The basics that are practiced are disconnected from the forms. They are little chunks of them practiced over and over, completely missing the point. Take low block as an example. The most useless thing (from an okinawan POV) you can do with it is practice it up and down the floor. When it is removed from the form it loses the original meaning.
We agree completely on this. My take on low blocks is that they have to be intepreted as part of what I think of as `minimal fighting units'. So a `chambering' retraction gripping a trapped wrist, with the defender at a 90 degree (establishing a lock at the wrist end), and a `chambering' movement of the left hand to the defender's left shoulder (imposing a lock at the elbow) allows the `down block' to strike at vital point on the arm, or by pressing the arm lock so the attacker's head is lowered, allows an arm bar across the throat forcing a takedown, or a strike to the carotid sinus, or... and if you follow up the throat strike with a punch to the base of the skull (gripping the attacker with the now-retracting left hand), and then use the punching hand to establish a hair grab using the right hand and a 180 turn, you've got a twisting throw imposed on a pretty crappy-feeling assailant---and another forward weight shift and punch for good measure pretty sends him home to bed to rest for a while. That's just the first four moves of Kicho Il-Jang, and there's not a single block in the lot.
If you teach that Kicho as part of the fighting methodology of TKD, you won't be getting your students to line up and routinely apply the move called a down block up and down the floor of the dojang---absolutely, that's true. But aren't you really talking about the continuing `disguising' of the bunkai that began with Itosu? Funakoshi continued it but always reminded students there was more there to be discovered than the `children's' level of application. Many people who teach TKD don't get beyond that, but isn't that also true in many karate dojangs? From what I read in some of the stuff written about it, it certainly seems that way.
What I'm saying is, you're talking about people teaching TKD moves independent of their realistic combat applications and you've observed that if you see it in the context of a realistic application of the form, the last thing you want to be doing is mindlessly repeating it en mass as a block. But this isn't incompatible with anything I was saying, is it?
Now, you may be implying that the old masters knew this stuff but didn't teach it for whatever reason. I, however, refuse to believe that they consciously taught everyone wrong.
I don't think one needs to assume that they were teaching everyone wrong... just that they were continuing the same practice of concealing whatever the useful fighting apps were that their own instructors, following Itosu's lead, were doing. I don't think they got the full system, no---but I think that they probably knew that a down block was only very rarely, if ever, a block.
In TSD we still practice those forms. They are almost identical to the japanese versions of Okinawan forms, but some changes were made. And these changes messed up a few key things. Its like taking a word and flipping around a pair of letters. Now imagine if you completely scrambled the letters entirely?
This is where the conversation gets interesting.
Absolutely. Can you please walk me through some of the crucial rearrangements and indicate just what effect those changes had? That has got to be an important part of any attempt to extract meaning from the current hyungs...
What are the subcomponents of the Korean forms. Hadan Mahkee, Sangdan Mahkee, Choong Dan Kun Kyuk, Etc...
What are the subcomponents of the Okinawan forms? Ogoshi, Deashi Barai, Ude Tori, Koto gey osh, etc...
See the difference? It all comes down to what basics you are practicing, this is how you see the form.
But the fact that the Mahkee-type moves can be interpreted as concealed strikes or locking/throwing components, as vs. the Okinawan hip throws and sweeps and other Tuite moves you're getting at, doesn't mean that it's a mistake to apply the same kind of
principles of bunkai analysis to discover, for example, that a rising block is actually a forearm strike to the throat of an attacker's forcibly lowered head. The main question---what does the form tell you about how to move in combat and what to do---seems to yield a productive answer when you take the Abernethy/O'Neil approach. I'm not saying you're going to get the same answers from the Okinawan kata as from the TKD hyungs by any means!
And this is why the TKD curriculum does not allow these types of interpretations. And this is why reinterpreting these forms would change everything about what TKD is and was supposed to be.
Well, I don't know about `supposed'. But what, apart from conventional practices, would prevent a TKD curriculum from being build around the combat tactics and techniques of the TKD hyungs?
If you decide to look at the TKD forms in the way being presented by the OP, you aren't rediscovering anything. That stuff wasn't there in the first place. You are, however, inventing something...and if you are looking to the Okinawan forms for guidance, you are reinventing something...namely Okinawan Karate.
I think I probably expressed myself poorly in my earlier post. I'm not using the Okinawan forms for guidance per se, nor so far as I can see is O'Neil. What I'm talking about is using the same principles of interpretation that people like Abernethy, O'Neil, Rick Clark and others have offered as ways to decode the moves in karate-based MAs that are packaged as punch-block-kick sequences and extract the actual use of the
actions that are given these misleading labels. To see in a bakkat mahki part of a throwing move setting up a finishing attack on an attacker's vital point, or to recognize that the chambering phase of arae mahki can correspond to an elbow strike in a series of techniques, doesn't require you to copy the Okinawan interpretations slavishly. No one would advocate that---the intention is just to use the same general principles that seem to underlie the relation between kata form and combat technique (chambering retraction often correspond to trapping grips, etc) to the TKD forms as well and see if they make sense in terms of combat. From what I've seen of O'Neil's interpretations, they do...
So I say again, at what point does what you are doing cease to be TKD?
Does what I've said above suggest that I'm no longer doing TKD? If I think the TKD forms have combat utility and attempt to extract that using general rules of interpretation that seem to yield good results applied to other similar combat systems, does that mean I've abandoned TKD? It doesn't
seem to me that I have...
This is the rabbit hole that all TSDists and TKDists eventually stare at. Why are the basics, the forms, and the fighting totally disconnected? Some people are attempting to answer this question by inventing or reinventing something that already existed and claiming that it was always part of TKD. They are looking in the right direction, but are wrong on many levels. The truth is deeper.
Well, if you still think I'm mistaken in what I've said, can you be more specific about where you think that truth lies and what it consists of? I don't mean this query in the least disrespectfully or rhetorically, UNKy---I really want to hear what your thoughts about this fundamental question are in greater detail. I joined MT to learn, that's why I think this line of discussion is so interesting and important.