macroth wrote:ranger wrote:social gaff
Doing a lot of social fishing these days?
You know, there's no shame in avoiding words that you can never spell properly, even if you're a college English professor.
On another note, just because you're socially inept doesn't mean conventional social behavior is the problem.
I don't think that conventional social behavior is a problem at all.
It serves it purpose beautifully.
Athletic achievement, though, is not primarily social.
So if a training plan is oriented toward social value rather than athletic effectiveness, it is somewhat off the mark, unless it admits as much, which rarely happens.
It just seems to be a fact:
If social nicities are just described for what they are, they no longer function.
We need to think they are something that they aren't in order to maintain them effectively at all.
For instance, we seem to need to think that the training plans we have for rowing are the most effective ones possible, not that they are just what makes us feel good, or what we are willing to do, or what is suited to our particular circumstances and personal histories, or what we know about because it is what we and others did back when and therefore what has been done ever since, etc.
Ah, yea.
Sorry about the gaffe with _gaff_.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)