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Moving Through Fear
It is the little fears that quietly steal our
lives. The grand concerns – death, loss, the meaning of existence… these
things, by and large, we can and do ignore for most of our days.
Philosophers and theologians may quibble and fret over the details of such
imponderables, but most of us have not the time, or lack the inclination, or
perhaps are just fortunate not to be burdened by too much curiosity. And
many fears are rational, of course, and can be friends to our lives; the
fear that heightens our awareness in a dark part of town, for example, or
the fear of falling that we suddenly develop when standing too near a
cliff’s edge on a windy day.
Fear, however, is a clever beast. It is behind fear’s reasonable façade that
the real danger lies, poised like the scorpion’s tail, ever ready to sting.
How much of your day is given over to the small fears? It is more than you
would at first think. They are the kind we barely notice, and yet rarely
ignore. They are the fears that make each day comfortable: The fear of
standing out that bends us all to conform in almost every way; the fear of
being laughed at that holds us to silence when we would rather laugh out
loud; the fear of rejection that causes us to avoid so many potential
connections. These fears we are used to, for they get us through the day
smoothly and with as little conflict as possible. They are the fears that
get us to work on time, that prevent us from challenging the opinions or
methods of our superiors. They are the fears that drive us towards the
so-called respectable goals we are told are worth achieving. They are the
fears that make us imbibe poisons when young so that our peers will accept
us.
Fear ensures we are constantly on the defensive, always responding in the
present to our worst imaginings of what the future will bring if we don’t.
The fear of consequences limits the actions we take. Fear becomes the actor
in our lives, while we gradually join the audience, becoming passive
spectators at the routine events of each of our precious days. So it is that
we spend so much time pandering to our fears that our lives pass us by,
until there is not even a whimper, let alone a bang, at the end.
What has all this
to do with Parkour?
Everything: For to practise Freestyle Parkour is to seek fear on a daily
basis, to confront it head-on, to face it naked and alone. In Parkour, you are
stripped to your essence. There is no equipment to rely on, no safety
harnesses or padding to protect you, no team mate to take the brunt when you
are tired. It’s you, and you alone. The only things that prevent you getting
hurt or injured are your skills, your judgement, your
ability – no one else’s. Now that in itself is a great realisation; but it
can also be a great burden. It is you and you alone who face your fears;
other people’s theories have no importance whatsoever here. You cannot
understand your fears according to Freud or Jung or anyone else – they are
not with you when you cat-leap or drop and roll, they are not there when you
vault. At those moments there is only you.
Parkour is movement, and all movement is connected to fear. It is
through a principle known as fear-reactivity that our bodies learn at
a tender age what not to do, how not to move, why not to fall. We learn to
avoid pain and to seek comfort, and if we experience discomfort due to a
certain action our bodies actually discourage us from trying that particular
action again. Simply put, fear-reactivity is our conditioned pattern of
behaviour involving movement, breathing and posture. It is “a learned,
conditioned reaction to stress, shock or trauma. It embeds in each one of
us; no one escapes it.”
Obviously this conditioning is of the past. Our bodies are reacting in the
present to the fear of that which has occurred in the past. Thus, fear is of
the past. It lives in memory, and from there is projected into the future,
and usually we find ourselves living in fear of one or the other – the past
or the future. Now, this means that in the present moment fear does not
actually exist. So to be free from fear, what we must do is live within
that present moment, live fully here and now. Not easy. But Parkour is a discipline that can assist us.
It is a fact that our natural physical potential and talent is far beyond
what we limit ourselves to doing. It is our conditioning, mental and
physical, that prevents us accessing this natural ability, and therefore it
is not so much the acquisition of skills and techniques that will lead us to
explore this talent but rather a stripping away of our own restraints. It is
not about a regular increase, but a regular decrease. We need only to get
out of our own way in order to find our potential. We need to eliminate our
fears to unleash our natural ability and grace. Both mentally and
physically, the practise of our art demands that we be fully focussed in the
moment and free from old limitations; after all, its entire approach is one
of freedom from boundaries. And it is in that moment of pure practice that
we can begin to overcome our own fear-reactivity, through being aware of it
and breaking away from its patterns.
It is a process. Watch yourself; observe. Notice the doubts, the
hesitations, the negative patterns, and the tensions within your body as you
move. Realise that those things are all choices you can do away with.
Tension is a choice. Try it now. Run a quick self-diagnostic of your body
and you will likely notice that some muscles are unnecessarily tense: now
choose to relax those muscles. Easy, once you are aware of where the
tensions are. The trick is to encourage this awareness to surface as often
as possible, and we can facilitate that by actively being aware during
practice. This way we learn to choose our actions and responses rather than
simply being a product of our reactions. From there comes the ability to tap
your own real potential, and from that comes mastery. That is where ‘Flow’
lives.
The more you are able to bring your focus fully to where you are, to what
you are doing, the less energy and thought you will give to fears born of
the past and the future. All that will remain is action, complete and
undiluted. This concept has many names across many cultures and philosophies
– but again, someone else’s name for something is not yours. Practise it,
experience it, go into it; then you will find you do not need to have a name
for it.
Fear is a static thing, it does not live in movement. Imagine a jungle path
at night. You walk the path warily, your mind imagining a sudden attack from
a snake or a spider dropping from the canopy above; you know fear then, and
it grows with every step you take. However, imagine what happens when that
snake does bite out of the blue – you react instantly, your body and mind
suddenly absorbed utterly in the moment in a combined effort to leap out of
range of the attack: The startle-reflex. In that moment, there is no fear
whatsoever. All of your being is engaged in escape, in movement. The fear
existed before the attack, and it will no doubt return after the attack (if
you were quick enough, of course!), but for the brief moment of the action
fear did not exist.
What is fascinating is that for the much larger period of time that you were
on the path, feeling afraid, the fact is that you were quite safe and not
being attacked. For the brief period when you were actually in danger, the
fear ceased to be. Extreme sports enthusiasts from every discipline as well
as survivors of extreme situations generally attest to the same thing: at
moments of great pressure and necessity, the anxious mind gets out of the
way and allows our latent, seemingly superhuman, abilities to take over. We
move through the fear, and it loses its power over us.
Now imagine what it would be like to expand the moment of no-fear so that it
spreads into the rest of the time on the path. The resulting state is one of
permanent awareness and readiness, but one that requires no effort or
paranoia; indeed it is utterly removed from paranoia, which is only the
complete absorption into one’s projected fears. It is a state of graceful
and efficient movement, free from fear-reactivity and residual muscle
tension and in harmony with thought rather than in conflict with it. This is
our true nature, the one that lays hidden most of our lives until we learn
to move beyond fear.
You might even find that, without fear, the walk in the dark jungle becomes
an enjoyable experience.
by D.Edwardes
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