Love the read about intentional and passive practise, and the benefits of each! I like to do 15min sessions of "diagnosing" what is going wrong in a move, so I can pay more attention to those areas.
Diagnosing the move is a great way to put it! Even taking a quick moment to step back and think about what’s happening can make a huge difference when it comes to progress.
Love the read about intentional and passive practise, and the benefits of each! I like to do 15min sessions of "diagnosing" what is going wrong in a move, so I can pay more attention to those areas.
Thanks for the shoutout on Off The Wall too!
Diagnosing the move is a great way to put it! Even taking a quick moment to step back and think about what’s happening can make a huge difference when it comes to progress.
Very interesting, thanks!! I'm a beginner in cardistry, practicing it since one month. Now I'm trying to master sybil cut and the werm...so cool! 😎
This article comes at the perfect time. What if this knowing-vs-doing gap is actualy huge in other domains to, not just cardistry?
Great thought, I bet it is! Mastering is the hard part, so that’s where people drop off more frequently. I’m sure applies to other disciplines.
Yep! It's an underestimated gap for sure.