What value do you get in your training from practicing your basics in the air? Do you feel like you get a good sense of the mechanics behind the blocks and strikes by doing them with no resistence? Does this type of training have any worth?
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Andrew Green said:That said, too many full force punches and kicks into the air can be very rough on the elbows and knees. Maybe not for everyone, but for a lot of people.
Andrew Green said:At a moderate intensity I think it's fine, can work the mechanics a bit. Shouldn't be the main source of training but taking away the ability to hit hard and forcing a look at form is sometimes neccessary.
That said, too many full force punches and kicks into the air can be very rough on the elbows and knees. Maybe not for everyone, but for a lot of people.
But that is exactly my point. Where would any martial art be without new students? If you've even gone even a week without practicing a technique then you probably know what I mean when I say that things don't always work like you remember them and being able to teach the technique without resistance as perfectly as possible is necessary for new students so that they can adapt it to resistance. And how will a white belt learn if not by watching a blue belt or even an orange belt? At my black belt class my instructor still does an advanced drill in the air before moving on to target and resistance kickingupnorthkyosa said:When one first learns a technique, doing it with no resistence can really help a student learn the fundamental movements that are inherit in the technique. After a while though, the student must transition and learn how to adjust the technique to resistence. I don't see any value in continual practice of techniques with no resistence. Especially at more experienced levels.
mtabone said:Just train both ways.
mtabone said:Btw air practice would also incorporate hyung practice too are you suggesting that hyung (kata or form for you non Tang Soo Do people) is worthless unless I have positioned punching bags, board holders, grabbers and attackers every where I go in the form, so that this way I will always encounter resistance?
upnorthkyosa said:What value do you get in your training from practicing your basics in the air? Do you feel like you get a good sense of the mechanics behind the blocks and strikes by doing them with no resistence? Does this type of training have any worth?
Master Jay S. Penfil said:If John, you choose to train with impact to excess over an extended period of time, you chance joint damage. We have a tendency to want to over-train ourselves to a point of having what I call the; RAMBO MANTALLITY. Unfortunately, our minds are usually able to handle far more then our bodies, and over the years we develop chronic injuries in our joints. I know many of my senior in Tang Soo Do, Shotokan and Isshinryu that established reputations for being the last guy that you would want to square off in front of in the ring, but in later years had to have knee and or hip replacements. Your joints come with only so many miles of wear, just like the tires on your car. Some of us, due to good genetics will see more mileage then others with the same training schedules, but like it or not, at some point your body will let you know when you are ready for those parts to be replaced