Context!

Everything needs to be seen within the correct context.

stone crop 2

Unless you know English landscape history fairly well, this is just a man standing next to a rock. And even if you did, you couldn’t be certain what you were looking at.

If we zoom out and look at a larger scale, is becomes this:

complete stone

Stonehenge 2016, Copyright T. Saltmarsh

 

But even then, this is not fully seen within the true context of its historical environment, with the additional burial barrows, the ditches and the surrounding landscape, mythological and physical.

The same comes when we are treating or working with clients, whether elite athletes or older people.

If we cannot see the bigger picture, or insist on just treating the problem they presented with, we will not be able to solve the problem effectively. A knee sprain may not heal if we don’t work with the coaching  staff to ensure the athlete gets corrective exercise prescription or time off lower limb loading. An older patient may not regain full range of motion if they are afraid of falling and therefore do not attempt the mobility plan you recommend. A desk bound client will still have the recurrent shoulder problems if they don’t tell you the whole story about the work and family related stress, or at least acknowledge to themselves that it exists.

So don’t just look at the rock, block or restriction, zoom out and take into consideration the environment it exists in.

 

 

 

 

Focus on the now

Buddists and other meditators claim that there is no past, no future, only now. Yet we spend most of our time ignoring whats in front of us and instead thinking about what has been or what might be, not being in our heads and focusing on the immediate task. This is not to say that planning (an almost unique skill in humans) is not vital, as otherwise we would be wasting ourselves spinning in circles watching a small screen, but this long term plan has to be combined with appropriate action now.

From a movement perspective, when coaching clients in new patterns, I use 2 key words  as triggers. Attention and Intention. What is the attention on and what is the intention. For example, moving the shoulder joint, the attention is on the joint, the way it feels and glides, while the intention is that the arm should move slowly and under control at all times. Many find this very hard to do as the mind tends to rebel against focusing on just one thing. The same is with running, the attention cannot be on the whole activity, as  we cannot cope with such input, but instead on just feeling the push off, or the chest postion, or another skill.

A five minute challenge, when moving next time, ask yourself: Where is my attention? What is my intention? Not just in a movement pattern but when working as well, it may provide some interesting results.

5 secret productivity tips hipsters don’t share

We may laugh at them with their plaid shirts, slightly too short trousers and propensity for bizarre methods of transport, but hipsters, artists and other truly creative types have figured out some things the rest of us could learn from.

 

1. They don’t care what you think.

As a rule, we tend to spend far too long worrying about what others may think of us rather than just getting on, which just wastes time and energy. Simply focusing on who and what we are means we can get more done.

 

2. They get absorbed in what they are fascinated by

Whether it is making a cup of coffee, a pair of jeans, a piece of visual-kinesethetic art or the next best application for a smartphone, they get completely absorbed by it, learning everything necessary to create the perfect object. They know what to cut out, when to add something and how it all goes together. So, no matter what your current project, learning everything around it and spending time considering how it all goes together will pay off. Perhaps most importantly, learning when to stop is a vital element in this. For good coffee, not quite boiling the water is a key, for a painting, not doing one brush stroke too many is the difference between finished and ruined, for software not adding too many confusing features means the product is likely to be more popular.

 

3. They don’t get distracted when they’re engaged in their work

We are all constantly surrounded by potential distractions, attacking every sense. Cluttered work spaces, external noises, uncomfortable chairs all draw our minds away from the task. Mentally, we are constantly flicking between the work at hand and the inevitable list of things that still need to be done. Many artists have figured out how to overcome this by removing all potential distractions from around them by muting their phones, adopting a minimal attitude to their workspace or studio and by learning to focus on just one thing at a time until they reach a point of fatigue or satisfaction.

 

4. They know what they need to do each day

This is an important but often misunderstood one. Everyone has a huge number of things that need to be done, from buying groceries to calling a friend, doing laundry to cleaning the bathroom. However, on that enormous to do list, there are only one or two items that actually add value to each day, or simply have to be achieved to move a project forward.  Studies have indicated that we are only truly productive for approximately 5 hours a day. The rest of the time we are marginally less present and therefore not doing our best work. If we can allocate this to the two or three tasks on our list that will give the most effective return, then the rest of the time can be used to do the other subtasks, which are important but less relevant. These major points may be as simple as a phone call or email, or as complex as reading a draft contract proposal but they are, in general, the sticking point in any project. They may also not necessarily be physical. For example, although many artists appear to float around doing very little, they are almost certainly making connections, reviewing their work and thinking about the next step, long before they do anything with a brush or canvas. A programmer is similar, using mental time to reflect on the problem, consider solutions and then, only when they are fairly confident they have a path forward, do they apparently start  working.

 

5. They know how to use their tools effectively

Possibly the most significant development of the 21st century so far is the modern smartphone. An incredibly powerful computer, with instant access to the internet, it offers a world of possibilities and connections that even a generation ago we could not forsee. People all over the planet, provided they have access to an unrestricted cellular data network can now do things that may unleash an avalanche of unintended concequences in the near future.Micropayments, democratic pricing, medical information, the potential for positive change is huge.

For the majority of us in the west however, this astonishing device is little more than a way of getting cross at other peoples lives and staring at cat pictures, so although we may smirk at the old fashioned notebook, post it notes and pens alongside the latest iphone, we forget that they are still some of the most effective productivity tools.  A good notebook creates a physical relationship between idea and creation, a post it note allows instant visual referencing when laying out a project and acts as an instant, disposable record. It may be useful to pick up a phone and take a picture or research something on the internet but these can allow us to fall down rabbit holes of selection and distraction, whereas a simple paper record tend to direct us towards a more positive flow. The secret therefore is to know when to use each tool and how to best apply them to each task. For example, an artist may sketch shape, form or colour, make brief notes on things that inspire them and take photographs, a coder might use the post it notes to flow a specific software routine to ensure the best user experience, whilst making notes of code changes required and using the phone to keep in contact with people who can help with projects.

 

Whether you want to wear skinny jeans, collect japanese coffee makers or ride a unicycle, perhaps they have something that too many of us are missing out on. So put down the phone, pick up a pencil and free your mind to create 3 fantastic things today.

 

Gym Free Workout

Burpee – Long jump

Warm up, swinging arms and legs, jogging on the spot and checking range of motion drills, followed by quiet breathing.

Do 1 full burpee, then jump as far as possible along from a standing start, to land on both feet. Repeat for 2 minutes, rest 1 minute, repeat for 5 rounds (total 10 mins exercise, 4 rest intervals)

Warm down, mobility awareness and breathing for 3 mins.

One foot in front of the other 

The oft quoted line is “A journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step”

What’s conveniently ignored is the subsequent steps. The ones up hills, through blizzards, rain and so forth. Inevitably our mythical mystic would have encountered these but they are brushed under the metaphorical mat unless pertinent to the retelling. 

A better narrative might be the one that admits such adversities and encourages progress and learning in spite or through the challenges. 

The trick is to maintain momentum, use easy moments to help carry over the harder ones and to accept that all things must change, all things have an end. 

In a running race, use the down and flat to recover, in a lifting competition, tactics, in the pool, don’t fight the water when tired and in life, take delight in the simple pleasures before the fading light. 

Semper Pergendum Sine Timore

Forward without fear!