• pooberbee (they/she)
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    471 year ago

    It’s obvious from the diagram that this is nanba walking, because each phase of the stride has a nanba right above it.

    • Vincent Adultman
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      41 year ago

      TIL I walk like this since forever. I didn’t know it had a name. The guy is pretty realistic, my friends laugh their asses off when they see me walking from a distance.

  • Grammaton Cleric
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    121 year ago

    I will not google this

    I will not google this

    I will not google this

    I will not google this

  • @boatsnhos931
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    21 year ago

    Not that efficient if someone tries to beat you up every 20 feet for walking like a creep

  • @LesserAbe
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    21 year ago

    I skimmed that website but my mind refuses to engage with the text.

    • @AEsheron
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      31 year ago

      Well that’s good, because it is the least efficient walk. It’s even worse than binding your hands to your sides. It makes a kind of intuitive sense, but shocker, the way we’ve evolved to walk most comfortably is the most efficient. We swing our arms in part to reduce angular momentum. Anti-swing walk, swinging the same arm forward as the leg that is moving forward, not only fails to bleed that momentum, it adds more of it. Which we then need to spend even more energy to counter, with less efficient muscles. It’s the worst of all worlds. The only practical reasons to use it are to increase the intensity of your walks, or if you’re into some martial arts/kendo that relies on it.