How to set up a home calisthenics setup for under $200
The Handstand as an Ongoing Practice
After 3 years of handstand training, I've come to see it as an ongoing practice rather than a goal to achieve. Here's what that mental shift changed.
The 'achieve' frame sets up a false endpoint. You can do a 5-second freestanding handstand, then 10 seconds, then 30 seconds. Then one-arm. Then pirouettes. Then press handstands. The skill develops indefinitely. Treating it as an ongoing practice removes the impatience that comes with goal-based thinking.
The daily practice frame changes the relationship to performance variability. Some days the balance is good, some days it's poor. In the 'achieve' frame, a bad day is a failure. In the practice frame, it's just today's data — interesting information about your nervous system state, not a verdict on your progress.
The craft frame: treating handstand training like a craftsperson treats their craft — attention to detail, appreciation for incremental refinement, patience with the learning curve — produces better results than treating it as a fitness task to complete.
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