![]() Your ability to copy your teacher depends on your physical ability to copy his movements, if you cannot control your movements, how can you expect to be able to copy your teacher? Now for many, they want to be able to be free to do as they wish, after all it is their body and their expression of it. Lack of flexibility is the number 1 reason why people get injured, fail at the technique they are learning or go do their own thing. ![]() You possess the flexibility of a house brick! These compensations lead to frustration, injuries and my favourite excuse that I see everywhere, doing your own thing because you are incapable of copying what is shown because you cannot control your body. When they cannot articulate their joints to copy the movement their teacher shows, they make compensations…. They have a good teacher, they attend class regularly, practice on their own a lot, but don’t actually get any better… Perhaps you have experienced this yourself?įor me the answer lies in your ability to copy your teacher, exactly as shown. I see it a lot in our community, friends that have a passion for Ninjutsu, but have not improved in years. ![]() There comes a point in time, when you feel flat or like you have not leveled up your skill in a long time, you may have increased your knowledge, but you don’t feel that you have actually improved. Hopefully even the long term practitioners still feel this way after 20 years of practice. We all want to be better at the arts we practice. ![]()
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