Jim and I shared an all day lesson with Diana Rogers of the PMTS crew.
Spending the time and money, reinforced, for me the value of working
with someone who can analyze and almost immediately define what
THE SINGLE MOST IMPORTANT MOVEMENT the students needs to master in order
to improve.
When Jim and I were on our own, we each can look at the other and pick out
movements that are wrong, improperly timed, executed poorly etc.
The HUGE difference in having an expert look at your skiing is that they see all those, but can
focus on which is the most important piece to work on first.
The building blocks (amino acids anyone?) start with the feet and work up the body.
Hmmm, where have I heard that before?

Anyway, those of you who follow PMTS technique and are self taught, do yourself the BIG favor of
taking a camp or a private with a certified PMTS teacher at least once!
Jim and I both came away with clear cut movements to work on.
Videoing each other in the days following the lesson helped to tell the truth of when we "got it" and more importantly,
when we did not.
It's true, video does not lie

,though I wish it did.
Lynn