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TAO
OF JEET KUNE DO Often, it's not how fast it travels but how soon it gets there that counts. - Bruce Lee |
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Elements that make greater speed possible: |
Preliminary
warming up to reduce viscosity, increase elasticity and flexibility, and
tune the system to a higher physiological tempo (heart rate, blood flow
and pressure, respiratory adjustment). |
Vision Awareness: |
Learning great speed in visual recognition is a basic beginning. Your training
should include short, concentrated, daily practice in seeing quickly (awareness
drills). High levels of perceptual speed are the product of learning, not of inheritance. A boy who is a little slow in reaction time, or in speed of delivery, may compensate for this slowness through quick seeing. |
Total reaction consists of three elements: |
1.
The time required for the stimulus to reach the receivers (i.e.: audio,
visual, tactile, etc.). |
Reaction time becomes longer under the following conditions: | 1.
Not trained in any type of system 2. Tiredness 3. Absentmindedness 4. Emotionally upset (i.e.: anger, fear, etc.) |
The direction of one's attention (awareness) to the motor act can shorten the response time. |
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A
practitioner must learn to perform at top speed all the time, not to coast
with the idea that he can "open up" when the time comes. The real
competitor is the one who gives all he has, all the time. The result is
that he works close to his capacity at all times and in so doing, forms
an attitude of giving all he has. |
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