posted 7 years ago
I taught myself to juggle in college, starting with 1 and tossing it up a foot or two and catching it, watching the ball non-stop. Then I stared at a point near the apex of the ball's path, and based on whether it was moving a little left or right, I would adjust my hand to catch it.
Next step was to deliberately have the ball go in the direction of the other hand, and catch it with the other hand. Back and forth with 1 ball this way.
Then I put 1 ball in each hand, and as the first ball reached the apex I would toss the other ball up so I could catch the first, and hopefully catch the second with the first hand. I also would place 2 balls in one hand, toss up the first, then toss up the second to catch the first and create a narrow loop with the path of the two balls. Helps with quick hand movement to keep catching the balls, and with practice you don't toss the balls too far off course. But initially they will go all over the place!
Next step was 3 balls, holding the third in say my left hand as I tossed the other 2 per the previous step in my right hand. Occasionally I would toss 1 across to the left hand, and juggle 2 balls in the left while the right hand got a rest. Once you can toss from one hand to the other and still catch the other free ball, then you just up the rate that you pass the ball back and forth, until you do it every time.
I never went beyond 3 balls, but did vary the sizes or firmness of the objects which adds an extra layer of difficulty.
The holy trinity of wholesomeness: Fred Rogers - be kind to others; Steve Irwin - be kind to animals; Bob Ross - be kind to yourself