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Float Loading's Downstroke Right Elbow -- Bend With Stretch
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Despite Float-Loading's characteristic 'gentle and lazy' Motion, the Power Package is always structured -- never 'flimsy' -- and its Execution is always deliberate and positive, never 'wobbly' (3-F-6). This Structure -- Left Arm and Right Forearm Flying Wedges glued together and stretched with Extensor Action -- is identical to that of Drive and Drag Loading (10-19-A/C). Bottom line: It's okay to think of the Arms as ropes . . . As long as you think of those ropes as stretched. |
Right you are
I have probably blithered on this point before but right arm participation was my epiphany. It would have been a theophany but I still have to execute! :angel1: Golf for a right hander is a left handed game is what those that meant well told me! :rolleyes: Initially I favored hitting because it reinforced the discovery of my bionic right arm! But as Yoda confirms the right arm is not passive for swinging. I think muscular thrust is far more drastic than most people think...and are not really doing it when they think they are. Why? Extensor Action was unknown to them in both thought and practice. Extensor action had me feeling that my right tricep was driving when in reality it was not. I thought I had "switter's multiple personalities' disorder for a while there. I even thought about becoming a hitter! So...I think learning to hit is helpful in understanding the possibilities of the right arm...then you decide. For twenty years I attempted to keep my right hand out of it, only to reduce my right arm to a shackled villian. Bent and level right wrist takes care of the flapping right hand...now let the right arm's attempt to always straighten along with the corresponding checkrein of the left arm provide the structure you need. If you are a righty it is a right handed game. Period. That way you can giver er' hell!
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Thanks again for this and all you do! Matt |
Yoda from 6-24-05
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Now if my right arm is completely relaxed and I bend the right elbow it bends very easily, but if I contract the Triceps the right elbow does not bend easily (it bends with resistance). Is this the idea, the right elbow bending should not feel effortless but take a LITTLE BIT of force. I'm sure this could easily be overdone and spin out of control. Thanks, Matt |
Keep in mind that while we talk about the specific motion/action of the left vs. right arm, it is really the entire power package that is being 'swung' or 'carried'.
The hitter is using muscle power - arm power - pressure point #1. The swinger is using rotational - pivot power - pressure point #4. Both are moving the 'entire package'. The lazy flowing backswing of a true swinger simply uses CF to maintain the structure. This works ok if you can always trust the flow of CF, but far better to add/maintain that structure with extensor action. This one is for you Bucket...... Keep in mind you must "swing the entire package"! See 6-A-1, 6-B-1, 6-B-4 |
Extensor Action From Start Up to Follow-Through
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Putting Bucket together with the entire package..........it is going to be a train wreck! :shock: Another great post! Thanks. :salut: UPP in freezing Ohio |
Yoda
Does the TGM path to true CF swinging often run through "Hittersville"? (And then maybe sometimes back). I think I heard someplace that Homer thought it easier for the hitter to swing than vice versa. Im guessing it had something to do with structure, extensor action and elbow action and the learning there of. Any drills for teaching the right elbow to bend while employing extensor action? Down swing waggles? |
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I’m not a Yoda, but here’s my 2 cents. At my best, by not consciously using Extensor Action from Startup, I have this need to ‘Leave my hands at the Top’ as I begin my Down Stroke Pivot. Or, if I start my Downswing Pivot before my Backswing ends, then my hands are left at the Top without me having to consciously do so. The Stretch can be felt in my left shoulder but also in my arms. When I use Extensor Action at Startup, then I don’t feel the need to leave my Hands at the Top because the Slack has already been removed. Not entirely, not 100%, but pretty close. So, to me, Extensor Action takes out much of the ‘Wobble’ and reduces the amount of feelings and motions in my swing. The amount of Extensor Action muscle needed depends on how much Wobble (looseness) exists. I have found it very valuable because I don’t want to disturb or have the #3 pressure point being jerked around at the start of my Downswing. If I extend my Left arm a slight amount at Startup, then the amount of Extensor Action muscle usage pressure effort, is reduced by a fair amount. But no amount of Extensor Action Muscle power effort can overcome a Left Arm that wants to stay slack. Addressing the Hitter/Swinger issue: I can only say that the more I’ve learned, the more I’ve come to realize the Sameness’s are the same but the differences are significantly different. I can’t see how one would lead to the other. |
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