powerplant42 wrote:Are you describing having the eyes' point of central focus being one place while the mind's point of focus being somewhere else in your field of vision? Looking at the bottom hand for instance, but focussing your attention on the horizon?
There's a lot of ways of looking at this but it all happens so fast, it's hard to say for sure. It's a bit of a blur for me, and quite frankly, I have to dig a little further back into my memory than you guys.
PP, I don't think you'd focus your MIND on the horizon ... that would be purely visual. But what I MIGHT be saying (not sure, because it happens so fast, and it's so subconcious) is that your SHORT-RANGE focus might be more mental than visual. I had my eyes wide open during the entire vault ... but I think my primary receptors to my spatial orientation and balance "in the air" and "upside down" were not my eyes ... they were my ... built in gyroscope ... whatever scientific label you and VaultMarq want to put on that.
If you search for "gyroscope", you'll find my quote from Sep 19, 2008, where I talk about something related to this ... here ... http://polevaultpower.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=38&t=15483&p=116313&hilit=gyroscope#p116313
It’s like having a built-in gyroscope in your inner ear that automagically points your legs straight up. I recall that in high school, it took me a long time to become comfortable getting upside-down on the pole. It’s not natural. But after training hard for several years on rope, rings, and highbar, I became totally comfortable in the inverted position on the pole. I guess what you’re doing when you do inverted gymnastics drills is to literally TRAIN YOUR INNER EAR (your vestibular system) to become accustomed to this.
And I see that I referred to the "vestibular system" back then, but the ...
VaultMarq26 wrote:... proprioception (which is from Golgi Tendon Organs in the tendons of your muscles) ...
... that VaultMarq refers to is a new one on me, so I bow to his expertise in this area.
Kirk