Thank you for watching. Comments are welcomed and encouraged - what do you think? I heart comments I have seen, and reply to those RUclips notifies me off. FEEDBACK: KEY COMMENTS:
Yeah fundamental concepts are eternal and always relevant. But I think in physical domain there is also fundamental things that will work. I think we can call it fundamental rhythms. So for example if you want to be a writer and you don't have the writing skills so from where to start. So if we pick a phrase "write it down" and associate a meaning to it that "whatever comes to your mind just write it down. Doesn't matter whether you are using proper grammar or sentences". What it will do is it will physically set you into the rhythm of writing and eventually the act of writing itself will become effortless for you and it will also act as a foundation of writing expression. And now you can polish it overtime by following any strategy such as "1% rule (improve your writing by implementing one better practice)". So it is not like constrained physical fundamental movements but a dynamic rhythm that set you into the momentum of that skill or work.
Why do you tell people to do things but not tell them how to do it? Was it in the video and I missed it? The beginning of the video made me start thinking maybe specific sports shouldn't be taught to people when they first start learning. Just teach them how to move properly. I thought of this because when I was trying to learn to skateboard, videos expected you would already know how to fall from other sports. I never did anything where they taught me how to fall. It would seem to be a good idea just to teach people how to move their body outside of a specific sport. I'm not talking about gymnastics.
Thank you for watching. Comments are welcomed and encouraged - what do you think?
I heart comments I have seen, and reply to those RUclips notifies me off.
FEEDBACK:
KEY COMMENTS:
Yeah fundamental concepts are eternal and always relevant. But I think in physical domain there is also fundamental things that will work. I think we can call it fundamental rhythms. So for example if you want to be a writer and you don't have the writing skills so from where to start. So if we pick a phrase "write it down" and associate a meaning to it that "whatever comes to your mind just write it down. Doesn't matter whether you are using proper grammar or sentences". What it will do is it will physically set you into the rhythm of writing and eventually the act of writing itself will become effortless for you and it will also act as a foundation of writing expression. And now you can polish it overtime by following any strategy such as "1% rule (improve your writing by implementing one better practice)".
So it is not like constrained physical fundamental movements but a dynamic rhythm that set you into the momentum of that skill or work.
Why do you tell people to do things but not tell them how to do it? Was it in the video and I missed it?
The beginning of the video made me start thinking maybe specific sports shouldn't be taught to people when they first start learning. Just teach them how to move properly. I thought of this because when I was trying to learn to skateboard, videos expected you would already know how to fall from other sports. I never did anything where they taught me how to fall. It would seem to be a good idea just to teach people how to move their body outside of a specific sport. I'm not talking about gymnastics.