When Boundary Protection Becomes a Training Variable

Edges change behaviour long before they are touched. A person entering a training space reads distance, speed, and risk almost at once. The eyes scan corners. The body adjusts stride length. Even without contact, boundaries already influence movement. What sits at those edges quietly shapes decisions. In many facilities, boundaries begin as safety measures. They exist to catch mistakes, not to guide technique. Over time, however, repeated exposure shifts perception. The body learns how close it can move before consequence appears. Confidence grows, though not always evenly. Some movements stretch…

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