Crisscrossing Crabs
Added 2025-09-16 16:09:59 +0000 UTCFostering shared rhythm, tempo, haptic sensitivity, and co-created movement
The activity asks practitioners to dwell in this unstable coordination, learning to sense weight shifts and tempo changes through the whole body. The practice co-creates movement together rather than executing memorized steps individually.
The activity
Partners face each other with wide roots for balance.
The inside partner clasps onto the triceps from inside-to-outside. They lead the direction and tempo.
The outside partner drapes their arms over from outside-to-inside, lightly clinging.
The activity begins with the inside partner initiating tilts, gently shifting their partner side to side. The inside partner allows their leg to be lifted as their heads crisscross and their bodies tilt in opposite directions. The arms hold the structure together.
Together, they trace a square, circle, or walk sideways in a line.
Once partners have grasped the activity, they can explore it patiently and silently. Verbal coordination can disrupt rhythm and distract from embodied listening.
Analysis of the video
This activity builds directly from Attached Crabs (Growth), extending it by shifting the relationship of the heads. The crisscrossing head position introduces greater instability and requires both partners to heighten their haptic sensitivity.
The person clasping triceps leads both direction and tempo, providing a steady base. Their partner clings while releasing control and moves with what is offered. The practice is less about choreography and more about tuning into shared rhythm—an emergent timing living in the body, not in words.
Partners go from a shared structure with four legs to a shared structure with two. Tilting in opposite directions while staying attached through the arms creates counterbalance, stabilizing the structure and allowing for shared motion.
By tracing simple shapes—squares, circles, or lines—practitioners move in and out of balance. The activity asks them to dwell in this unstable coordination, learning to sense weight shifts and tempo changes through the whole body. The practice co-creates movement together rather than executing memorized steps individually.
Safety considerations
Keep arms from bending too tightly, as this brings heads dangerously close for collision.
Both partners should maintain wide roots to reduce the chance of toppling during tilts.
Practitioners are strongly encouraged to wear mouthguards for protection. Headgear is optional.
Explore patiently. Do not rush tempo or direction changes.
Circle time concepts
Stability: When partners’ heads are attached or aligned, as in Attached Crabs, they share a single frame of balance. This creates stability and ease of coordination.
Instability: When the heads detach and become misaligned, stability is disrupted. The connection is still present, but both partners must constantly adjust, heightening sensitivity to shifts in weight and tempo.
Momentum: When both partners actively detach and misalign, instability becomes directional force. Misalignment here generates momentum—partners co-create movement by leaning into instability rather than resisting it, relying on the arms and friction to maintain connection.
– Sam