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My name is Rodney Shelton and I do Parkour & Free Running. I have been involved in it for a little over 3 years, my goal is to become a professional Traceur / Freerunner. Well i was born and raised in Manchester,TN. I dont have tons to do but I try to have as much fun as I can while I am here. Dont get me wrong I love my town, but I have plans for myself. Off and on through the years I help my dad with his construction and with his farming. Thats not what I want to be doing when Im his age. I would love to get into stunts for movies, commercials, or whatever else that would need stunts done. Even being sponsored by any company willing to help me live my dream. I believe that if you dont do what you love when you want to do it, you will eventually lose that love, so I try to do Parkour every day and it keeps me in shape like you wouldnt beleive. I just wish there where more locations around for good runs. I highly recommend Parkour and Free Running to anyone who is bored with walking in a straight line through their lives, just know your limits, their are none.
I live and breath for the next day I get to go out and do Parkour and Freerunning. It is the greatest sport for self improvment. I have been doing it for about 3 years. I would love to get sponsored so I can do this for a living. I am sure there are lots of products that I could be representing and help promote their products. I would not stop training if I got sponsored, because it would be my life. And I would be so happy. I hope a lower class farmer can get some sponsors to help him start his dream carrer. I just want to keep doing what I love. I believe if you don't do what you love you will not be truely happy. So thats why I need this, to be happy. I dont want to get a job thats not going to give back, every job i have ever worked i was not happy. Factory jobs will take your spirit away, you just become a machine doing things that dont help you expand your mind and body. This sport I do has changed me into a very open thinker and has made me adapt to whatever situation that comes. I love when I am doing Parkour the felling of complete focus. It is just being aware of what you are doing at the moment.
Parkour and Free Running Info
Parkour (sometimes abbreviated to PK) or l'art du déplacement (English: the art of displacement) is an activity with the aim of moving from one point to another as efficiently and quickly as possible, using principally the abilities of the human body. It is meant to help one overcome obstacles, which can be anything in the surrounding environment—from branches and rocks to rails and concrete walls—and can be practiced in both rural and urban areas. Parkour practitioners are referred to as traceurs, or traceuses for females.Founded by David Belle in France, parkour focuses on practicing efficient movements to develop one's body and mind to be able to overcome obstacles in an emergency.
Free running is a physical art, in which participants (free runners) use the urban and rural areas to perform movements through its structures focused on freedom and beauty. It incorporates efficient movements from parkour, adds aesthetic vaults and other acrobatics, such as tricking and street stunts, creating an athletic and aesthetically pleasing way of moving. It is commonly practiced at gymnasiums and in urban areas that are cluttered with obstacles.The term free running was coined during the filming of Jump London, as a way to present parkour to the English-speaking world. However, free running and parkour are separate, distinct concepts — a distinction which is often missed due to the aesthetic similarities. Parkour as a discipline comprises efficiency, whilst free running embodies complete freedom of movement — and includes many acrobatic manoeuvres. Although often times the two are physically similar, the mindsets of each are vastly different. The founder Sébastien Foucan defines free running as a discipline to self development, following your own way.
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"It is the little fears that quietly steal our lives. The grand concerns – death, loss, the meaning of existence… these things, by and large, we can and do ignore for most of our days. Philosophers and theologians may quibble and fret over the details of such imponderables, but most of us have not the time, or lack the inclination, or perhaps are just fortunate not to be burdened by too much curiosity. And many fears are rational, of course, and can be friends to our lives; the fear that heightens our awareness in a dark part of town, for example, or the fear of falling that we suddenly develop when standing too near a cliff’s edge on a windy day. Fear, however, is a clever beast. It is behind fear’s reasonable façade that the real danger lies, poised like the scorpion’s tail, ever ready to sting. How much of your day is given over to the small fears? It is more than you would at first think. They are the kind we barely notice, and yet rarely ignore. They are the fears that make each day comfortable: The fear of standing out that bends us all to conform in almost every way; the fear of being laughed at that holds us to silence when we would rather laugh out loud; the fear of rejection that causes us to avoid so many potential connections. These fears we are used to, for they get us through the day smoothly and with as little conflict as possible.
Quoted from Urbanfreeflow.com
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