Just a couple more thoughts on this. I was responding to the original poster's question which, if memory serves me, was "what does it feel like if I am angulated?" or words to that effect, not "How do I angulate?" I think its useful to answer that original question and also to point out that bending sideways at the waist, as many have been trying to do, does not produce angulation. Neither does bending forward at the waist achieve angulation. Its a mistake to try to achieve angulation, or to try to teach it for that matter, by contorting the body into a particular position. Nonetheless bending at the waist is partly what it feels like.In addition to what Jamt, Jilly, and Zenny said, let's clarify and simply say it might mean getting the chest over the outside ski at and after the fall line (in reality, though it might feel like this, the result won't look like the chest is literally over the outside foot) , but not necessarily forward, otherwise we're likely to see a bunch of folks folded over at the waist, maybe angulating but probably not, and a nice resultant rotary stem and push off as their fore aft balance goes to poop and the lateral gymnastics to compensate begin. Maybe I'm mincing words, but 'bending forward' needs to defined as it's often the source of a lot of misunderstanding and poor snow ski performance.
quote: " Its pointless to attempt it as if assuming a pose were the goal."
Angulation is enabled by the culmination of proper skill development, hopefully guided by good instruction. Skill development and the movement patterns are seldom addressed by the ski instruction articles we read and possibly frequently misunderstood among some instructional staff.