Your physical practice need not be oriented toward developing your generalist movement potential to inform your movement perspective. Consider, however, that your physical practice carries extremely high potentiality to affect your perspective, and vice-versa.

Our ‘perspective’ is the filter through which we comprehend our selves, the world & beings around us, and our position within and in relation to this world. All experience is filtered through our perspective and translated into an understanding. Our perspective/s are not fixed, and therefore our understandings also change. Our understanding is the basis of our logic and expression.

A ‘Movement Perspective’ is a perception of one’s existence from the departure point of ‘Movement‘ as it’s irreducible condition. As such, it will both affect and determine your actions, reactions, and refractions of your experience. It will inform not only any current or prospective physical, spiritual, or intellectual practice, but also self & social conduct, experiential & educational orientation, and ethical and ecological outlook.

The term ‘movement perspective’ is, again, not a fixed or exclusive term. It is neither a category or school of thought, nor a method or system of thinking. It is rather an understanding, whether expressed through movement-oriented terms or others – that movement is an irreducible condition of experience and existence.

Whilst developing your movement perspective does not require a physical practice, without one there would be imbalance; although generally considered intellectual properties, research, theorization, and calculation are too (no less and no more) facets of physical practice. Further, there are experiences accessible only through the body, and those unique to the mind.

This is by no means an isolated phenomenon.

Your physical practice need not be oriented toward developing your generalist movement potential to inform your movement perspective. Consider, however, that your physical practice carries extremely high potentiality to affect your perspective, and vice-versa.

A simple summary of the cycle:  your physical practice informs your perspective and your perspective informs your physical practice in return. They do, therefore, reflect and refract each other.

Hold reconciling your physical practice and perspective in high priority.