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Steve Magness
@stevemagness
I bet you know how fast your driving without looking at the speedometer....

How? You FEEL it!

The best performers share the same ability.

They know when to push, when to hold back, and when to let go...without checking a screen.

It's a skill many of us have forgotten how to use:
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
When you learn to drive, you check the speedometer constantly.

But over time, your body calibrates. You sense speed through vibration, pressure, sound, and flow.

You don’t need to stare at the dial, you just drive.

That’s what skill is: the fusion of perception and action.
And it’s the same connection most of us have lost in our work, our training, and even our rest.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
In the world of ecological psychology, scientists call these cues affordances — signals from the environment that invite action.

You don’t think about pressing the gas when the light turns green; your surroundings pull the response from you.

It’s a seamless feedback loop between the world and your body.

But the more we rely on data, devices, and dashboards, the more we weaken that bond.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
When we always outsource awareness to gadgets we replace instinct with analysis.

Like a driver obsessively watching the speedometer, we interrupt the flow.

The very act of checking can break rhythm and coordination.

The mind steps in, the body hesitates, and we lose the feel that made us skilled in the first place.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Technology isn’t the villain.

Feedback has its place.

The problem arises when we let the numbers override what the body already knows.

When that happens, we disconnect from the very system evolution designed to guide us: our own interoception.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
The best performers don’t think their way through every move.

They feel their way through it.

They trust years of embodied learning to steer them, checking the data only to confirm what their body’s already saying.

It’s using science to understand when to let go of it.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
Listening to your body is a skill.

It means noticing small signals: breath rhythm, muscle tension, posture, tone, emotion.

It means asking, What’s my body trying to tell me, before asking, What does my device say?

The more you practice tuning in, the less you need external validation to know how you’re doing.
Steve Magness
@stevemagness
So next time you train, work, or create, try this: leave the metrics behind for a day.

Run without your watch. Write without your word count. Rest without checking recovery scores.

Relearn what it feels like to be guided from the inside out.

Your body’s been whispering the whole time. You just have to listen.
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