Bah, a design problem..   https://www.arcimoto.com/

On 6/11/20, 9:47 AM, "Friam on behalf of glen∈ℂ" <[email protected] on 
behalf of [email protected]> wrote:

    The deadlift helps you learn how the posterior chain of muscles and 
connective tissue work together to achieve a complex action [†] like, say, 
getting out of your lazy-boy. One of the common flaws in weightlifting is to 
focus on isolating muscles. Things like the deadlift are more like 
calisthenics. That compositional (tacit) understanding of how your body works 
together as a system helps will all sorts of things including balance, 
objective-orientation, the relation between your bowels and bladder, etc. 
Systems like crossfit are loaded with that sort of thing ... but I'm not a fan. 
Calisthenics and yoga would be better. The main reason I like the deadlift is 
that it helps me understand the task of picking up my 800 lb hight CoG 
motorcycle [‡] after I've dropped it (which happens embarrassingly often).

    [†] And it was complex actions that the Maegherman article speculated might 
trigger M1, even if their simple behaviors did not.

    [‡] My last bike was a Ulysses, which held the gas in the frame, 
significantly lowering the CoG. But it also weighed only 400 lb, if I remember 
right.

    On 6/11/20 9:03 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
    > How do dead lift and a graceful death relate to one another?   I could 
see arguments for and against.

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