Myology

Myology is the study of the muscular system. Though there is no central structure which serves as a hub for the body’s musculature, it is still fitting to acknowledge the systemized composition of the body’s muscles, as they do find grouping among the body’s internal structures. The body’s largest muscles are present along the legs, arms, back, and chest, and amongst these, there is also a uniquely strong collection of muscles termed simply as the tongue which is found in the oral cavity. It is an interesting gathering of musculature that grows to articulate the ability of small things to house great and powerful capacities.

Muscles themselves are also composed of physical features that expound upon the previous example. Muscles are made up of tissue which is made up of fibers, and these fibers, when not bundled or when viewed in isolation, are composed of smaller units dubbed as muscle cells. The organization of the body’s musculature falls in step with the systemized organization described above, and as was stated, though there is no central or overarching muscle group, there are varied collections found across the body that compose the larger, and supposedly primary, muscle groups within the body’s morphology. In this manner of articulation, the muscles which are positioned and developed in the body are reflective of the body’s habitual and patterned construction. These vital structures are granting of a perpetual machination which is centered on the improvement and unending change associated with the body and the different environments in which it survives.

 

This is seen in the body’s natural muscle development, and it is also seen in the orchestration of the whole of the body’s musculature, which receives its conducting signals from the comparatively smaller cells that compose whole muscle groups.

 

From the above, two dynamics can be written plainly, so as to grant wording to the central concepts above. The first is an adage often spoken as ‘big things sometimes come in small packages’. This serves in part as a reiteration of the ability of the tongue to move weight in a much greater ratio than what would be expected of its size. Along with this wisdom, there is also found within the previous delineation, the understanding that many can achieve much more than one. By working together, within the body, to produce internal and external bodily movement, the muscle cells of the body step into a role that would otherwise go unnoticed if the smallest individuations of the body’s form were never studied, or even known.

 

The applicability of the two wisdoms found above is wrought with themes of an ‘underdog’ story, in that the capacity to understand an unexpected triumph at its genesis is an excellent example of how the things we pay the least amount of attention to are typically the fundamental bedrocks of experience upon which we, as a people, stand. Small things can produce big results, and this is possible through the individual elements that may never be known but remain as static constituents in the perpetual cycles of learning, understanding, and subsequent sharing of one’s philosophies as well as those of others.

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