Very interesting. Is there such a thing as a moving pause? I would think that a pause is a temporary stop, but a stop, nonetheless. If something is continuing to move, then isn't it technically still defined as moving and not pausing, even though it slows down?
Fran Crimi
(Trained Instructor)
Nothing bad meant when I said trained instructor, just didn't know how to word that.
I guess what I was trying to get at is when people are talking about pausing between, backstroke, and forward stroke, whether it's a stationary (or physical stop) or whether it's a continuing of motion even though not backward or forward motion there still is either a physical or a time lapse between the backward and forward motions.
There is something going on in either instance between the the two (backward and forward) motions. Which I would think would give, in either case a chance for the benefits of said pause to kick in.
As far as it not being a pause if the if the cue is still moving I guess someone could call it what ever they want, I just chose to call it what I did for lack of a better term.
Question? If I was talking with you and speaking out loud as one would in a normal conversation, and in the middle of a sentence I stopped speaking out loud but kept moving my lips, mouthing words, and then started speaking out loud again. Was there a pause in the conversation even though my lips were still moving?
I'm saying there was a pause (even though my lips were moving)
You could hear me, then you couldn't, and then you could again.
Of coarse I'm relating this to the pump stroke, as in the backward movement has stopped, and the forward motion hasn't started yet and even though the back hand is moving, to me there has been a pause
between the backward and forward motions.
I am not trying to argue, just discussing and trying to back up what I have said is all.