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In downhill movement, the most important visible element is FLOW.
In Japanese, we might simply call it nagareーflow.
It’s not about speed, and it’s not about never stopping.
It’s about not letting the movement stagnate.
When there is flow, nothing catches.
There is no forcing acceleration,
no hard, deliberate braking.
The falling motion carries itself naturally into the next movement,
one motion handed off seamlessly to the next.
No gaps appear.
Of course, in downhill movement,
the most important thing is braking control.
How you manage speed,
where you restrain it and where you let it runー
that adjustment is the foundation of everything.
But whether that braking control is working or not
appears on the surface as FLOW.
When braking is properly managed,
movement connects naturally,
and the sense of “doing something” disappears from the appearance.
Going one step further,
what I may really be aiming for
is a kind of invisibility in skiing.
From the chairlift,
I don’t want people to think,
“Oh, they’re really doing something.”
I want the skiing to look that natural.
With carving skis,
you can tell immediately:
“Oh, they’re carving.”
With telemark skiing,
you might think,
“Oh, they’re really working that telemark position.”
The moment that kind of “doing-ness” comes to the foreground,
the movement becomes explanatory,
and the flow is broken.
What I want to strip away
is precisely that sense of “trying.”
Nothing appears to be happening.
It looks like nothing more than falling.
And yet, it is clearly controlled.
That, to me, is FLOW.
Because telemark skiing is heel-free,
it allows a much greater range of motion in the joints.
This also means a much wider range of braking adjustment.
Holding back, easing off, letting it flowー
these subtle changes can be controlled
directly through joint movement.
That’s why, from the perspective of flow,
telemark skiing feels especially well suited to downhill movement.
Rather than trying to stop gravity,
or exaggerate it,
you simply move along with it.
Heel-free equipment makes that possible.
That’s why, when I go skiing in the mountains,
I choose heel-free gear.
In natural terrain,
flow is not something you chop into piecesー
it’s something you maintain.
Alpine skiing, on the other hand,
offers a more limited range of joint motion.
As a result, movements tend to rely on
clear rhythm and strong contrasts in force.
It’s a refined technique,
but in the mountains it can feel overly assertive.
I sometimes call that quality “macho.”
Movement where strength pushes itself to the front.
Less about yielding to the mountain,
and more about doing something to it.
In downhill movement,
what matters is not displaying technique.
With braking control as the foundation,
the goal is to keep the flow unbroken.
If, with heel-free telemark skis,
I can express a fall that is so natural
it goes unnoticed from the chairliftー
then I feel I’m getting close
to my own idea of FLOW.
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