2 3 Technical Tuesday Spine | Ballet Webb

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Technical Tuesday Spine




Technical Tuesday Spine

The spinal column is made up of 33 individual bone, all stacked neatly on top of one another. This forms the all-important pillar of support for the body, and allows movements like bending and twisting that dancers do all the time. This vertebral column also serves to protect the spinal cord and allows pathways for spinal nerves to follow.

The spine has a natural S-shaped curve made up of five different sections: the neck area (includes 7 cervical vertebrae, C-1-C-7), the middle area (the 12 thoracic vertebrae, T1-T12), the lower area (5 lumbar vertebrae, L1-L5), and the bottom area (the sacrum – a composite bone formed by the fusion of 5 vertebrae). The sacrum articulates with L5 and the coccyx (tailbone).

Think of the S-curve in the spine as a spring, because this slight, natural curve gives the body resiliency – the ability to absorb shock – when jumping, for example. Dancers should always warm up their spine by articulating one vertebrae at a time, instead of imagining it as a single solid beam.

From the Big Blue Book of Ballet Secrets:

Ballet Secret #24j:  
An adult spine has a natural S-shaped curve.

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