I just published “Back flipping is easier than Jumping”https://medium.com/p/back-flipping-is-easier-than-jumping-f77c95cdf852 …
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Replying to @sir_deenicus
Notwithstanding, I'm really impressed you can backflip.
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Replying to @o_guest
Fear of what could go wrong causes you to make more motions than needed, more complicated than necessary, more dangerous and harder to learn. Back hand-springs, where your hands touch the ground, are actually much harder!
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Replying to @sir_deenicus
I believe you and yet, I'm still impressed. Have you done any bouldering? This reminds of cases when you just have to trust your, e.g., thigh muscle of one leg and just jump on it to get the next hold or similar.
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Replying to @o_guest
Nope, the closest I've gotten is an indoor rock-climbing place and I was no good at it! Requires quite different motor planning so all of us were being very inefficient.
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Replying to @sir_deenicus @o_guest
Ah, yea, the not letting your intuition get in the way part is the same. I think of it as people actually have a poor internal model of themselves and training that is a big part of any kind of training.
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Replying to @sir_deenicus
Exactly. Bouldering is like/is a type of rock climbing, though. The big difference, for me, between rock climbing with ropes and bouldering is that the latter has more explosive moves and more falls to the bottom. With ropes falling is just "another move" in bouldering it means
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you've facilties solve the puzzle. It's very cognitive.
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