Jaw/Vocalization Somatic Anatomy

Please use for your study - but do not share them on your facebook page- it has taken me 15 years to compile these images - thank you!

 

1. Intro

 
 

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2. Cranial Bones/CSF Rhythm

 
 

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Vestibulum et magna mattis, sollicitudin ligula ac, facilisi. Ut blandit lectus neque, sit amet fringilla nisi mollis eget. Sed a eros nec leo euismod eleifend sit amet ut nisl. Donec consectetur, odio eget porta varius, orci mauris viverra ante, eget egestas turpis sapien vel orci. Donec eu ornare augue, ut efficitur velit. 

Here is your description of this project.  Nullam tempor dolor sed nulla auctor, nec placerat felis sodales. Etiam et turpis mattis, efficitur mi ut, ultrices diam. Donec consectetur, odio eget porta varius, orci mauris viverra ante, eget egestas turpis sapien vel orci. 

Donec consectetur, odio eget porta varius, orci mauris viverra ante, eget egestas turpis sapien vel orci. Donec eu ornare augue, ut efficitur velit. Vestibulum et magna mattis, sollicitudin ligula ac, facilisis dui. Ut blandit lectus neque, sit amet fringilla nisi mollis eget. Sed a eros nec leo euismod eleifend sit amet ut nisl.

Vestibulum et magna mattis, sollicitudin ligula ac, facilisi. Ut blandit lectus neque, sit amet fringilla nisi mollis eget. Sed a eros nec leo euismod eleifend sit amet ut nisl. Donec consectetur, odio eget porta varius, orci mauris viverra ante, eget egestas turpis sapien vel orci. Donec eu ornare augue, ut efficitur velit. 

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3. Vocalization ONE

 
 

These are unusual perspectives of the space that is available above and below the diaphragm, showing the space that the lungs will fill up and surround the heart on top of the diaphragm. We often underestimate the space the lungs take up. This also shows the beautiful double-doming o the diaphragm where the stomach and liver will fit. This also shows where the arteries, veins, and lymph squeeze through the diaphragm and are protected by the vertebral bodies, and are also protected by the lungs (above the diaphragm). There is a reciprocal relationship between the rib cage and the organs. The ribs protect and support the organs (lungs and heart) and the organs support and lift the ribs from the inside. Our breath itself supports our structure.

It is uncommon for most people to know and to allow the lungs to take up all the space they have available, so we need to expand our visualization and embodiment of the spaces all the way up to 1st and 2nd ribs and down to the space of the floating ribs to allow our breath to enter and release fully.

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4. Mastication and Swallowing

 
 

This first picture beautifully shows how our breathing. Lungs accomplish breathing by offering our circulation system immense access to the air we are breathing. What you see here are the arteries and veins that enter and return to the heart. What you see below is how they eventually end up encircling surrounding and eventually becoming the alveoli.

You are creating millions and millions of alveoli at the end of the branching bronchi, supported by cartelidge into tissues that, as you can see in this image have beautiful looping muscles. What you can’t see here is how fine the lung membrane actually is is Again, the body has created a membrane that is both very strong yet pliable, yet very light and thin. And what might the yellow strands around the alveoli be?

In the image from Grey’s anatomy, you see how the vertebra is central; how the different arteries and veins group together near the protection of the spinal cord and how there is space between the ribs and the lungs. There is a ‘skin’ or sac around the heart and around the lungs.

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5. Evening Class

 

In the first diagram, we are seeing the embryological origins of the heart starting from primitive blood vessels that connect and create flow by connecting to each other, and how these tubes, then, fuse together into a primitive heart tube, and then fold and spiral into a heart, after which different pathways are opened up and created between the heart chambers to make our now-modern human heart work.

In the second image, we see a spliced heart. It is so interesting that in the development of the heart starting from tubes signifies how the heart is connected to the whole circulatory system of tubes, and there is just one part that has specialized into a pump that nevertheless needs the support from the whole system.

6. Neck Anatomy — Detail

 

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7. Vocalization TWO

 
 

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8. Repatterning — Voice, Mouth and Jaw

 
 

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