Psychologists have found crawling is one of the most important activities we ever accomplish, because it profoundly affects the brain and its capacity to learn. The right-hand-left-leg, left-hand-right-leg rhythm of alternation acts upon our nervous systems like the surf upon the coastline, developing it, shaping it, and preparing it for all sorts of more sophisticated levels of learning and awareness later in life. So that subject line is more profound that we originally knew. It’s also the first training we all get the learning to walk. We do need to have that right left action in place or walking becomes nigh on impossible. As we progress through life the same process happens. Learning to feed ourselves. Potty training. Riding a bicycle. Playing games. Playing sport. School. Everything is a process of starting where we are and adding knowledge to build on that. But it’s not just the knowledge is it? It’s also putting that knowledge into action. Then taking what we learned from the action to add to our knowledge and taking better action. This process is everywhere, so why do we stop some things before we get where we were aiming? I think it comes down to our indoctrination. We have been hammered for years about instant this and instant that. We have come to believe that if something doesn’t happen instantly then we’ve done it wrong and we quit. That’s the epiphany I had that prompted me to create the Kaizen Coach. It doesn’t care if you’ve taken the action or not, it’s going to ask you again tomorrow if you’ve done what you said you’d do. It won’t judge you if you don’t. It won’t judge you if you do. It will applaud your activity, and adjust the activity if you miss multiple times. You can reset to a different goal when you complete the current one. And it’s 100% focussed on you and what you want. Check it out for yourself here: kaizen-coach.surfer3l337.workers.dev/. Regards, |
