visualization is important for all athletes; it allows you to see where you're going before you get there... to see yourself completing a task and thereby enabling you to complete that task. two pics follow, one is pre-vis... the other is completion.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjqz0uIXklj6XxdFnxMA9JYMfds4FD2w_rhyphenhyphenhjZMjIGYXaG8_M9vesMJRA1h7X3sp_W8-qOfhjvHmIw7A7dn3rX-c7hyphenhyphenP6nscP09L-KcBSnivf6vzobGTWB05WLXPHVQbeHMpN2/s400/vis.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiAqbuO3SjhqYm-VXS4EW-4Gf0VtOiqAmU4XIidKu_jjvh4CUJZyJkarRMtut3p-Xl1DEzkm0AvpwLn5yQmlX-8k7x8fkHultLIykygdI0zlb5reHbM8QrttRuQRsCx7LfO-eMJ/s400/drop.jpg)
that's me at keystone, sending a small drop (~6 feet?)...
~t
1 comment:
T,
If that was a small jump then I cringe when I imagine what a large jump would look like! I think the full face helmet was a good investment even for those "small" jumps! The largest jump I've ever made on a bike was going off a curb...does that count (it was a wicked curb of course)? Cool pics.
C
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