Back-Handspring - Keeping the Head Neutral |
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I always
throw my head backwards!!!!!! Puh-lease explain to me the proper Thanks!! Stormy Stormy has quite a few corrections to make in that handspring! Let's work on the "head-toss". The back-handspring is a "Blind-Entry" tumbling skill. That means you are "blind," or "can't see" where you are going as you spring from your FEET onto your HANDS. In other words, when you do the skill correctly, you SHOULD NOT see where your hands are about to land until the moment before they touch the floor. That's scary! The NATURAL urge is to lift your chin & "toss" your head backwards. Partly the chin-lift "URGE" is caused by the desire to see where you are going. Partly that "URGE" is to help generate motion & power. However, instead of helping the handspring, the head-toss hurts you. Tossing your head backwards tends to place the body into a position that is weak, dangerous, difficult to control and sloppy looking. You must LEARN to resist the "instinct" of tossing the head backwards. You will learn to discipline the head & shoulders into a position that is STRONG, SAFE, CONTROLLED and BEAUTIFUL.
Throughout the handspring the head should remain in a "NEUTRAL"
position; neither tossed backwards, nor tucked forwards.It stays in the
middle, in neutral. An easy "rule" to follow is this... "Keep
your ARMS against your EARS". Now remember, from the beginning of the handspring, through the leg-push-backwards... as you REACH into the handstand with the hands...through the handstand position... through the arm push/spring... and through the hollow-body landing... the head should remain in approximately that same position. NEUTRAL. I recommend that the ARM swing, commonly used to gain momentum in the standing back-handspring, be AVOIDED... for the first 300 handsprings! Wait until the HABIT of proper head position is very well established. Once a tumbler is ready to perform the standing handspring with VERY little, or no spot, it's acceptable to allow the arms swing. It helps build momentum. Another very common teaching technique is to hold the arms straight out in FRONT of the body at the beginning, as if to balance. Don't do it! ~CW! |
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