Not sure but I remember doing cartwheels effortlessly in middle school and can do it anytime,anywhere just as naturally as walking,so I assume the handstand would work the same way.
>just as naturally as walking,
Kek Reminds me of this video of this Asian gymnast doing 100 cartwheels down a path in a park. Can't find it anymore though
you should try to hold the position as long as possible
At around 34s when he talks about using the wall properly it seems that he starts pushing away from the wall by putting only one foot on it, to get closer to the position of a free handstand. It's hard at first to keep your body straight and maintaining your balance, you gotta develop a feeling for it
Against a wall is harder. I started in a door frame walking up one side with my back to the other.
I'm practicing free handstands now but have trouble getting into them.
Train hindu squats, they train leg mobility and bounciness pretty well if the kick up part is the hard one for you. Elbow Stands and Frog Stands are a good place to start as well to develop hand/spine strength for stabilizing muscles.
Why would you ever need to do that?
after squatting because he has leg DOMS
to train
I have a totally unnecessary desire to do one armed handstand push-ups
Don't trust convict conditioning, I've never seen anyone do them full rom and/or without wall support.
Do it against a wall, and practice
Is it this one of those things where if you never did it as a kid you will never do it? Like cartwheels?
Not sure but I remember doing cartwheels effortlessly in middle school and can do it anytime,anywhere just as naturally as walking,so I assume the handstand would work the same way.
>just as naturally as walking,
Kek Reminds me of this video of this Asian gymnast doing 100 cartwheels down a path in a park. Can't find it anymore though
So should I repeat hand stands against the wall like reps or just remain still while handstanded
you should try to hold the position as long as possible
At around 34s when he talks about using the wall properly it seems that he starts pushing away from the wall by putting only one foot on it, to get closer to the position of a free handstand. It's hard at first to keep your body straight and maintaining your balance, you gotta develop a feeling for it
Or having sex with your uncle
Would you quit bragging
Just train in 10x gravity like a normal person
Against a wall is harder. I started in a door frame walking up one side with my back to the other.
I'm practicing free handstands now but have trouble getting into them.
Train hindu squats, they train leg mobility and bounciness pretty well if the kick up part is the hard one for you. Elbow Stands and Frog Stands are a good place to start as well to develop hand/spine strength for stabilizing muscles.