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Slowing Down to Run Faster

A Sense-able Approach to Movement

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A trainer and former triathlete shows you how to achieve the results you want with a new multidisciplinary approach
Why does trying harder sometimes become an exercise in futility? Why does following "expert advice" often lead to little or no improvement? What if there were an efficient way of learning that could be applied to every area of human experience? Drawing from the principles of Bagua, Taichi, and Feldenkrais, Edward Yu presents an innovative approach to running: power, speed, and agility are more related to your ability to sense your own body than to willpower or raw talent. Centering the art of running as an explorative, creative, and somatic-based practice, Yu shows us how to run faster by learning to become more sensible—that is, more sense-able—through the playful and systematic exploration of movement.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 18, 2020
      Rehab specialist and former triathlete Yu debuts with a thoughtful treatise on running intended to help readers achieve “sense-ability,” the human mind’s potential ability “to sense and feel at extraordinarily subtle levels and in the process direct your movement with the precision of an Olympic athlete.” Yu believes that the modern world is defined by a “get it done” culture of “not feeling, not knowing and not being.” In running, this lack of awareness can lead to injury. He credits experience with the martial arts Bagua and Taichi and the Feldenkrais method of movement with leading him toward greater awareness of bodily movement, and in particular, with enabling him to achieve more graceful, powerful, and enjoyable running. Yu asks runners to try out various bodily motions—for instance, the “common dictum among track coaches, ‘Lift your knees higher’ ”—for themselves, and to concentrate on how much effort these actions require, and how good they feel. Twenty-seven exercise sets, such as “Downward Spiral” and “Salsa Hips,” are included, with accompanying photographs, for readers to practice as part of their program. In redefining running as a time for “wonder and exploration,” Yu’s instructive and inviting text will appeal to fitness enthusiasts eager to shake up their exercise regimen.

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  • English

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