Wednesday, January 29, 2014

FMyLife #13: The Gorilla-Snake

Last time at the gym, coach said "I saw you training" (the room has a view onto the skating hall) "you looked like a gorilla-snake in there!"

I have been compared to a whole menagerie already: cats, rabbits, young goats and all… but there, with such an analogy, I felt like my jamming had reached a brand-new level. Fiercer, more powerful and insidous.

"This is a compliment", he added. "And I take it as such..." (although I liked the fluffy rabbit-kitty look better).


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Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Toe Stops are Optional

Mallory for SkateXpress
With the start of the new 2014 season, I started to take over the weekly Agility Sessions at BCRD. I ran my first class (in English!) last week and decided to strike hard in doing a toe-stops-off course. Throughout my (short) quad skating life, I have always encouraged people to free themselves from that stops addiction: that habit may be the easy way at first but it will end up limiting you.

Some people are all for it, some strongly stand against it. I am in-between the two, not because I am an indecisive person, but because of personal convictions.
Toe stops are there, at your toes, it would be a shame not to exploit them. Yet, they should be used in full knowledge of their pros and cons. Here are my thoughts about that optional device that juts out of our derby plates.


WHY TOE STOPS ARE ONLY ADD-ONS


Toe stops are part of your skates. Indeed. But they are not essential to them: The job of your skates is to make you ROLL, a task in which toe stops are NOT involved. They are an add-on, a device that can be used for the STOPPING PART. You could argue that stopping is a stage of the rolling process: The rolling has 1) a start (gaining momentum), 2) a body (the rolling itself) and 3) an end (stopping). Just like everything in life, and, in order to stick to the subject, just like any movement and trick. Never isolate elements from their contexts.