Earth

Wall Fall-and-Catch Hysteresis

Stand and lean very slightly against a wall with one shoulder, then push off into a slow, repeated falling-and-catching pattern away from the wall and back. Map the gap between those two angles.

Full Lesson Notes

Complete Practice

Stand and lean very slightly against a wall with one shoulder, then push off into a slow, repeated falling-and-catching pattern away from the wall and back. Map the gap between those two angles. The size of that gap is your hysteresis; the question is whether the gap shrinks as the joints warm, and which joint contributes most of the slack.

Minimal line anatomy illustration for Wall Fall-and-Catch Hysteresis.