Is the idea of the importance of chushin another flashy MA myth?
I read a study recently on the efficacy of kata, and by extension, the centre line in practising whatever martial art you're practising.
To be honest, "chushin" is a term I was unfamiliar with, so I did a little research and found I
was familiar with the concept
s. I use the plural as it seems there are really two chushins: Chushin ryoku and chushin sen.
Chushin
ryoku refers to
one's own centerline and is concerned with body structure being in alignment that allows efficient biomechanics for power generation (and balance). Kata practice can certainly be a big help to train this, no doubt. But any kind of MA practice should always keep this in mind - it's that important IMO.
Chushin
sen is different in that rather being concerned with oneself, it is concerned with the
centerline of the opponent in relation to your position. Now were talking tactics and movement. (I touched on this in the second half of post #8). One can evade and attack offline, or
attack straight into it. (Maybe a good topic for a new thread.) Working with a partner/sparring I think will best develop skills in this regard, though evading and attacking offline is illustrated in a number of kata.
I think chushin (both of them), far from being a "flashy MA myth," are basic foundations of TMA.
It appears these terms are most often used in aikido and iaijutsu, but the concepts are definitely used in karate and it's in this respect I am viewing and interpreting them. While the concepts I've mentioned are real, I'm not sure if I'm a little off base per the exact technical definition used by those other arts. Maybe I got it right. If not, at least I learned some new words.