Evolve, Evolve It. Pretend you are a theosophist obsessed with Darwin, a mad inventor able to compress a million years of change into a two-day sequence.
Starting from post # 4170, play from high initial position only with bent arms. No reason to be uncomfortable unless you grew up in the Puritan Tradition.
And if that is true, give a great shake now to the Pioneer Tradition.
The first iteration had you bending toss arm from initial straightness. Now it's bent to begin with.
The hit arm meanwhile can comfortably extend exactly as it has been doing for a month from a lower position.
Another difference is that separation of the elbows stage can play with setting of one's ice cream cone hand.
Two-prong point at the net can be exaggerated and grotesque, particularly the ice cream cone or Hungarian hot dog, where hot dog, mustard and all the condiments can threaten to fall out. The cone or lengthwise-speared bun can now be on its side threatening to drop even more than horizontal-- dangerous enough.
Now, as the upper bod arch takes elbows out, the toss hand can lag, staying more or less where it was.
The result is still some tilt toward the net but not as much as an instant ago.
The cone or hollowed bun now is aimed for a slightly more forward toss no matter how else that toss may arc.
The hands, I can now see as I mime all this on my back, can rest one on the top of the other.
Straightness of toss wrist makes a bed next to big knuckles for thumb to rest on probably at an angle.
Attention to comfort makes something new a lot easier to do.
Starting from post # 4170, play from high initial position only with bent arms. No reason to be uncomfortable unless you grew up in the Puritan Tradition.
And if that is true, give a great shake now to the Pioneer Tradition.
The first iteration had you bending toss arm from initial straightness. Now it's bent to begin with.
The hit arm meanwhile can comfortably extend exactly as it has been doing for a month from a lower position.
Another difference is that separation of the elbows stage can play with setting of one's ice cream cone hand.
Two-prong point at the net can be exaggerated and grotesque, particularly the ice cream cone or Hungarian hot dog, where hot dog, mustard and all the condiments can threaten to fall out. The cone or lengthwise-speared bun can now be on its side threatening to drop even more than horizontal-- dangerous enough.
Now, as the upper bod arch takes elbows out, the toss hand can lag, staying more or less where it was.
The result is still some tilt toward the net but not as much as an instant ago.
The cone or hollowed bun now is aimed for a slightly more forward toss no matter how else that toss may arc.
The hands, I can now see as I mime all this on my back, can rest one on the top of the other.
Straightness of toss wrist makes a bed next to big knuckles for thumb to rest on probably at an angle.
Attention to comfort makes something new a lot easier to do.
Comment