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    <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">The Bobski Blog</title>
    <tagline mode="escaped" type="text/html">Skiing, Ski Coaching and Ski Instruction Blog </tagline>
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    <modified>2008-06-30T19:05:16Z</modified>
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/21-Ali-Rainback.-BASI-Trainer.html" rel="alternate" title="Ali Rainback. BASI Trainer" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
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        <issued>2008-06-30T19:05:16Z</issued>
        <created>2008-06-30T19:05:16Z</created>
        <modified>2008-06-30T19:05:16Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.bobski.com/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=21</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/21-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Ali Rainback. BASI Trainer</title>
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                <p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">ALI RAINBACK. BASI Trainer. British Association of Snowsport Instructors.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">It is with the very greatest regret that I hear from David Tapley that Ali Rainback has recently died.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">If you never met Ali, you missed something. Ali was as yet only a young man, and a very decent one. He was one of the intelligent and thougtful souls in BASI. I don't think he was qualified as a coach, perhaps he was but in any case he acted like one. </font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Ali cared about his clients and pupils, and put a lot of thought into how he and his closer colleagues might best help them learn.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">I did not know Ali well, but I was very impressed with him every time we met and talked.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">BASI is much the less for his going, and so is skiing. It is always tragic when a young person dies, especially when they are as kindly as Ali Rainback.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Bob Trueman</font></p> 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/20-Parallel-skiing-and-stuff.html" rel="alternate" title="Parallel skiing and stuff" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
            <email>nospam@example.com</email>
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        <issued>2008-06-26T15:35:18Z</issued>
        <created>2008-06-26T15:35:18Z</created>
        <modified>2008-06-26T15:35:18Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.bobski.com/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=20</wfw:comment>
        <slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
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        <id>http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/20-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Parallel skiing and stuff</title>
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                <p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">There is an interesting conversation going on in the &quot;comments&quot; section of the &quot;Ski Coaching&quot; category, much of it relating to whether or not skis really <em>can</em> be skied truly parallel. There is a mixture of enlightenment and confusion. If skiing interests you, you could do worse than take a look.</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">In reply to David's comment (no.9) I'd say that what John Shedden so wisely observed about the skis, after the initiation of the change of direction, having to respond to centripetal (and presumably other) forces, then perhaps the forces on the inner and outer skis are different. </font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">We might expect them to be, whether or not the two arcs were congruently centred, but certainly so if they are because the &quot;moment arms&quot; will be different. I think. Perhaps!. </font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">If this is the case, and if the force on the inner ski were to be automatically more than that on the outer ski because of its tighter radius, then it would bend more. In that instance it would then perhaps be able to describe an arc parallel to the outer one, which at the same time could have its centre point the same as the outer ski.</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">What do you think? What do our resident physicist suggest? Is there anybody there? Knock three times for yes.</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">Bob</font></p> 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/19-Parallelism.html" rel="alternate" title="Parallelism" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
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        <issued>2008-06-23T08:58:51Z</issued>
        <created>2008-06-23T08:58:51Z</created>
        <modified>2008-06-23T09:03:29Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.bobski.com/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=19</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/19-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Parallelism</title>
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                <p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">In very minor response to John Shedden's post, [ it's immediately below and you really should take a look ] the only thing I have to say that might be worth listening to is that the skis' parallelism would not I think be related to the shape-outcome of the arc; not at any rate if the timing, the rate, and the amplitude of the skis' tilting and other responses were the same as one another.</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">Does this make any sense? If I'm not careful I might get so far up my bum that I won't be able to get out and ski!</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">Bob</font></p> 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/18-Parallel-skiing-revisited-again,-but-this-time-by-the-master..html" rel="alternate" title="Parallel skiing revisited again, but this time by the master." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
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        <issued>2008-06-23T08:50:25Z</issued>
        <created>2008-06-23T08:50:25Z</created>
        <modified>2008-06-26T15:35:02Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.bobski.com/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=18</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/18-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Parallel skiing revisited again, but this time by the master.</title>
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                <div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font style="FONT: 11px Lucida Grande" face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">I have just received an email from John Shedden in response to our discussion on parallel skiing and whether or not it is possible. John has had a bit of a problem getting this post to load, so I have simply attached his commens in full to this post.</font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"></font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"></font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">If YOU are having any similar difficulty please just email me at</font> <a href="mailto:bobski@bobski.com">bobski@bobski.com</a> </div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font style="FONT: 11px Lucida Grande" face="Lucida Grande" size="3"></font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font style="FONT: 11px Lucida Grande" face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"></font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font face="Georgia">From John,</font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font style="FONT: 11px Lucida Grande" face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"></font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font style="FONT: 11px Lucida Grande" face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Could that be m(wsquared)     divided by r ?</font></div><div style="MIN-HEIGHT: 13px; MARGIN: 0px; FONT: 11px 'Lucida Grande'"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif"><br /><font size="3"></font></font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font style="FONT: 11px Lucida Grande" face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">We talk about circles for ease of conversation but What if the arcs are not circular but some other conic section?  Or even perhaps made up of several different sections of conic sections.</font></div><div style="MIN-HEIGHT: 13px; MARGIN: 0px; FONT: 11px 'Lucida Grande'"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"></font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font style="f”Ãwpt9: 11.0px Lucida Grande" face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"></font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font style="f”Ãwpt9: 11.0px Lucida Grande" face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">The arcs do have different &quot;centres&quot; if the legs are working independently of each other as each arc relates to each leg..or?</font></div><div style="MIN-HEIGHT: 13px; MARGIN: 0px; FONT: 11px 'Lucida Grande'"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif"><br /><font size="3"></font></font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font style="FONT: 11px Lucida Grande" face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Perhaps  so called parallel skiing is vastly overrated as the only thing the skier has (more or less) complete control over is the INITIATION of the change of direction.  This is the focus of most peoples attention when learning and the rest of the 'turn' is subject to a variety of forces to which the skier will respond.  </font></div><div style="MIN-HEIGHT: 13px; MARGIN: 0px; FONT: 11px 'Lucida Grande'"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif"><br /><font size="3"></font></font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font style="FONT: 11px Lucida Grande" face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Parallel 'starting' might be better named as simultaneous 'edge change' - (or as I might call it, simultaneous tilting. Bob ) - the initiation phase --followed by the reactive / steering phase - until the next initiation phase.</font></div><div style="MIN-HEIGHT: 13px; MARGIN: 0px; FONT: 11px 'Lucida Grande'"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif"><br /><font size="3"></font></font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font style="FONT: 11px Lucida Grande" face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">I can't speak for anyone else but when I steer my skis, even when I'm carving, I travel along curving 'pathways' which often change shape during a single 'arc' - if that isn't a contradiction in terms.</font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px; FONT: 11px 'Lucida Grande'"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif"><br /><font size="3"></font></font></div><div style="MARGIN: 0px"><font style="FONT: 11px Lucida Grande" face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">I supose what I'm saying is that we TALK about, &quot;arcs&quot; and &quot;radii&quot; etc because it makes conversation possible but theose words are just shorthand for more complex things going on . . we shouldn't believe everything we say!!</font></div><div><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif"><br /><font size="3"></font></font></div><div><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif"><br /><font size="3"></font></font></div><div><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Very best regards,</font></div><div><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">John</font></div> 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/17-Really-cheap-petrol..html" rel="alternate" title="Really cheap petrol." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
            <email>nospam@example.com</email>
        </author>
    
        <issued>2008-06-19T11:03:55Z</issued>
        <created>2008-06-19T11:03:55Z</created>
        <modified>2008-06-19T11:03:55Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.bobski.com/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=17</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/17-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Really cheap petrol.</title>
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                <p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">I see from our local service station forecourt that petrol is now about £1.20 per litre and diesel about £1.34. I work that out to be roughly £5.46 a gallon for petrol and over £6 a gallon for diesel.</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">Ever since I was born, my generation here in the wealthy west has been able to enjoy pretty well everything we wanted, and most certainly everything we need. The result seems to have been that we have lost the ability to distinguish what is important from what isn't.  </font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">We know the price of everything and the value of not much at all. Take petrol or diesel for example. We have come to think of them only as transport fuels, and have lost sight of all the other things our society has done and continues to do with oil.</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">We complain about £5 or £6 petrol or diesel, but we happily pay something like £36 for a gallon of so-so wine; some folk happily spend £21 a gallon on bottled water which is no better for you than tap water and comes in a container made of an oil derivative; and while it is a rather silly calculation it still makes a point - we spend about £5200 per gallon for computer printer ink.</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">Don't even <strong>think</strong> about Chanel No 5 or some poncy aftershave lotion.</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">And yet a gallon of petrol or diesel will do the work which it would otherwise take <strong>three man-weeks</strong> of work to do.</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">At £5 or £6, I'd say we're getting it cheap - but we're wasting it and using what is undoubtedly the west's most precious commodity very unwisely. </font></p> 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/16-Improve-your-skiing-by-walking.html" rel="alternate" title="Improve your skiing by walking" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
            <email>nospam@example.com</email>
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        <issued>2008-06-16T17:46:55Z</issued>
        <created>2008-06-16T17:46:55Z</created>
        <modified>2008-06-16T17:54:00Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.bobski.com/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=16</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/16-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Improve your skiing by walking</title>
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                <p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Do you do any walking, in the countryside? Sometimes off the footpath or to the side of it? If so, you can be preparing for next season right now, in the height of summer.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Every time you are out walking, deliberately seek out some down-slopes on grassy terrain. They don't have to be long, and they don't have to be massively steep; all we're trying to do is get used to the feelings.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">As you walk down the slope, deliberately get your weight onto your toes or the balls of your feet - no further back at all! <strong>FEEL </strong>yourself being held back from sliding down the slope by the pressure against these front parts of your feet. Concentrate on that feeling. Every time your concentration lapses (and it will), use that lapse as your cue to bring it back to your toes.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">When you succeed in this little game, and you can feel yourself being supported by your toes or balls of your feet, you will be able to notice something else: you cannot do it while leaning back. And you cannot do it with your legs straight. It will feel horribly unstable and risky.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">So now I'm going to suggest you find another bit of slope, or some more of the same one, and GRADUALLY, VERY GRADUALLY, make an attempt to lean slightly backward as you walk down, and let the pressure under the soles of your feet move rearward towards your heels.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">I want you to investigate how this <strong>FEELS</strong>. Does it feel more, or less safe than its predecessor? Please write to me if it feels safer - if it does, you are phenomenon!</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Go back to having the pressure forward under your foot. Do you notice that you INSTINCTIVELY flex your legs? </font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">You will find that you can keep your body fairly upright (you don't have to lean forward, although sometimes it helps). You might imagine a straight vertical line going down through your body and continuing into the ground. I'll bet it passes through the forward pressure point you can feel under your feet.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Each time you go out, play this game, and make sure you include some of the leaning back occasions too so that you can calibrate your feelings.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">If anyone would like to comment on this when you've tried it, I'd love to see them, and they might help other folk too - you'll find the link to click to enable you to do this at the end of this article.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Let us know how you get on.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">As aye<br />Bob</font></p> 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/15-Success!.html" rel="alternate" title="Success!" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
            <email>nospam@example.com</email>
        </author>
    
        <issued>2008-05-30T10:44:20Z</issued>
        <created>2008-05-30T10:44:20Z</created>
        <modified>2008-05-30T10:44:20Z</modified>
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        <id>http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/15-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Success!</title>
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                <p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">&quot;You know I've been working to improve at - thingy?&quot;</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">&quot;Yes&quot;</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">&quot;I had another go yesterday&quot;</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">&quot;Oh. Did you have any success?&quot;</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">&quot;Certainly did. Brilliant success.&quot;</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">&quot;What happened?&quot;</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">&quot;Well I kept up with the practicing, and I had very little success, and what success I had went slowly.&quot;</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">&quot;I thought you said you had brilliant success?&quot;</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">&quot;I did. Why does success have to be quick in order to be good?&quot;</font></p> 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/14-Parallel-skiing-revisited.html" rel="alternate" title="Parallel skiing revisited" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
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        <issued>2008-05-16T10:48:07Z</issued>
        <created>2008-05-16T10:48:07Z</created>
        <modified>2008-05-17T09:57:03Z</modified>
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        <id>http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/14-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Parallel skiing revisited</title>
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                <p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">There is some discussion as to whether or not skis CAN be skied truly parallel, whilst making arcs.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">IF they can, then the circles, the segments of which are being described in the snow by the skis, MUST be concentric. If those circles are not concentric then the skis can only be parallel at one infinitessimally small point. At two points on the circles they describe, the lines they are drawing will cross. This means the lines are approaching and diverging from one another. Clearly then, they are not parallel. The skis would then cross, as would the skier's legs and the result is not pleasant to contemplate.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">If you wish to test this you can, very simply and without complex physics being involved. The skis can only describe circles of either the same or different radii.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif"><font size="3"><u>Example 1:</u> Same radius. If the two circles being described are the same radius, then either they will be concentric or not. If concentric there will only be one line drawn in the snow and since there are two skis that is not possible. So - if the radii of the two circles are the same, then the circles must be centred on different points.</font></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Their circumferences cannot then be parallel. All you need in order to prove this to yourself is to take a set of compasses, (or in their absence a circular saucer or even a coffee cup), and draw two circles of matching radius, centred on two different, albeit nearby points. You will see that the circles cross one another twice. Therefore their circumferences are not parallel.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif"><font size="3"><u>Example 2:</u> Now consider two circles of slightly different radii. The only circumstance in which their circumferences can be parallel is if they are concentric.</font></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">IF ( and it may be big &quot;IF&quot; ) truly parallel arcs <em>can</em> be described by two skis acting simultaneously, then whatever the physical influences at work are, the inner ski must be reacting differently to the outer ski. Skis can only bend, tilt (with or without torsional distortion), or pivot. </font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Bending and tilting combined can lead to &quot;carving&quot;. Pivoting leads to skidding, as does torsional distortion.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">I have no idea whether true, absolutely exact parallel skiing is possible, but it seems  clear to me, that if it is, it can only be done with arcs which are part of concentric circles.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">So - either it <em>is</em> possible and the inner and outer skis are being separately influenced by the external forces; <em>or</em> the external forces are equalised between the two skis, and while &quot;parallel&quot; skiing may APPEAR to be happening, that is a mistaken perception resulting from not being able to watch and measure sufficient of the circumference of the circles being described.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Bob Trueman</font></p> 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/13-The-Man-and-the-Bracken,-Part-2..html" rel="alternate" title="The Man and the Bracken, Part 2." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
            <email>nospam@example.com</email>
        </author>
    
        <issued>2008-05-12T14:06:01Z</issued>
        <created>2008-05-12T14:06:01Z</created>
        <modified>2008-05-12T14:21:17Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.bobski.com/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=13</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/13-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">The Man and the Bracken, Part 2.</title>
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                <p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">The Man and the Bracken revisited. If you have not already read it, you might enjoy going to </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><a href="http://www.bobski.com/technical%20papers">www.bobski.com/technical papers</a>  and read &quot;The Man, The Bracken, and the Sport </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Psychology&quot;.</font></p><p align="justify"><br /><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">So.  It had not been cleared. A year later and when, in early May, the man went to the </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">bracken areas, there it was, healthier than ever. </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">True, in some places where it had previously been there was now either none or much </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">less. But in others, it was flourishing in an abundance greater than previous years. </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">There were even some areas where pulling it up was no longer even an option - it would </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">have to be cut, at least for a while.</font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">So how was he to &quot;handle&quot; this? What sort of things about it would he be likely to say </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">to himself, and his self, about it? Should he call himself all sorts of fool for having </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">even attempted the job; or for having believed he might have cleared it in just one or </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">two seasons? Perhaps it wasn't possible: how would he know?</font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Clearly the possibility arose for depressing himself about it. It wasn't possible for </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">the bracken to depress him; bracken is just bracken and totally indifferent to him or </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">any one else. But if he were to do this, why would he do it? What would be achieved? </font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Would it be possible NOT to depress himself about it? And if he did, what would be the </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">PROCESS of doing it? What would need to be in place for him to be able to? The man </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">thought about this, and about what might be different to last year. Perhaps the </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">circumstances had changed? If so, how might they have done so?</font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Slowly some differences became apparent. Firstly, last year in order to get to places </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">where the bracken was he had had to clear brambles, rosebay willow herb, small areas of </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">blackthorn and so on. This had allowed him access to the bracken but in the process had </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">let in more light so this year's bracken growth was enhanced. So, clearly the graph of </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">his bracken clearance would not be a straight line - it would have accelerative phases </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">and troughs.</font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Secondly, the weather this year was much better than last year; temperatures are higher, </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">rainfall just right for growth. So he must be careful not compare like with un-like. </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">At this point Sport Psychology came in again. His end goal, his dream, was to clear </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">these two large areas of bracken, and it is important to have a dream and a long term </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">objective. But if that had been ALL he had - if this had been the only kind of goal he </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">knew about - then it could easily have been disappointing and he might have depressed </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">himself.</font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Fortunately the man knew a little more about goal setting and he knew that he could also </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">choose to create and adopt other kinds of goals. He could if he chose set himself </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">PERFORMANCE goals; say, more yardage of cutting, in fewer minutes of work. But the man </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">had tried these sort of goals in other areas of his life and while they had helped then, </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">the idea didn't seem to fit in well with this job. </font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">He was afraid that he would find that by accepting goals of this sort he would become </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">too intense about it, and miss all the good things going on around him. When he had </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">first set out to do this job, he had made that mistake. He had been so focused, so </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">intense that he found hiself missing the bird song, missing the sound of the river, and </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">missing the opportunity to stop and look at the distant hills.</font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">So, he began considering PROCESS goals as an option. And this is the type he chose. With </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">a process-goal mind-set he could set a goal of &quot;making sure he did at least one area a </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">day&quot;. He could even change that if he later wanted to, by making it &quot;at least 12 days </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">out of every 14&quot; or some such. That would still quite likely be a challenge - what about </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">the mornings he didn't feel like getting up, or the days the weather was lousy. Yes, </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">sounded good.</font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">He could break it up and set himself the goal of pulling up half of it, and cutting the </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">other half; then swapping the halves over.  He could include in his daily goal &quot;stopping </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">at least four times, to rest and look at the view, listen to the birds and hear the </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">river singing along in the valley&quot; why not? What a beautiful sort of goal. Wouldn't be a </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">bad sort of goal to set yourself when you were skiing in the mountains.</font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">He noticed that one effect of thinking things through like this was that he found he was </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">not falling for goals that made him impatient, or inadequate. It didn't even matter that </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">perhaps the dream goal of total clearance might not even be &quot;realistic&quot; - who knew, </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">perhaps expecting total clearance in one lifetime was just pie in the sky. </font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">It didn't matter, what mattered was sticking to the task, AND ENJOYING THE PROCESS.  </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Maybe the world was a slightly better place if this bit of it had some bracken, who was </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">he to say? What right did he have to dictate what would happen, perhaps it was better if </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">he just stuck to what HE was intending to do, and leave the rest to the fates.</font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Maybe, if he didn't ever become quite the skier he had once dreamed of, that was a </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">better solution because it meant he would always have the possibility of improvement, </font><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">and after all it was in working toward that improvement wherein lay the real pleasure.</font></p><p align="justify"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Bob Valentine Trueman</font></p> 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/12-Is-parallel-skiing-possible.html" rel="alternate" title="Is parallel skiing possible?" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
            <email>nospam@example.com</email>
        </author>
    
        <issued>2008-05-12T11:45:54Z</issued>
        <created>2008-05-12T11:45:54Z</created>
        <modified>2008-05-16T10:46:46Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.bobski.com/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=12</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/12-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Is parallel skiing possible?</title>
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                <p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">My fellow coach Dave Tapley reported to me that one or two skiing blogs have recently been filled with discussion about the true nature of &quot;parallel&quot; skiing and the perplexing questions that arise once you start thinking in depth about it. </font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">The discussion hinges on whether or not &quot;parallel&quot; skiing is actually possible. Dave quoted his own observation that when you are &quot;carving&quot; perfectly you can inspect your skis' tracks and they look to be perfectly parallel. However, they are not drawing the same radius arcs (part-circles).</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">So, After some thought I wrote to a pupil and friend of mine,  physicist Tony York. Here is the e-mail like what I wrote.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><em>Let's say we have a skier effecting an arc, a perfectly &quot;carved&quot; arc - an arc during which both skis slide perfectly (no skid) -and let's say that his skis are parallel to one another all the way round that arc.</em></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><em>For this to happen, the inner ski must perforce travel a shorter distance than the outer ski.  For this to happen without skidding, the inner ski must either, tilt more, or bend more, or a combination of both. Were this not to be the case, they would necessarily be describing segments of arcs of non-concentric circles.</em></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><em>To bend more it would need to be receiving greater centripetal force, which we know would be very unstable for the skier, so optimally no more than 50% of the force should be being resisted by the inner ski. Unless - I wonder - being nearer to the circle's centre it inevitably receives more force ? ? </em></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><em>Even in this scenario, the inner ski must be tilted slightly more than the outer ski, or it would skid. This is because were it to be tilted to the same degree it would be describing a circle of the same diameter as the outer, but in a different location - they would not be concentric; and if you draw this out on a piece of paper it becomes obvious that the two circles must cross (twice) which thereby denies the &quot;parallel&quot; requirement of this experiment.</em></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><em>Now, there is plenty enough bio-mechanical movement in the hips and ankles to permit this variation, but here a little confusion arises in my mind ( which is rather unusual  -  because usually there is a <strong>lot</strong> of confusion in my mind; I must do this again!).</em></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><em>There will be one aggregate centre of mass for the skier, supported against the centripetal force by two platforms.  Here then is where my confusion arises.</em></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><em>Where, precisely is the centripetal force's own centre of origin? Or is this a daft question?  Is there, for example, just one centre of centripetal force, or since there are two platforms, are there also two centres of this force? After considering this I feel there must be two, because each ski (platform) is resisting a force, and I feel that this necessitates having two forces, coming from two slightly different directions. This being the case, then there are two reasons for the inner ski to tilt more - 1) in order to present a platform at 90 degrees to the force, and 2) in order to enable the ski to slide perfectly around a circle of smaller radius.</em></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><em>But if this is so, then if you followed the directional lines of these forces (or this force) from whence do they emanate? Is it for example on the snow's surface? Or precisely at the interface between the platform and supporting surface? Or - does it emanate from somewhere else, underground? And if so, how far away/down?</em></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><em>I think it must be at the interface only, which is where the force and the resistance meet. Am I right? After all ( I conjecture) unless there is resistance, there will be no centripetal force - in effect they are one and the same???? Without the one, you cannot have the other.</em></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><em>Bob</em></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><em>PS - It's just occurred to me that the bend in the ski is created at least in part by a force from ahead of it, acting on the shovel through a couple between the shovel and the ski's centre. The shorter the radius of the circle being followed for any given tangential speed, wouldn't the force be inevitably greater? So might we not get more bend anyway even though the skier's mass was being equally distributed between the two skis?</em></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">Tony, after considerable cogitation answered as follows, and I'm very grateful to him. </font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3">OK, (he said) <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif"><em>here are my thoughts so far</em></font>:<br /> <br /><font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif"><em>Since the skis are going round curves of different radii, and are therefore travelling at different speeds, it is mathematically easier to say they are both moving with the same angular velocity (ie they would both take the same time to complete a full circle).  The expression for the force is then mw<sup>2</sup>r (m is mass, w is angular velocity, r is radius).  Because r is greater for the outside ski, there will be more force, which is what the skier needs, in order to be stable.<br /> <br />So far so good - but then how do the skis provide this force?  If the outer one is producing more of the centripetal force, and they are both at the same angle, it will bend more, making it impossible for both skis to be &quot;carving&quot;, as the inner one is following a tighter curve.  If the inner one is tilted more, perhaps it could be describing a tighter arc, but be bent less, consistent with it producing less force.  I should stop now while I'm ahead, but I have a horrible feeling that if you look at a still photo of a racer in a turn, the outside ski is tilted more!</em> <font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif">(Yes, but you'll usually see that the inner ski is all but &quot;floating&quot; and is not actually carving, even though that's what they would like. Bob)</font><br /><em> <br />The bending of the ski is a result of the snow pushing against it, but that won't be simple either.  Even in the simplest imaginable scenario of the same force from the snow against each cm of the ski, the front of the ski will have more bending moment, as it is longer than the tail.  Whether this leads to more actual bending depends on the stiffness of the ski, which varies along the ski in a very complex manner, I would imagine.<br /> <br />As implicit in last para, as far as the ski is concerned the force comes from the snow immediately in contact with it, but that snow is in turn supported by the snow beneath it, which is in turn supported by the ground beneath it.  This is of course why the skier sinks deeper into powder before there is enough force generated to support him/her.<br /> <br />I don't think the idea of a &quot;centre of centripetal force&quot; is useful.  The vector sum of all the forces from both skis must pass through the centre of mass of the skier and be directed towards the centre of the circle in which he/she is travelling.  One also needs to be careful in talking about reaction forces.  This vector sum is effectively a single force acting on the skier.  There is no sense in which the skier is in equilibrium; he/she is being continually accelerated towards the centre of the circle.<br /> <br />God knows how ski designers do the business, &amp; God knows how any of us can actually get the skis to do what we want (sometimes).  I should probably stick to making furniture or high energy nuclear physics; that would be simpler.</em></font> </font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">I am very grateful to Tony for his observations, and if anyone wants to join in, then please do so; it won't make anybody's skiing any better, but it keeps the old grey matter from atrophying any more quickly than is necessary! And it sure as Hell beats &quot;doing turns!&quot;</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="3">Bob Valentine Trueman</font></p><p /> 
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/11-Self-Efficacy-it-underlies-Bobski-Coaching.html" rel="alternate" title="Self Efficacy - it underlies Bobski Coaching" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
            <email>nospam@example.com</email>
        </author>
    
        <issued>2008-05-04T09:05:13Z</issued>
        <created>2008-05-04T09:05:13Z</created>
        <modified>2008-05-04T09:26:37Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.bobski.com/blog/wfwcomment.php?cid=11</wfw:comment>
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        <id>http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/11-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Self Efficacy - it underlies Bobski Coaching</title>
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                <p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><font size="2">The greatest satisfaction I get, and have got from coaching, has been so repeatedly to watch my pupils change their beliefs about their own potential. This happens with both men and with women, but more so I think with the womenfolk.</font></font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="2">Far too frequently, women &quot;of a certain age&quot; come to their first Bobski coaching week scarcely able to believe that they will be able to bring about any serious changes in their skiing. They typically arrive in a last-ditch, more-in-hope-than-expectation mode. Frequently I have been the absolute last hope - &quot;If this doesn't work, I'm giving up, the family can go on their own and I'll take up macrame!&quot;</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="2">So far, fingers crossed, I haven't had a failure. Big changes in technique have usually not happened quickly - and nor should they, skiing isn't easy! - but changes in self-belief are the norm. &quot;Hang on a minute, this is something I <strong>am</strong> going to be able to do, if I work at it. I'm not a failure, or a dead loss.&quot; </font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="2">What a marvellous thing to happen. What more could anyone do for another person, than to do something that helps them change their own self belief?</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="2">Here are extracts from a report of a recent scientific paper which described a research project into what the differences were between women who were overweight and stayed that way, and women who were able to change. I'd be interested in any feedback.</font></p><p><em><font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif">If you are what you eat, what you eat has a lot to do with how you think about yourself, says a QUT PhD researcher whose study is part of an international research project on the healthy ageing of women.</font></em></p><div id="seealso"><hr /><font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif"><em>Queensland University of Technology nursing researcher Rhonda Anderson said self-efficacy had emerged as a strong influence on women's decision to do more exercise or eat more healthily.</em></font></div><p><font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif"><em>She surveyed more than 560 South-East Queensland women aged between 51 and 66 on their exercise and diet habits and found that although women in their 50s were keen to make healthier diet and exercise changes, they had few effective strategies to draw upon.</em></font></p><p>&quot;This is an age when women's weight tends to peak, and almost two-thirds of the survey group were overweight &quot;Ms Anderson said.</p><p><em><strong>&quot;Self efficacy is our belief that we can produce the result we want to produce</strong>, so a person with high dietary self-efficacy believes they can eat healthily no matter what - even when bored, upset, tired, on holiday or at a party.</em></p><p><strong><em>&quot;A person's level of self-efficacy determines how hard they try and how long they stick at things in the face of difficulties. People with high self-efficacy are motivated and optimistic - when the going gets tough, they keep going.</em></strong></p><p><strong><em>&quot;People with low self-efficacy avoid difficult tasks and when things get tough they are more likely to give up.</em></strong> <font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="3"><strong><em><u>We can improve our self-efficacy by developing skills</u></em></strong></font>, <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="2"><em>having role models and getting encouragement from others.&quot;</em></font></p><p><font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="2"><em>&quot;Education is also a factor - women with a tertiary education were more likely to have high self-efficacy for exercise.&quot;</em></font></p><p><font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="2"><em>Ms Anderson said her findings were timely given the population was ageing and women lived longer than men.</em></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="2">That last paragraph reminded me of Jackie Mason's gag about &quot;Why do men die before their wives? - Because they want to.&quot;</font></p><p><font face="Georgia" size="2">The <strong>key element</strong> in all this extract, for me, is that <font size="3"><strong><em><u>We can improve our self-efficacy by developing skills.</u></em></strong> </font><font size="2">A great deal of what we do on my courses is aimed specifically at this; without it all the physical stuff just runs off like water from a duck's back.</font></font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="2">Bob Valentine Trueman</font></p> 
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/10-Sour-Apples.html" rel="alternate" title="Sour Apples" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
            <email>nospam@example.com</email>
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        <issued>2008-04-28T20:19:47Z</issued>
        <created>2008-04-28T20:19:47Z</created>
        <modified>2008-05-03T08:11:37Z</modified>
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        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Sour Apples</title>
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                <p><em>&quot;How long?&quot; Sohrab asked.</em></p><p><em>&quot;I don't know. A while.&quot;</em></p><p><em>Sohrab shrugged and smiled, wider this time. &quot;I don't mind. I can wait. It's like sour apples.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;Sour apples?&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;One time, when I was really little, I climbed a tree and ate these green, sour apples. My stomach swelled and became hard like a drum, it hurt a lot. Mother said that if I'd just waited for the apples to ripen, I wouldn't have become sick. So now, whenever I really want something, I try to remember what she said about the apples.&quot;</em></p><p align="right"><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="2">This is an extract from Khaled Hosseini's novel &quot;The Kite Runner.&quot;</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="2">It sums up perfectly in my view, something that I have repeatedly seen my skiing clients do to themselves, and which not only holds back their development toward mastery of their sport, but also renders them unhappy.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="2">In one of her songs, Carly Simon wrote &quot;Anticipation, it's making me late, it's keeping me waiting.&quot; While ours, since World War II, has been the most fortunate generation in the history of mankind in many ways, there is one way in which perhaps we've been a little less lucky.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="2">We have never had to do without anything; just about everything has been possible. I think it's just possible that we have somehow come to expect everything, and everything now. Which was the rock group that sang &quot;I want it all, and I want it now!&quot; Queen? Can't remember, but it sums up quite a lot I think, and it's a recipe for unhappiness.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="2">I know of no shortcuts to anywhere worthwhile. If you wish find mastery of skiing, you will have to pay your dues, do the work, and be both patient and persistent. That, at any rate, has been my own experience, and so far I haven't come across anyone else who just raced away to success in a short time.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="2">If you are impatient, either to get what you want, or perhaps with yourself, you will find yourself employing the kind of self talk that will make you unhappy and lead you further away from your goal, not toward it. You'll find yourself saying (perhaps only internally, and maybe that's worse) things like - &quot;I ought to be better than this by now.&quot; [Why should you?].&quot;I feel such a fool because I can't do .....&quot; [What's has foolishness got to do with anything? You are where you are that's all]</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="2">There is nothing else; there is only what we do, and what we don't do, and the consequences thereof.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="2">So, why am I saying this - well, I happen to believe, through many years of observing aspirational skiers, that knowing how to learn is the key piece of knowledge we need, and this issue of patient abstraction, while still working hard at our tasks, is essential.</font></p><p><font face="georgia,times new roman,times,serif" size="2">Bob Valentine Trueman.</font></p> 
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        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/9-Oil-price-rises-temporary-or-not.html" rel="alternate" title="Oil price rises - temporary or not?" type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
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        <issued>2008-04-28T07:54:49Z</issued>
        <created>2008-04-28T07:54:49Z</created>
        <modified>2008-04-28T11:26:59Z</modified>
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        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Oil price rises - temporary or not?</title>
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                <p /> <br /><a href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/9-Oil-price-rises-temporary-or-not.html#extended">Continue reading "Oil price rises - temporary or not?"</a>
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/8-Your-UNCONSCIOUS-is-in-charge!.html" rel="alternate" title="Your UNCONSCIOUS is in charge!" type="text/html" />
        <author>
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        <issued>2008-04-14T11:18:43Z</issued>
        <created>2008-04-14T11:18:43Z</created>
        <modified>2008-04-14T11:18:43Z</modified>
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        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Your UNCONSCIOUS is in charge!</title>
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                <p><font face="Georgia" color="#000000" size="2">On my ski courses, and whenever I am in conversation with ski instructors, I spend a great deal of time, stressing the importance of the mind, over the mere physique.</font></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">It is not enough to just attempt to “do”. Unless you have applied your mind <b>before</b> the “doing” phase, you are unlikely indeed to achieve what you want to achieve – or if you do it will likely be more luck than judgement.</font></span></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia">The most important 150cms on any mountain, are those between your ears. If you do not have the clearest, and most precise of intentions, plus an advance awareness of how you will monitor the <i>results </i></span><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">of your intentions, you will get yourself stuck on the “plateau” before you know it.</font></font></p><p><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman"> </font></font></font><font face="Times New Roman" color="#000000" size="3">This morning on the early morning BBC Radio 4 programme (which is really still called The Home Service but any of us who are really in the know) there was a fascinating piece about very recent neurological research.</font></p><p><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman"> </font></font></font><font face="Times New Roman" color="#000000" size="3">It’s now possible for the neuro-scientists to monitor brain activity in real time, whilst observing the human subject, and some extremely interesting stuff is coming out of it.</font></p><p><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman"> </font></font></font><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman">The research referred-to has indicated that a <b>full ten seconds</b> before a subject becomes aware that (s)he has decided to perform an action, <b>the unconscious mind has <u>made</u> that decision.</b></font></font></font></p><p><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman"> </font></font></font><font face="Times New Roman" color="#000000" size="3">I haven’t yet had time to fully absorb and consider this, but to me the discovery (if real) is mind blowing, and has all sorts of potential implications.</font></p><p><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman"> </font></font></font><font face="Times New Roman" color="#000000" size="3">If we are making decisions in ways of which – or at times of which - we are completely unaware, it almost seems to beg the question of “who’s in charge?”</font></p><p><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman"> </font></font></font><font face="Times New Roman" color="#000000" size="3">It also perhaps makes it quite interesting from the point of view of how quickly we may need to consciously countermand an unconsciously made decision (and how much chance we have). This, especially if the decision made is a bad one, like burying an axe in someone’s head!</font></p><p><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman"> </font></font></font><font face="Times New Roman" color="#000000" size="3">I would be really interested in any feedback anyone wishes to let me have on this, because if it does nothing else, it most certainly reinforces the proven fact that if we wish to master skiing (or anything else) then gaining more command over our subconscious minds is pivotal. Fortunately, it is also perfectly possible if you employ the techniques which I for one am so diligent in promoting.</font></p><p><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman"> </font></font></font><font face="Times New Roman" color="#000000" size="3">Let me give you an example – some years ago I unintentionally upset, and lost as a client, a young woman who fell of a T-bar. What I did, was to say to her that I had seen the moment at which she had <i>decided</i> to fall off it. She was unaware that she had “made” this decision and got very upset about it, saying that it wasn’t <i>her</i> fault, somehow the T-bar, or the universe had made her do it.</font></p><p><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><font face="Times New Roman"> </font></font></font><font face="Times New Roman" color="#000000" size="3">Well, now I know, I had spotted the ten-second delay at work, but the neuro scientists hadn’t released the research findings back then.</font></p><p><font face="Times New Roman" color="#000000" size="3">Bob</font></p> 
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/7-Rule-your-own-state..html" rel="alternate" title="Rule your own state." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Bob Valentine Trueman</name>
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        <issued>2008-04-13T11:34:40Z</issued>
        <created>2008-04-13T11:34:40Z</created>
        <modified>2008-04-13T11:34:40Z</modified>
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        <id>http://www.bobski.com/blog/archives/7-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Rule your own state.</title>
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                <p><font face="Georgia" color="#000000" size="2">Yesterday in my wife’s Telegraph I was lucky enough to be able to read a short piece about Haile Gebrselassie, the world’s greatest ever distance runner and holder of the Marathon world record. I show extracts of it below.</font></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span><font color="#000000"><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia">What he had to say about mind control and self control was fascinating. It echoes exactly the approach that I have been advocating for the past ten years or more to my own skiing pupils. To have it said by someone of such incredible talent and success is extra reinforcement though. (So, I’m sure he will be grateful! </span><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Wingdings"><span>J</span></span><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"> )</span></font></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">Years ago at a Neuro Linguistic Programming conference I was particularly struck by something one of the keynote speakers said – she said: “I’ve come to believe that ‘state’ is <b>everything</b>.</font></span></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">The ‘state’ she was referring to was mental state, and the important point she was making and with which I totally concur, is that your mental state is a matter of <b>choice</b>; it is not forced on you from outside of your self. There are forceful techniques which you can learn and with which you can become skilful, which facilitate your creating your best mental state <i>before</i> and in readiness for whatever it is you plan to do.</font></span></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">Here’ what Gebrselassie said:</font></span></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span><font color="#000000"><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia">Successful athletes need to display &quot;a strong set of values&quot;.</span></i></font></p><p><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span></i><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">First win the internal battle: then don't let anything stand in your way.</font></span></i></p><p><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span></i><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">First they must win themselves. How do they do that? First, do enough training.Then believe in yourself and say:&quot;I can do it.This is my day.The one over there, he is the same as me; he has two legs same as me, that is all.</font></span></i></p><p><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span></i><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">Like some high official you have to tell your brain:Do it. Come on. I have to do it. Always, if you win mentally, you can win physically as well.</font></span></i></p><p><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span></i><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">This sense of separation of mind and body, the idea that orders are given almost remotely by a dominant internal spirit to a flagging set of muscles and tendons, lies at the heart of Gebrselassie's preparation.</font></span></i></p><p><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span></i><font face="Georgia" color="#000000" size="2">The single greatest factor determining his own success, he insists, is discipline - a sharply self-improving attitude.</font></p><p><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span></i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">If you have a fear of failure, says Gebrselassie,<i> &quot;when you start, don't be nervous. Why be nervous? It's not the end of the world. (the mountain) will be there tomorrow and tomorrow: it will be there year after year, after that.</i></font></span></p><p><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span></i><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">Run (ski) in the present, but remember you have a future too.</font></span></i></p><p><i><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span></i><font face="Georgia" color="#000000" size="2">Much of what Gebrselassie is saying lies at the core of coaching; as much as anything the ability to master something, such as skiing, depends on how you handle the setbacks and the hold ups.</font></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">It takes mental strength and determination to succeed, at anything. That can be built, but it won’t build itself.</font></span></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">I have a number of “white papers” which many of my pupils already have copies of, and which are available on request – you can find my email on </font><a href="http://www.bobski.com/"><font color="#800080">www.bobski.com</font></a><font color="#000000"> and you are welcome to copies.</font></span></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"> </font></span><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">Let’s face it, if it’s good enough for world record holders, we could all do a piece of it, and to find that it’s not some arcane secret available only to the chosen few, but that it’s there for you and me, is good news isn’t it?</font></span></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000">Bob</font></span></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"><a href="http://www.bobski.com">www.bobski.com</a></font></span></p><p><span style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Georgia"><font color="#000000"></font></span></p> 
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