September 15th, 2021

Thanks for spontaneously taking part in this first training. Here is a quick recap of what we did

Warmup

  • Turn wrists, turn elbows, turn shoulders, use full range of motion
  • Go on all fours, put little weight on the hands, push body up with the wrists. Stretch lower arms in several directions. Carefully feel into your wrists, what feels good and what not.
  • Swing whole body, feel the blood pouring into your fingertips.
  • Swing even more until knees touch the ground.
  • Make circles with knees (around hips).
  • Make circles with feet (around knees.
  • Turn your ankles.
  • Sit on the ground, let knees fall left/right.
  • With knees fallen to one side, get up without hands:

Exercises

  • Alternate between pushup and shoulder stand.
  • Animal walk mixed with rolls, every time it gets strenous, forward and backward. Feel dizziness, hear your heart beat!
  • Monkey walk mixed with sideway rolls.
  • Stand, feel your feet on the ground, circle your weight around the center of gravity. Try to make the circles smaller, until you hit a spot where you can stand most effortless.
  • Try too keep this effortless feeling while starting to run (not too fast)
  • Try to keep this feeling while running uphill
  • Try to hold on on different kinds of trees
  • With a partner: One partner holds on a tree, when he has to get down, the other gets up. Try to keep alternating.
  • Climbing a rope attached on a tree

Tools used

It was a quite simple training we did yesterday. But we already used many tools to enjoy training:

  • We didn’t do this one, because I forgot :D: “Brain dump”: write everything you ponder about or any unfinished trains of thoughts on a piece of paper. Put it in your pocket. You can continue after training (if its still important then)
  • “Observation break”: Stop doing what you do, check your physical and mental status.
  • “Paradox break”: Break up monotony in an exercise by doing something which makes you loose control or orientation a bit. For example do a somersault while crawling on the floor. Enjoy the dizzyness or use the moment of disorientation for an observation break.
  • “Posture of least effort”: What we did before running. Move body in circles, find the posture most in-balance. These postures also exist on all fours or while carrying heavy weight.
  • “Take balance with you”. Try to take a balanced and effortless feeling into movement. In our case from standing to running. But can also be from lying to standing up.
  • “Observe and stop when closing down”. What we did with hillrunning. Start with “eyes wide open”. Observe your body and mind while increasing effort. Catch the moment when you start “closing down” (grimacing, pulling shoulders forward, stomping,…). Try to stay open as long as possible.
  • Use short relaxation as reward. After the hill runs, we stood or sat for a few moments. Hear the heart beat, hear the sound of breath. Enjoy coming back into the comfort zone. Don’t skip this! We are in training and not on the run!
  • Interaction: When “hugging the trees” in pairs. The time to get on the tree was determined by the partner getting (or falling) off the tree. The longer you are on the tree, the more you give your partner a break. You can conversate (e.g. complain about the weird training). All this makes you forget you are exhausting yourselfes.
  • Couriosity: Trying different techniques of climbing a tree or a rope is interesting. It is also strenuous, but often the couriosity if and how something works is stronger.

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