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Juggling and Flourishing

I had a discussion with a friend about this.
Can Flourishing be considered a juggling form of sorts? from tossing balls, to yoyos, contact juggling and then Flourishing?
it might be pointless. but thought it was a different way to look at it.
so you can tell people you can juggle then show them some flourishes.
 
Nov 20, 2007
4,410
6
Sydney, Australia
Yes, I'd say so. A lot of people I know consider flourishing to be card juggling. It's a fairly common term, actually, especially amongst older magicians.

I don't agree completely.

I think that 95% of flourishing is simply card juggling.

Something interesting to me would be: if you don't consider flourishing "merely card juggling", what would you call it?
 
Mar 22, 2009
39
1
I think for the most part that card flourishing is akin to juggling. It's an open display of skill.

I've heard there is a flourish group somewhere in Sydney where I'm from, and they meet together. Can't remember the name, but I think they just meet and do flourishes.

I enjoy watching flourishes sometimes but most laypeople I've spoken to find them dull after about a minute. Jugglers put effort into making their routines entertaining whereas flourishers (XCMers?) rarely do this.
 
Mar 31, 2009
25
0
I don't know if I'd consider flourishing as a type of juggling, its is card manipulation. And after all juggling is also manipulation, of balls.
I'm not sure but I do a lil of both along with a few cigarette tricks that could be considered juggling.
 
Yes card manipulation is a form of juggling.

To juggle

to keep more than 2 activities in motion; to juggle objects or perform other tricks displaying manual dexterity.

I do believe that flourishing falls under the umbrella.
 
May 18, 2008
807
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It is juggling of sorts, and yet I still do it.

For me, even though it has NO use at all, it is a test of whether I have the patience to learn it and do it or not.

It's like meditation for me.
 
Nov 20, 2007
4,410
6
Sydney, Australia
I've heard there is a flourish group somewhere in Sydney where I'm from, and they meet together. Can't remember the name, but I think they just meet and do flourishes.

Jugglers put effort into making their routines entertaining whereas flourishers (XCMers?) rarely do this.

That would be us, Mr Zsasz.

We do indeed meet and do flourishes, but it's not at all what we "just" do ^.^ A large part of it is just socialising, jamming, showing new flourishes, making vids, etc. Most of us also perform magic though, so there are always (public) performances, brainstorming ideas, feedback for routines, discussion, etc. If you ever feel like coming, you're more than welcome.

Your last sentence is absolutely spot on, though. Which is fine, if like popchris, it's a personal thing. But if you consider what you do as an art, which is what I do sometimes take issue with, at least do something with it. I only know one person who actually makes an art out of flourishing.
 
Sep 1, 2007
409
1
California
I know many people that practice flourishing routines, near perfect as well. Personally as a flourisher I don't really like being called a "card juggler". I would much rather be a "flourisher" or even "card shuffler". But I don't really like the term "card juggler".
 
Nov 20, 2007
4,410
6
Sydney, Australia
@ cbols23 and SplitHeavens: What, then, in your opinion, is the difference between card juggling and flourishing? NexusMagic described a definition of juggling:

To juggle

to keep more than 2 activities in motion; to juggle objects or perform other tricks displaying manual dexterity.

Is this not flourishing?

(To anyone else, before you interject as an answer: I do have a point in asking this question, so I'd like to hear the answer)
 
Mar 22, 2009
39
1
Hi praetoritevong,

Thanks for the invite! I suck at flourishes, otherwise I probably would come. I think I've met two people who go to the group. Mark and Guang, I think.

How often do you meet?
 
Apr 28, 2008
596
0
@ cbols23 and SplitHeavens: What, then, in your opinion, is the difference between card juggling and flourishing? NexusMagic described a definition of juggling:

To juggle

to keep more than 2 activities in motion; to juggle objects or perform other tricks displaying manual dexterity.

Is this not flourishing?

(To anyone else, before you interject as an answer: I do have a point in asking this question, so I'd like to hear the answer)

I'd say flourishing does meet the definition of juggling. However, I don't like the use of the term at all as it is frequently used (especially by older magicians) to dismiss flourishing as being pointless and trivial when compared to magic which I don't believe is fair.

Why does it need to be referred to as juggling? Flourishing already has a name, the only reason I can see for using the term juggling is to try and dismiss flourishing as being a waste of time.

I imagine juggling probably requires far more skill than most flourishing and I suspect jugglers put a lot more thought into their routines than most flourishers but when people use the term juggling they certainly aren't using it to show any respect to flourishers.
 
Nov 20, 2007
4,410
6
Sydney, Australia
I'd agree with that. But the thing is, I also feel that a lot of this disrespect is totally fair. Why? Because your average joe flourisher isn't doing anything. One cut looks the same as the next, it's not interesting, it's not well thought out, it's not done for any particular reason except because we think it looks cool and cool people like D&D are good at it.

The reason I asked for the difference between card juggling and flourishing is this: Many people I've heard would say the flourishing is more than mere card juggling - it's an art, etc.

And I laugh, and ask, How on earth is that an art?

As I have mentioned in the past, I know one person personally who makes flourishing an art - one single person out of two to three dozen people I know who flourish.

I went to a jam today, and after two or three hours, I was bored, because I felt like what I was doing and what we were doing was completely mundane. So I've started thinking of ways to make it more interesting and useful.

Sitting there doing endless two handed cuts which, for all intents and purpose, look the same (and yes, I do know flourishing reasonably well, it's not just because I don't know anything - although this raises the question of what spectators see), is not an art.

When I talk to my friend about flourishing, he looks at a flourish, and he says something along the lines of, "It's nice... But I don't really like it because it doesn't go anywhere. There's no further development possible, nothing I can build up on or extend further." Which is interesting - cause it's fast and has lots of packets - but that by itself describes 95% of flourishes. Then he looks at something else and says "I'm much more excited about this though - check this out. I've been working on this concept for a few weeks, look what I've developed" - and what he's developed, that is Art. Not this random generic crap, but he tries to do stuff with flourishing. Just as, in magic, it is Deadly to become generic (a reference to Peter Brook's Deadly Theatre, in case anyone's read The Empty Space). People get criticised for it all the time. Why then are we allowed to be generic in flourishing, if so many people want to tout flourishing as an equally respectable thing as magic?

The truth is, it is that, in the hands of those most capable, but it is not that in 95% of flourishers who sit there and do nothing.

One other quick thing I want to address. Flourishing has often been condescendingly called masturbation with cards. Well, honestly, I don't see the problem with masturbating, I really don't. If it makes you happy - how is it different from collecting stamps, or other such pasttimes?

Flourishing has never been something I'm naturally skilled at, nor will it ever come close to my magic in terms of love or importance. I like it to a point, which is why I learn some flourishes. But for me, it's a curiosity, a passing show of impressive decksterity I show my magician friends and occasionally laymen friends. My focus is my magic.

It's those that claim to be more than "mere juggling", who claim that flourishing is "an art", but don't live up to these claims, and don't make any attempt to live up to these claims, but rather are quite happy to wallow in mediocrity and claim greatness (including, largely, implicitly so), which annoy me.

It reminds me of Steerpike's topic: It's fine that you're not artists, as long as you don't call yourselves artists. One more little thing to add here, as I'm sure someone will think or say this: No, not everyone goes around consciously believing or saying to themselves that they are artists, that they are great, doing something high and mighty, etc. But I do feel that this mentality is, even at a subconscious, implicity level, active in much of flourishing.

Finally, to come back to what squ!rrel was saying: I do agree that juggling is most often a condescending term used unfairly in the sense that it is often applied as a stereotype to all flourishers regardless of skill, a blanket statement over this form of manipulation. I do however believe that it is fair in another sense, in the sense that the huge majority of "flourishers", fulfill this stereotype, whilst insisting on something greater.
 
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