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Stealth: Making Silence

“Silence, in most cases, demonstrates efficiency. Move while producing the
least amount of noise as you touch the ground and you demonstrate masterful
muscle control. If you want to know the degree of your coordination, agility
and balance, listen rather than watch. The less you hear, the greater the
skill level.” - Scott Sonnon, Master of Sports and U.S. National Coach
How often
have you stopped simply to listen to the world around you? Indeed, how often
have you actually listened to yourself? Admittedly, against the constant
background drone of an urban society this can sometimes be hard to manage.
Noise, bright lights, the rush of the city – these things are the trappings
of our modern life, so much so that we easily forget the pleasure of natural
silence.
Generally we tend to lead fairly discordant lives, this displayed by our
clumsiness and our clatter as we go about everyday tasks. People are always
shouting to be heard, firing out opinions like automatic weapons, slamming
doors and stamping feet, like petulant children demanding attention from the
adults in the room. Always noise.
And
what is any noise but a disruption of the endless flow of silence? Silence
is the base. Silence is the foundation. Silence is the formlessness from
which all form manifests. It is this silence that we aspire to. Not the
passive hush that comes from doing nothing, but the powerful and active
silence that results from true mastery of one’s art.
Why be silent?
It
is important to understand that it is not just being quiet for quiet’s sake:
it has a purpose. That purpose is to improve and refine your control over
your physical abilities. Moving silently means moving with absolute
precision as well as with constant awareness of your body. You must be
choosing how much noise your footsteps and movements make, not letting
mere chance decide. For a good example, observe a cat moving about a house –
its every step is measured, its landings are controlled, and all needless
sound is avoided. Cats move with perfect control.
However you want to move, whatever path you choose to take, stealth must be
a core component of your practice of Parkour. Every aspect of your
game will benefit from being able to do it with less noise, quietly…
stealthily. So while you train, listen to your movements.
A loud
landing is a heavy landing. Think about it: the softer any impact is, the
less sound it generates. Hit someone with a pillow and then with a piece of
4-by-2 and you’ll get the picture. If you want to be able to practise up
unto a ripe old age, it is imperative that you minimise the impact your body
and joints receive. If you can land quietly, you can be fairly sure the
impact is negligible.
As
with everything, the key is to start small. Try dropping off a bench, or a
table, but do it silently. This is where technique and refinement will
assist: land on the balls of your feet first, absorbing the energy through
the muscles of your legs as you crouch. Place your hands down in front of
yourself for extra surety of balance. Do this until you can land without
noise, cat-like, poised to move on immediately – then up the height. Then
try it with precisions. Then with rail precisions.
And it
isn’t just in landings that we can incorporate the principles of stealth.
Listen to your footsteps when you walk or run: are your feet crashing down
like buckets of cement with each step, flat-footed and heavy? If so, time to
go back to basics and learn to walk properly my friend: Heel-to-ball-to-toe.
Flex the ankle. Energy should be directed forwards, not up and down: always
think efficiency. Try to keep your head at the same height when walking or
running. Be balanced, not tipped forwards or leaning back. Relax the
muscles. Be stealthy, like a stalking cat. Flow, even when you
walk! Herein lies self-mastery.
Having trouble being silent?
Recruit your muscles…
All
motion involves a collusion of many muscles. In crude terms, the more
muscles you can engage for any one movement, the more power and control that
movement will have. Isolation is inefficiency. Learn to think of the body as
an undivided whole, for that is exactly what it is.
Our
musculatures are symmetrical as well as sympathetic: tense your right bicep
and upto 20% of that tension will be reflected in your left one. Improve the
grip of one hand by clenching the other at the same time. You will see that
the muscles of the body are all interconnected on many levels, and none of
them works alone. Understanding this can help you greatly improve your
economy of effort within any movement. This brings control, and this in turn
will bring silence.
Look
at a decent boxer’s punch: it isn’t just the arm, or even the shoulders that
give it that dynamic speed and power. A whole array of muscles is involved,
from the toes and lower leg through the hips and torso and then lastly the
shoulder and arm. This is known as muscle recruitment, and it applies
across the board for all sports and physical activities, and no less for
Freestyle Parkour.
A poor
landing, for instance, is one in which the impact is managed only by the
knees and lower legs. The full range of muscles are not recruited
effectively into the action, and the resulting heavy jolt will shock the
spine and have negative effects upon the entire skeletal structure. And it
will be loud.
A good
landing, however, will disperse the impact through the whole body as all the
muscles work to support each other, much like the ribs of a coiled spring.
Such a landing will be soft, graceful and controlled. And it will be quiet.
Stealth Runs
One of
the best methods for developing your stealth, and hence your muscle control,
is to practice what are affectionately known as ‘Stealth Runs’.
These
are effectively uninterrupted periods of movement, over any terrain, often
at night, wherein the goal is simply to move as quietly and efficiently as
possible. Speed is not important here, nor particularly are aesthetics. Just
move, interact with whatever comes your way, but always do it silently. If
training with others, monitor each other’s noise levels, see if you can hear
the one ahead and the one behind – and if someone is too loud, let them know
about it with a definite ‘shush’.
The
concept of a Stealth Run is not to sneak about, but rather not to draw
attention to yourself. The aim is to move fluidly and in harmony with your
environment, such that people simply do not notice you are there because you
are not generating any stimuli that their senses might pick up on. This is a
great way to train your body as well as your immediate spatial awareness,
and it’s great fun too. Try it: but try it quietly.
The Art of Making Silence
No
matter how loud our everyday environment is, we all have the ability to
fashion our own silent space within it. Not only does moving quietly enable
you to master your own movements, it also greatly improves your ability to
observe the world around you, just as you can listen only when you are not
speaking. This improved observation helps us find harmony with our
surroundings, which in turn helps us move through them with ease and grace.
And
the benefits of silence stretch beyond the physical arena as well. You will
find as you progress through stealth training that the endless discourse
within your mind begins to fade into the background, allowing pure
concentration and focus to come to the fore.
You will find that you become free from any distraction, inner or outer.
Free to move.
Let others make noise; we can learn to make silence.
by D.Edwardes
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