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I think it was Confucius who said "the beginning of wisdom is to call things by their right names" or something similar. I agree with this; words have power and having a common vocabulary is important for conveying crucial concepts.
I am having some difficulty finding the language coach wants me to use to discuss strategy. I tend to zoom in on what specific actions to take in a given situation, and completely miss the glaringly obvious. V. wants me to think in 4 broad terms: offense, defense, preparation, and feint. Knowing I work with computers, he even suggested fake coding to better unravel the logic:
Sunday's lesson was frustrating because of my inflexible inability to see the forest for the trees, so to speak. V. pushed repeatedly that I MUST understand the bigger picture to move up to the next level and implement strategy effectively. He is not wrong, but I'm really struggling to get my head around it.
I'll be working on this more of this on Sunday, and I'll experiment tonight at practice to see if I can think in these broader terms and leave the technical aspects to experience.
This is part of what keeps fencing so endlessly fascinating for me - I think I'll always be trying to see a bit more of the iceberg. That doesn't make it any less maddening!
I am having some difficulty finding the language coach wants me to use to discuss strategy. I tend to zoom in on what specific actions to take in a given situation, and completely miss the glaringly obvious. V. wants me to think in 4 broad terms: offense, defense, preparation, and feint. Knowing I work with computers, he even suggested fake coding to better unravel the logic:
If Action=Offense If Offense.Real Defense Counteroffense Elseif Offense.Feint OR Offense.Preparation Defense Feint Preparation Elseif Action=Defense If Defense.Real Counteroffense Feint Preparation Elseif Defense.Feint OR Defense.Preparation Offense Preparation Feint Loop
Sunday's lesson was frustrating because of my inflexible inability to see the forest for the trees, so to speak. V. pushed repeatedly that I MUST understand the bigger picture to move up to the next level and implement strategy effectively. He is not wrong, but I'm really struggling to get my head around it.
I'll be working on this more of this on Sunday, and I'll experiment tonight at practice to see if I can think in these broader terms and leave the technical aspects to experience.
This is part of what keeps fencing so endlessly fascinating for me - I think I'll always be trying to see a bit more of the iceberg. That doesn't make it any less maddening!
no subject
Date: 2012-07-24 11:00 pm (UTC)