i'm just a crankshaft so don't take it personally when i rant on. the tangent I went off there was to describe the enthusiasm over the DVD in general. it's good that you're new to flourishing and interested, and trust me there is a good chance you're going to waste some money on stupid sh**. how do I know this? because I did it and so did lots of my friends when they were new. like the XTC deck from E , that was a good one.
heres the thing - its not your fault - its the companies like t11 and now the "virts of video editing", dressing up olde stuff in 18 layers of HD hyperbole instead of just saying Here Is The Material, Buy This If You Want To Learn It. instead we get ridiculous statements and like snake-oil salesmen, EVERYTHING is the new most incredible blah blah blah. after a while, some people think its funny and laugh it off, but it actually offends me. in fact a member of one of these groups/companies that I won't name at his request, once compared marketing to taking a dump because "its not pretty but every one has to do it". I laughed my ass off at the time but on further reflection , I think that's not the way things should be... just my opinion though I don't want to rain on your enthusiasm, but rather let you know there's a metric sh*t-ton of material out there that most people don't know about simply because it isn't hyped.
and honestly... if you (not literally yourself, just for the sake of structuring a sentence) can't figure out the hindu tornado variation after learning the basic hindu cut, then god help you, it's going to cost you about $3000 to buy enough DVDs to develop a repertoire of moves. Flourishing doesn't have to be something where someone holds your hand to teach you every ultra-simple little cut, its something you have to figure out yourself to really understand and take it to the next level, your unique level. to make a bad analogy, some guys buy a modded-up car off craiglist and drive it around like they're hot ish, other guys might buy a set of tools and build/upgrade to their own rig. The guys that built their own hot rod up, handle the thing much more skillfully , and are better prepared if it breaks down because they understand its components and how they all fit together.