Guys, forgive my stupidity but I really am this dumb.
I've been following closely, and I think I understand what you mean by sectional power. I also think I understand the mental part of more fluid power. I'm just having a hard time with the physicality of it.
The body is made up of fairly rigid bones, joined at the joints which move in a given range of motion. The bones don't "whip" to any practical degree, so in a purely physiological sense, muscle can only move us in "sections." I certainly understand the difference between so-called angular and "curved" shots, but in accurate language, the body does not move in any other manner except "sectionally." Muscles only contract or relax, and the bone structures move through their ranges of motion directly as a result. In other words, from a kinesthetic or physiological point of view, all movement is a matter of varying degrees of sectional coordination. More coordination means "smoother" motion, but as Tant mentioned earlier, that's very largely a matter of timing.
So my question is, are we talking about the same thing? The difference between rough and refined timing and coordination? Or is it more a matter of "mental direction?" In other words, is there some physiological way to move that ignorant mortals like me just don't understand, or are we really looking at the difference between rudimentary and highly polished timing and coordination?
Thanks
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