Untitled — 3 weeks ago
Worth doing!
I have been having a lot of fun with this goal. I used to barely do anything like climb up the side of a building. Now that’s so easy.
I really like parkour :)
Worth doing!
I have been having a lot of fun with this goal. I used to barely do anything like climb up the side of a building. Now that’s so easy.
I really like parkour :)
So I notice…as I looked down my list of goals that I had a lot of goals that related to parkour.
-Eat less sugar
-Exercise Regularly
-Stretch every day
So I removed them all from my list because I found that those are really my goals to become a better traceur. A better athlete. So I must keep those in mind.
i can give lessons to people in the north wales or who can make it to wrexham i am really good at parkour even though i am young but you have my word it will be worth it i can do all the basics dash kong double kong you name it i am also going to florida so if there is anyone there who is interested please contact me at ozzy-99er@hotmail.com
ozzy
I may be older than most who take this up, but I know I can have fun with this. I have always had a self-image of being someone who is athletic, fit, flexible, and there have been times when I was some of the above, but in the last few years I have put on weight, gotten injuries, been old, tired and achey.
It’s time to remember that I CAN do backflips, cartwheels, be light on my feet, be undaunted by the urban obstacles around me.
i live in london and am looking for the closest parkour lessons to earls court.
a way to fly without wings,
and i’m going to learn how.
bring it on world,
and fuck you all.
Enjoyed watching videos on youtube, so yesterday I went out and tried it for the first time. There is a set of condos near where I was visiting. The different obstacles made for a lot of fun. Had other people interested pretty quickly. Probably looked pretty inelegant, but the pleasure I derived from it was worth it.
I’ve got to just go out and do it! Seems like a nice way to get around.
Jump London
Free running or parkour (‘the art of moving’) is urban sport at its most unadulterated; few would deny the beauty inherent in its transformation of urban landscapes into arenas for physical expression, or the simplicity of its purpose: to pass obstacles in the fastest and most direct manner possible. Following a boom in parkour’s popularity in the last few years, Paul Corkery established Urban Freeflow (www.urbanfreeflow.co.uk) to promote safe parkour at a time when copycats were launching themselves off multi-storey car parks with abandon. Corkery runs an Urban Freeflow Academy offering two-hour classes on Monday and Friday nights (£5 per session) at the Moberley Sports and Education Centre (101 Kilburn Lane, W10; 020 7641 4807), and a range of advanced classes (£10 per session) around the city on a first-come, first-served basis.
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Savannah
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K.N. Senko asks,
“How should i start building up my strength and what moves should i practice? Right now i'm trying to lose weight and want to start running, what else do i need to work on as a beginner?”
— 9 months ago |
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