Hello All,
Recently I went to my first ever Chi Sao competition, and in the first few moments the head judge stood up and said "Chi Sao is not for fighting."
Hearing that nearly gave me an aneurysm.
It made me realize though, that there are a large number of practitioners who approach Chi Sao totally differently than the way my KF family does. For us it is a direct conditioned response to an attack or how to handle a challenge to your attack. We look to hit - it is up to the other guy to stick to us. If they don't stick, we don't stop hitting. On the other side, to diffuse and incoming attack, we will stick, but only momentarily to gain leverage and control, then it's on to hitting. Everything we do is mapped 100% to actual combat response, for us Chi Sao is for fighting.
How do you guys approach it?
Recently I went to my first ever Chi Sao competition, and in the first few moments the head judge stood up and said "Chi Sao is not for fighting."
Hearing that nearly gave me an aneurysm.
It made me realize though, that there are a large number of practitioners who approach Chi Sao totally differently than the way my KF family does. For us it is a direct conditioned response to an attack or how to handle a challenge to your attack. We look to hit - it is up to the other guy to stick to us. If they don't stick, we don't stop hitting. On the other side, to diffuse and incoming attack, we will stick, but only momentarily to gain leverage and control, then it's on to hitting. Everything we do is mapped 100% to actual combat response, for us Chi Sao is for fighting.
How do you guys approach it?