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Monday, June 04th, 2007 | Author:

Liverpool is quiet, fair-weather traceurs discouraged by the threatening gloom. My enthusiasm, struggling like the weak sunshine, is trying to fight its way through the dull fug in my head. We trundle around the spots we know and find a fair bit to do but we have to search for it. The huge and imposing buildings promise so much but actually yield little for parkour. I know there is a lot of stuff here but we could do with some guides to show us the best spots.

I miss Liverpool. My City. It has and always will be a part of me. Every building and park holds tons of memories from when I was growing up, like a photo-album in my mind. An adult’s eyes may admire the magnificent architecture of the art galleries, the flowing lines of St George’s Hall, the eye-catching St John’s Tower: the hard-earned fruits of hundreds of years of culture. Today, all I see are lots of great walls for us to jump off, gaps to hurtle through, leaps to attempt. The sun breaks out from the clouds and that smile appears on my face. I’m home – for today.

On the periphery of my vision, I notice that we are attracting a bit of attention. Kids, of no more than maybe eleven or twelve, keep popping up and scurrying around. Again the same faces, off at a distance, watching furtively what we are doing and trying to copy. This is not good. They are clambering onto things we would not attempt, with little thought for their own safety, invoking the wrath of security guards who have to interrupt their mid-morning snooze to chase them away. Please don’t let them think they’re with us. They get brave and, like little pigeons used to being fed, they wearily approach us bit by bit. They’re obviously accustomed to seeing people jumping around in town. “Can you do flips?” Hmm. Not the thing you should ask us. I opt not to get into the whole argument about how parkour and free-running are not the same thing. They persist but, realising that we are not going to oblige, eventually get the message and hop off. Keen to move on ourselves, we bomb-burst and make a break for the Wirral by train and car.

We head under the Mersey to Moreton where we are to meet others of our group. Jak, Fred and Katie (their mum) are at a disused cricket pavilion on an old sports pitch. There are several unfamiliar faces here, too, but introductions quickly turn them into new-found friends. If you do parkour, you’re one of us. It’s a nice feeling, a bond instinctively shared. We are on their patch and they know it like the back of their hands, and are keen to show us the best places to train. And there are plenty. As we wander around the place we realise that it is alive with parkour. And with those who do it.

Although it’s been around a fair few years now, parkour and free-running are still low-key activities, coming in under the radar of most people. The media has got a hold of PK lately and seem to be trying to push it to prominence, but there are still relatively few people who practise it. It’s origins lie in France but the UK has developed a few stars of its own.

Daniel Ilabaca is somewhat of a celebrity in his hometown. Although only nineteen, he is a natural traceur with the outlook of a man many years older. Living proof of what training, pushing and believing in yourself can achieve. He manages to find work as a stunt-man in films and is training as one of the country’s first qualified parkour coaches. Rather than cause trouble, as many idle youths will when there is little to do, there are groups of lads who have looked at Danny’s example and are trying to emulate him. Instead of hanging around on street corners intimidating old ladies, they train in parks and on the streets. They’re learning about themselves and, in turn, teaching others. It is amazing to see.

We try some jumps next to a school in the village itself and are a little alarmed to see two Community Service Officers hurtling up the street towards a couple of our friends. As far as I can see, they are not doing anything dangerous or damaging but we are used to other people getting a little edgy when we train. It sometimes looks like we might be up to no good, but a little cool-headed explanation usually changes minds and mind-sets. They get their notebooks out and it is all looking bad. I quickly cross over the road to see if I can help and I engage the two officers in conversation. They are very helpful. In fact – to our astonishment – they go even a step further. She explains that they know all about Danny and what he does. If someone could arrange to come down to the station in the near future, they would like to discuss the possibility of providing funding for some training facilities. I’m flabbergasted – I thought they were going to give us a ticket and a fine for some trumped up charge. I am filled with respect.

When we get back to the pavilion Chris, Danny’s brother, has arranged for a crash-mat and already other traceurs are descending on it. Literally. They’re throwing themselves off the roof, sailing in graceful summersaults onto the floor below. Impressive, but nothing more than fun. One day, maybe.

An invitation arrives to come train in Danny’s back-garden. It’s not what I expect. Our group of ten tag onto a training session already in progress. His small garden is already teeming with people: several generations of Ilabaca family are there; Danny and his friends are hanging monkey-like from the branches of a tree which supports a huge tree-house; lads are swinging from some home-made scaffolding. It is a hive of purposeful activity.

Danny is happy to meet us and a flurry of introductions are quickly made. Before long, we are being put through our paces. Strength-training, bottle-testing, confidence-building, adrenaline-pumping action. Under Danny’s watchful eye we attempt the unthinkable. We are encouraged and inspired.

Thoroughly warmed up, we move out into Moreton and the grounds of an old church where we can do more conventional parkour. But before long, the day has fled. It’s getting late and we have a journey back to Manchester still to do. We’re not finished yet, though. We subject ourselves to a vigorous warm-down which seems every bit as energetic as the training we’ve just been doing.

With legs as heavy as lead, and minds floating on our own personal clouds, we cram ourselves back into the car and make our way home to Manchester.

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Monday, May 28th, 2007 | Author:

Getting up early of a weekend is never one of my strongpoints, but always somehow I manage it. I can’t vouch for the state of mind I will be in, but my body will always oblige by being in the promised location at the specified time.

The last beer I had in the bar to celebrate my friend Rachel’s birthday causes my head to reel. Well less the beer itself and more the time I am inbibing it – 4.30am. This is only my third beer but the late hour and the excitement about the following day leaves me restless on my bedroom floor. I have no bed at the moment. But that’s ok cos I don’t specialise in sleep. My room is more a studio with floor-space on which to sleep than a real bedroom.

I’m up and packing at Sparrow’s Fart. The morning sunlight stabs at my eyes through the curtainless windows. Food and clothes, sufficient to last me what is going to be a physically demanding day, get stuffed into my daysack and I jump a bus into town. I manage to call Paul, Anton and Ste before falling into my usual public-transport stupor, my head lolling and bouncing against the window in time to the poorly-driven vehicle’s lurches. I learnt this the hard way. Even fifteen minutes spent in neutral on the bus is time well spent. If there is one useful skill I have acquired then it’s this. I have the gift of being able to fall asleep within moments, even when I don’t really need it, in the strangest and most uncomfortable of places. And I can make that sleep count. So when I need to be alert, I have an overdraft I can call upon at a moments notice. A reserve.

Today I need it. And a can of Red Bull to kick-start it into life. A shiny new hire car is flashing its lights at me, inviting me to put it through its paces. With a car full of traceurs it flashes its way through the bank holiday traffic, leaving a preoccupied Manchester behind in its wake. We have no business there today.

Parkour is not about doing the same movements parrot fashion until you’ve got them nailed. It is all too easy to get carried away trying to do bigger jumps, better kongs, more impressive climbs. Forgetting that such feats in themselves are but a means to an end, tools in your box. I look into several areas of my life and see huge parallels. It’s not the songs a DJ plays but how he plays them, the feeling behind his choices and the direction he chooses to carry you in. Seemless fluidity, attempted grace, compelling motion. It’s easy to play impressive tune after impressive tune, or to flip somersaults, and then look over your shoulder to see if everyone saw what you just did. Finesse and form come from the little things. The simple things. No one will jump up and pat you on the back say well done. You learn to do that for yourself. Self-pride and self-confidence come from self-knowledge.

I put another CD on and the motorway miles are fodder for my wheels.

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Sunday, November 19th, 2006 | Author:

I’m tempted to (and could) say a lot more here but I’ve held my tongue so far and am not going to compromise my ethics by blurting anything out now.

Over several years, after a really tough period in my life, I moved to Manchester. To make a fresh start. From scratch. Carefully I made a few friends and, tiny little bit by tiny little bit, allowed this circle to grow.

I always considered myself to be a good judge of character. In fact, I prided myself on it, perhaps too much. I thought I had a good balance and allowed a small group of people in closer. And one person all the way.

Though I misjudged in some of these friends, at least I know for certain that I didn’t with one.

If what we had is to continue to hold its value then it should be left as it was. All I would hope that it not be picked over by other people for their own ends.

To those who are my real friends – you know who you are and will have a clear conscience. If I am distant from you, it is more out of necessity right now. Give me time and space.

——

Experience is not measured in time but in lessons learnt.
Learning a lesson does not mean that you know the answers.
To find the answers you need to know which questions to ask.
Knowing the right questions to ask sometimes comes with experience.

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