Bill Hartman 42:08–43:29
Or don't even tell them anything. And just have them do it. And then you get to be the judge of like, oh, okay, we captured a better representation of iron at the bottom. We saw a stronger turnaround. They usually comment, they go, wow, that was so much easier. That's usually what happens. Gotcha. If I may, one of the things that you may wanna consider if you're having trouble in progressing that is you start them from the static representation where they actually have to just hold the position that you're trying to capture and then slowly increase the amplitude above and below, right? So they're doing an impulse literally at that level. And then you expand it, you say, now start here, come down and catch it and come right back up, come down and catch it and come right back up, come down and catch it and come right back up. So you just slowly expand the excursion that they're moving without resistance. So the drop, right? And then they have to catch. And so then you're increasing the rate at which they have to perform that progressively. And then doing so, then you get your nice little concentric overcoming where you get the nice stiff connective tissue response that goes along with them capturing the concentric orientation.
movement progressioneccentric-concentric transitionstatic to dynamic movementconnective tissue responsemovement amplitude