Spotting: Your Secret Training Partner
Spotting isn’t just for beginners—it’s a tool the best acrobats in the world still use to refine their skills. A good spotter doesn’t just catch you when things go wrong; they help you push past fear, refine technique, and build confidence in new skills.
Think of it this way: If you’re hesitant, your body holds back. But when you know you have support, you commit fully. That commitment is often the missing piece in making a trick work.
But there’s a difference between spotting correctly and over-spotting. The goal is to give just enough assistance so the flyer or performer can feel their own movement—not to carry them through it. The best spotters are like training wheels: present when needed, but slowly fading as control improves.
💡 Your challenge this week: Next time you train a skill that scares you, ask for a spot. Focus on committing fully while they assist, then gradually reduce the support until you own the move solo.
PS – Even elite performers have coaches and spotters. Mastery isn’t about going it alone—it’s about knowing when to get the right support.