The Tax of Misaligned Movement Initiation
Misaligned movement initiation generates tax by introducing load before proper distribution pathways are established.
1. Initiation as Directional Setup
Movement initiation defines the initial direction of load.
At this stage:
- force is introduced
- pathways are selected
- structures prepare for transfer
Initiation sets the course for distribution.
2. Misalignment at Entry Point
When initiation is misaligned:
- load enters through suboptimal pathways
- initial direction deviates from balanced distribution
- engagement occurs unevenly
The system begins from an offset state.
3. Immediate Uneven Allocation
Misaligned initiation results in:
- disproportionate load on specific structures
- reduced engagement in others
- early imbalance in distribution
Load is skewed from the outset.
4. Compensatory Adjustment
Following misalignment:
- secondary structures engage to correct direction
- pathways shift mid-cycle
- additional effort is introduced
The system adjusts after initiation rather than before.
5. Accumulated Tax Over Repetition
With repeated misaligned initiation:
- compensatory patterns become consistent
- excess load accumulates in correcting structures
- efficiency declines
Cost persists across cycles.
Summary
Misaligned movement initiation introduces load through uneven pathways, creating immediate imbalance and requiring compensatory adjustment.
With repetition, this generates continuous tax through accumulated correction and reduced efficiency.