improve them. As our posture gets closer to ideal (an ideal posture is one that can let the force of gravity fall down through the body and into the feet), less and less stress is placed on the musculature and the internal organs and a greater degree of relaxation can be achieved. This in turn allows an increased flow of blood and energy to all parts of the body.

For the sake of simplicity and ease of understanding, we can think of the musculature of our bodies as being divided into two categories: Postural and phasic. In reality most muscles have an element of both within them, but are biased toward one or the other.

The postural muscles, as the name implies, deal with holding the skeleton in position, and they naturally have more strength and endurance than the phasic muscles. When practicing post standing exercises we are told to relax as much as possible. What we are really doing is trying to minimise the use of the phasic muscles and maximise the use of the postural muscles. The better we can become at doing this, the more we can maintain a strong structure and still remain reasonably relaxed. A strong structure is one that is able to receive force and still maintain it’s shape.

From a health perspective the force we are concerned with is that which is exerted on our body by gravity—i.e.: It’s weight. Most people have difficulty in holding up the weight of their own body without holding tension. As previously mentioned, incorrect alignment plays a large part in this, as it creates a situation where extra muscle groups need to be engaged just to fight gravity.

In a martial scenario, the forces that the body structure has to deal with are not only the practitioner’s own body weight, but also the force generated by the opponent. Just as we can learn to let the force of gravity drop through the body into the feet through correct alignment, so we can use body structure to allow us absorb force from an opponent and lead it into the ground. Standing exercises teach us how.

Movement

The phasic muscles are those that deal with moving the body. Post standing exercises help us to gain the body awareness and control required to use only those phasic muscles that are needed to perform a specific task, and then only to the degree that is required. The net result is we seldom use more effort than is necessary. Most people are poor at this. They habitually use muscle groups that are actually antagonistic to the movement required, and the ones that are required are often over-tensed. Exercises such as weight training (in most cases) encourage the over-use of phasic muscles and discourage a high level of body awareness. This results in an inefficient use of the body. When people experience fatigue due to inefficient use of energy, they usually try to rectify the situation by trying to make themselves fitter or stronger, not realising that if they could just make themselves more efficient, they would find the same tasks much easier. Internal arts teacher Tim Cartmell uses the analogy of souping up a car engine but still driving the car with the handbrake on.

The exercise is one of stillness because in stillness we are minimising the external, and indeed internal, distractions that can impair our ability to ‘listen’ to our body – that is, to gain an ever increasing awareness of its state.  As we improve at this ’listening’ we can also use the stillness to ‘tune in’ to our mental state and to start to become aware of the nature of mind.