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Home arrow Publications arrow Articles arrow Informative arrow "Go Big or Go Home" - Not part of Parkour
"Go Big or Go Home" - Not part of Parkour PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 25 September 2007
 

This article was submitted by APK user happydud - it is something everyone should take heed.

In short, there is no place for the extreme sports "Go Big or Go Home" attitude in Parkour.

When I started "parkour," (i put that in quotes because of the following) I really didn't know what it was all about. I just saw the techniques, I saw the videos, and I went out and did some really stupid stuff that could have seriously injured me. For a little while (and really, a VERY little while) the group I train with were all about "Go big or go home." I realized, pretty quickly (thankfully), that this was not what Parkour was about.... (please read more)

 

In short, there is no place for the extreme sports "Go Big or Go Home" attitude in Parkour.

When I started "parkour," (i put that in quotes because of the following) I really didn't know what it was all about. I just saw the techniques, I saw the videos, and I went out and did some really stupid stuff that could have seriously injured me. For a little while (and really, a VERY little while) the group I train with were all about "Go big or go home." I realized, pretty quickly (thankfully), that this was not what Parkour was about.

It isn't "Go big or go home." It isn't the X-Games. It's not about "jumping off of s%@*." I was damn lucky I didn't break both my legs. As it is, I bashed my hip on a screwed up precision (though that wasn't a "go big" thing, it was just sandy and I didn't check my surfaces (ANOTHER lesson learned)), and to this day a year and a half later, it still gets sore if I lay on it for too long.

Don't trust me on this. Don't blindly take my word for truth, or lies. Read. Read the articles stickied on the .Net forums. Read the articles on APK. Read the articles on NYPK, Colorado PK, any of the other
matured community sites (meaning not www.ihartpkandjumpingoffastuff.com). Read and THINK about it, ponder it, meditate on it - whatever on it - until you realize WHY Parkour is not about "go big or go home."

I think too quickly seasoned traceurs tell new people that big drops aren't what it's all about, but they don't give any reasons (other than the obvious health/safety reasons which a lot of people
apparently don't care about.)


In a thread I was reading recently, a new guy was saying he was drilling 10 foot drops - great. Now you know you can do it if you have to. What's the point in doing something THAT risky over and over and
over again until you get hurt?


A traceur named Jesse "Hardcoretraceur", whom I really respect, said something at the NYPK07 jam: Someone pointed to a roof and said "Could you jump from that?" He replied "Yes, but I don't want to."
HCT believes, and I agree with him, that the best way to train for drops is to do drops. Which means while squats and pistols and whatever else helps condition the legs, nothing conditions them for drops like doing drops. But he, and I, want to be doing Parkour when we're 30. 40. 50. We value our knees, so we stay ground-level. There's no reason to practice jumping off of buildings. If you ever need to, if you train hard enough with low drops, you'll probably be able to make a few big drops without a problem. But if you train a ton of high drops, the damage you're doing is going to prevent you from doing ANYTHING pretty quickly.

So please, anyone who is still of the "Go big or go home" attitude: Don't change because I tell you to. Or because M2 tells you to, or Sebastian, or eZ, or David Belle. But do LISTEN to us. Take our advice. The advice of people who have been in your position. And then do your own reading, your own thinking, and keep searching until you find the path to the same conclusion we found.


Users' Comments  RSS feed comment
 

Display 14 of 14 comments

1. 09-25-2007 06:41

Also... ah, am I the only one who clicked on www.ihartpkandjumpingoffastuff .com and hoped something was there? ;)
ohfomehxr

2. 09-25-2007 06:54

No, Ohfomehxr, I did, too. 
 
Hardcore and Happydud FTW! Yay!
HuoMaKe

3. 09-25-2007 07:16

I think that was worded well. 
 
The way that me and my friends often talk about the that HCT mentioned, is that there is a big difference between the words "can" and "should."  
 
(By that I mean stuff like this: "Can I take that drop? Probably. Should I? Absolutely not.")
OmahaBeef

4. 09-25-2007 10:08

Good stuff. But one part made me laugh. 
 
"Sebastien, or Ez or David Belle." 
 
One of these things is not like the others...
Shkitzelbaugh

5. 09-25-2007 14:17

Great article - nice and to the point. :-)
Cav

6. 09-25-2007 18:45

i hope this wasnt inspired by me jumping off my roof :o 
 
what do you think a good height to practice drops from is then?
phreaknite

7. 09-25-2007 19:20

if you can't jump on it dont jump off of it
ara_v_q

8. 09-26-2007 10:22

yea i know what your friend was talking about when he said, yes but i dont want to, ive done that many times...
argetlam

9. 09-26-2007 11:58

ara_v_q, start by jumping off like a 6 inch step and landing as quietly as you can. Practicing one story drops, especially for a beginner, is a recipe for disaster--if not now, then down the road.
OmahaBeef

10. 09-26-2007 14:19

The above message was directed at phreaknite. 
 
btw, the formatting for these comments is painful to read lol. Its hard to tell who is saying what.
OmahaBeef

11. 09-26-2007 18:28

While I agree that an extreme attitude is not for good for parkour or you, I do believe that a healthy dose of competition is good. Having friends who will urge you on to new hights and challenge you in your core level training, and imagine flows can help you progress. But only in moderation
crazymex

12. 09-27-2007 13:47

...a little more... 
 
http://www.nyparkour.com/ forums/viewtopic.php?t=171
Diezytres

13. 09-27-2007 18:17

"Good stuff. But one part made me laugh.  
 
"Sebastien, or Ez or David Belle."  
 
One of these things is not like the others..." 
 
-that's really not fair, he still lives with his mom because his dedication to parkour doesnt leave much time for anything else.
hardcoretraceur

14. 09-27-2007 18:19

alright happydud! (i really respect you too!) keep on keepin on.
hardcoretraceur

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