The importance of going back to basics

Going back to basics

If you are an avid follower of my work you would have no doubt caught me yapping on about the importance of solid fundamentals in the past.

Basics could be defined as the necessary pieces of one level or tier of skill needed to then add additional layers of complexity/workload on top.

Here are some quick examples of how not developing far enough or maintaining your basics can trip you up in the long run.

Examples :

Shape changes - By making sure each shape is solid first it then becomes fairly easy to learn to transition from one to another. Think Isolation then integration.

Press handstand - By having a solid 30-40s freestanding handstand your wrists will have some conditioning to withstand the increased load pressing requires minimizing injury risk.

Plus you have something to actually press up into.

OAHS - In regular handstand you have two things to manage balance wise. Over balance and under balance. (Falling over and falling under)

In one arm handstand you additionally have the left and right plane as well as twisting either way.

Once over and under balance are on “auto pilot” you will have way less to multitask and can focus on learning how to correct these new variables.

An easy way to factor this into your own self programming is to include some basics as part of your warmup before more technical skills that are on the edge of your ability.

Not sure what “basics” are for you individually at your own current level?

That’s where a coach comes in handy.

I’m waiting =)

Online handstand coaching - CLICK ME