Originally posted by silver_tears
i like looking back at old photos, this is probably 19 vs. 26 here divavs.
in the first pic, you look like you just got done having sex and you're trying to cover it up. shock
Originally posted by Oneness
back when my hair wasn't a mess
you have kind of a tyler durden ambience going on here. i approve. 😊
Originally posted by It's xyz!I'm a patron of the logical specs of my mind, not this prude matter.
fight
Although a mind that can be more fitted for logic can be more fitted for anything competitive.
And a strong body benefits the reach of the mind, and vice versa.
There's a goal, perhaps futile, to become perfect in every single way.
I wasn't born with the structure of Usain Bolt or some 6'4" Polish Strongman - but every non-malformed body-type has the capacity for perfection in its own regard.
Being faster doesn't mean that one can run further (stamina) or change direction more quickly (agility). It means that one can get from a set point A to a set point B in less time. Stronger doesn't mean one can lift a set weight more times before one's muscles wear-out (endurance), stretch further before tearing (flexibility), nor does it mean one can lift a set weight faster (power) - it merely means one can lift a higher set-weight. But there is a perfection point in one's natural body-type to at least one out of any of these that could yield an advantage or disadvantage one whose body-type matches the parameters of another such specification.
Besides, martial arts is more a game of chess than specific physical parameters - although one must have an actualized connection to their unique body-type's perfect point to excel in martial arts, of course.
And in any athletic endeavor the fight or flight response will get you places, arousal sends hormones through the body that can desensitize one so that he may last through pain without endurance, or sensitize one so as to avoid an obstacle. Emotion has a way of either clarifying or distorting logic, so one must be careful here.