ABSTRACT
Never has the domain of sports coaching been so inundated with secondary information. In high-performance contexts, for example, coaches are routinely presented with detailed reports specifying features about an athlete’s or team’s performance. Here, we question whether such detailed secondary information has led us to know too much, obscuring what the world has to share directly with us. To over-rely on secondary information is to narrow in on certainty, on cause-effects that are oft-espoused through de-contextualised ‘performance’ tests and metrics. This indirect approach eschews opening up to uncertainty, to ongoing inquiry embedded in primary experience. For where certainty risks closures, uncertainty opens to the possibility of carrying on with and alongside others. We explore this thesis through the reflections of an Olympic Canoe Slalom coach, meandering through three sections: (i) on paying attention; (ii) on knowing better; (iii) on guidance without specification. In presenting this thesis, we hope to encourage others – in sports coaching and beyond – to embrace an ethos of not-knowing, opening up to the ‘goings on’ of what interests them, actively attending and directly responding with genuine care and curiosity. Indeed, while embracing an ethos of not-knowing can be unsettling, vulnerably exposing oneself to changing power relations in a world perpetually on the move, it can facilitate primary experience of the surrounding ecology. The accompanying growth of responsiveness to one’s surroundings emerges from listening to what it has share, joining in conversation to find ways of carrying on. It is in this responsiveness, we contend, that a wisdom can be found; a wisdom of not-knowing.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1 It is of note, that the etymology of the word ‘abstract’ captures the de-contextualization of second-hand knowledge; abstractus (Latin) – meaning ‘drawn away’ or ‘removed’.
2 Such ‘machining of the mind’ is perhaps best surmised by a common phrase encountered in Western society: ‘the computer won’t let me do that’.
3 We draw inspiration for this term from the work of both Cage (Citation2011) and Haraway (Citation2016). In becoming response-able, people open themselves to the experiences cast forward by others, as others do to theirs. What this does, is open paths of travel neither have traversed before, enabling both to carry on their lives, together. See Woods et al. (Citation2022) for further reading.