WORK HARD
~ unknown
STAY HUMBLE
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WORK HARD
~ unknown
STAY HUMBLE
slip:4a471.
What lessons does the practice of Parkour teach about community, personal growth, and resilience?
Adam McClellan discusses his work with Parkour Generations Americas, the parkour community in America, and his local community. He goes into his transition from martial arts to parkour, before delving into goal setting and how he motivates himself. Adam finishes by sharing people he draws inspiration from and why coaching parkour is so important to him.
A rising tide lifts all boats, and through events like Art of Retreat, we’re realizing we can all benefit by working together.
~ Adam McClellan (0:53)
The conversation explores the broad implications of Parkour on personal growth, community development, and coaching philosophies. Adam discusses Parkour Generations’ work in creating partnerships with various organizations, emphasizing trust-building and long-term collaboration. He highlights the growing unity within the American Parkour community, describing a shift toward collaboration and shared growth over individual competition.
On a personal level, McClellan shares his journey from martial arts to Parkour, driven by the transparency and humility inherent in Parkour’s practice. He reflects on the physical and mental challenges of advanced training courses and the value of failure in pushing boundaries. The conversation also delves into his coaching philosophy, advocating for spreading Parkour’s core values effectively and inclusively.
Takeaways
Strength, touch, and spirit — Core elements that define Parkour as a practice, blending physical, mental, and community aspects.
Community collaboration — The rising trend of cooperation within the American Parkour community, fostering mutual growth and shared opportunities.
Transparency in movement — The unique quality of Parkour, where skill is immediately visible and ego has no place.
The role of failure — Viewing failure as a necessary and valuable part of growth in training and life.
Parkour coaching impact — Emphasis on making Parkour accessible and inspiring to others through intentional coaching methods.
Transition from martial arts — A shift from a field driven by appearances to one defined by authentic skill and humility.
Building community spaces — The dream of creating a hub for Parkour practitioners to train, connect, and grow together.
Adapting goals — A preference for broad, flexible objectives over rigid benchmarks to encourage creativity and exploration.
Resources
Parkour Generations — The global organization involved in Parkour coaching, partnerships, and community development.
Art of Retreat — A gathering of Parkour coaches and community leaders in the U.S.
American Council on Exercise (ACE) — Partner organization that uses Parkour coaching standards.
ADEPT Level 2 Course — A rigorous certification program for advanced Parkour coaches.
Lehigh Valley Martial Arts — The martial arts school where Adam McClellan began his training journey.
(Written with help from Chat-GPT.)
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I can accept failure, but I cannot accept not trying.
~ unknown
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Here it is! After five years of work and planning, my mom has her new house.
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A champion is someone who gets up when he can’t.
~ Jack Dempsy
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For remembering makes everything “just now,” doesn’t it? Just now I was a boy, sitting in the house of Sotion the philosopher; Just now I began to argue cases; Just now I stopped wanting to argue them; Just now I ceased to be able. The rapidity of time is boundless—and is more evident when one looks back. For though it goes at breakneck speed, it glides by so smoothly that those who are intent on the present moment fail to notice it passing.
~ Seneca
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The question is, do we want parkour to be a thing that is a casual part of more people’s lifestyles, like walking a dog or riding a bike? Or do we want it to be a pursuit only the able and passionate need bother even try?
~ Amy Vhan from, «https://fallingleavesandabird.com/2016/11/29/parkour-spectacle-competition/»
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In Brooklyn today for interview 3… I bet it’s not who you expect.
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The greatest danger to our future is apathy.
~ Jane Goodall
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Thanks @wildfoxfarm! Refrig-pickling for several weeks of nibbling.
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