Yeah theres a lot of moving parts, and you kinda gotta watch it as many times as it takes to keep your eyes on ONE individual thruout the entire clip.
Its like that video where they tell you to count the basketball passes and while you are focused on that, there is a gorilla dancing in the background that you dont notice at all until next time you watch the clip and then you are surprised because how tf did i not notice the gorilla? Thats the point. We need to be aware of our weaknesses.
I practice this when crossing the street with busy traffic; cars going in a bunch of different directions.
I stare at a point in space on the ground, and allow my peripheral vision to see the cars on my left, right, and anything else to come into my vision and awareness.
Same thing with checking my blind spot before changing lanes while driving; I try not to look at a single window and instead see the whole scenery behind the car chassis, I try to see all the windows and the whole background as I sweep my vision from side-to-side.
Thanks man.
edit: the yellow arrow on the left distracted me from the WTF guy.
Yeah theres a lot of moving parts, and you kinda gotta watch it as many times as it takes to keep your eyes on ONE individual thruout the entire clip.
Its like that video where they tell you to count the basketball passes and while you are focused on that, there is a gorilla dancing in the background that you dont notice at all until next time you watch the clip and then you are surprised because how tf did i not notice the gorilla? Thats the point. We need to be aware of our weaknesses.
Reminds me of Miyamoto Musashi, he said we must train our eyes to see everything
Any good tips on how to do that?
I practice this when crossing the street with busy traffic; cars going in a bunch of different directions.
I stare at a point in space on the ground, and allow my peripheral vision to see the cars on my left, right, and anything else to come into my vision and awareness.
Same thing with checking my blind spot before changing lanes while driving; I try not to look at a single window and instead see the whole scenery behind the car chassis, I try to see all the windows and the whole background as I sweep my vision from side-to-side.
That's my interpretation of what Musashi said.