A Check-list? Should We Really Restrict Ourselves to Two Conscious Thoughts?
For half-loops, increase the amount of linear sweep toward the target. The idea that full and half loop versions should finish in same place (back of hand by left ear) is symptom of the overconceptualization into which western peoples easily fall. Eastern peoples on the other hand don't analyze enough. (And hooray for hasty generalizations.)
For a full loop then, finish with back of hand brushing left ear. For in between loops (1/2, 3/4, 4/5, etc.) finish some inches nearer to left fence.
Dwell-- "staying on the ball"-- is still big consideration as in normal ground strokes out into the court.
But so are other wellworn saws such as "Get on outside of ball." On a short angle one wants to be so on the outside that the ball flies as parallel to the net and close to it as possible.
Note: We've made certain choices to develop these shots. At what point do the choices become a check-list? First, start with shoulders parallel to the net like a boxer ready to punch with either hand. This is huge and truly indicates that one has chosen the specialty shot route. Normal shots by turning the shoulders block the most acute (the cutest) shots.
Second, go with an arm first body chime in formula as in a Ziegenfuss or my McEnrueful, or don't and make it all unified but decide. Obviously I haven't made that choice yet. Third, the elbow moves while scissoring. Fourth, one has a specific well-balanced followthrough in mind. Fifth, mild forearm roll no matter how one set up always brings the ball down sooner.
And there are other important items that could go on the list but who wants to remember them all at once unless one is taking a memory test?
For sharpest possibility, how bent could the elbow be set before it begins to scissor? You and I both, reader, should check this out.
Elbow travel and amount of scissor could become corollaries in inverse proportion to one another like sympathy and judgment in fiction.
Note II: When dancing one doesn't want to overthink either. When first trying to master a difficult step however one may try to hold nine items in mind at once.
For half-loops, increase the amount of linear sweep toward the target. The idea that full and half loop versions should finish in same place (back of hand by left ear) is symptom of the overconceptualization into which western peoples easily fall. Eastern peoples on the other hand don't analyze enough. (And hooray for hasty generalizations.)
For a full loop then, finish with back of hand brushing left ear. For in between loops (1/2, 3/4, 4/5, etc.) finish some inches nearer to left fence.
Dwell-- "staying on the ball"-- is still big consideration as in normal ground strokes out into the court.
But so are other wellworn saws such as "Get on outside of ball." On a short angle one wants to be so on the outside that the ball flies as parallel to the net and close to it as possible.
Note: We've made certain choices to develop these shots. At what point do the choices become a check-list? First, start with shoulders parallel to the net like a boxer ready to punch with either hand. This is huge and truly indicates that one has chosen the specialty shot route. Normal shots by turning the shoulders block the most acute (the cutest) shots.
Second, go with an arm first body chime in formula as in a Ziegenfuss or my McEnrueful, or don't and make it all unified but decide. Obviously I haven't made that choice yet. Third, the elbow moves while scissoring. Fourth, one has a specific well-balanced followthrough in mind. Fifth, mild forearm roll no matter how one set up always brings the ball down sooner.
And there are other important items that could go on the list but who wants to remember them all at once unless one is taking a memory test?
For sharpest possibility, how bent could the elbow be set before it begins to scissor? You and I both, reader, should check this out.
Elbow travel and amount of scissor could become corollaries in inverse proportion to one another like sympathy and judgment in fiction.
Note II: When dancing one doesn't want to overthink either. When first trying to master a difficult step however one may try to hold nine items in mind at once.
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