I often speak about tennis being one of the most important sports when I was growing up, for my hand-eye coordination and quick feet.
Bouldering on real rock, which I'm more used to climbing on, is a lot more static and requires mostly finger power, whereas competition-style boulder problems are about coordination.
I've just always felt it's an incredibly empowering thing, particularly for young women, to capitalize on their coordination and their strength. It's a very empowering thing to feel strong in your body.
I've been blessed with great hand-eye coordination.
From the age of seven, I basically started practicing my hand-eye and foot coordination, balance, strength, endurance, discipline, and mental toughness three days a week until I was about 15.
Providing health care is like building a house. The task requires experts, expensive equipment and materials, and a huge amount of coordination.
Every science consists in the coordination of facts; if the different observations were entirely isolated, there would be no science.
Foot work, hand-eye coordination. There's a lot of things. If you just watch basketball, you can tell where it would help someone who's receiving the ball.
Playing well with others is important - not being too flashy, just keeping good time and of course coming up with cool beats. A good snare drum, kick drum, high hat. Just getting good at the hand feet coordination.
I have learned very quickly where my strengths are, and color coordination of particular things is not a strong suit.