Chris,
Earl, and thats all he is, EARL, spent the better part of 6 pages telling me I was doing a kata wrong, and that I should tell my instructor they were wrong.
.
If I said "Wrong" then I apologize as this is a relative term. It is quite posssible that due to the nature of this type of communication I was not as diplomatic as i should have been.
If you perform as your instructor wishes, then it is not wrong.
I do not believe I ever said that you should TELL your instructor he was wrong. I did however reccomend that you ASK a question.
Since I have a mindset, experience and instructors who believed asking respectful questions was a good thing, I could not anticipate how my comment would be recieved by others who apparently do not share the mindset or experience. (Yes, I even asked General Choi about what I percieved to be an error in his book, as did others and rec'd confirmation from him that in some cases these things were errors. ) Having a good relationship with many old school practitioners, particularly those who trained with Han Cha Kyo, I can certainly appreciate that there are those out there who did / do not question what there instructor says.
I even got a response from He Il Cho's HQ, (I think it was signed off by Jasmin Cho) but it did not really address the issue. A follow up query trying to hone in on the issue went un answered.
FWIW students ask me stuff all the time. Sometimes I mess up, other times don't. I tink every instructor knows that for whatever reason once in a while smething comes out of their mouth that they did not mean to say. Often because they are thinking 2 or 3 items ahead. I feel a tremendous responsibility to "Teach correctly" because if i make a mistake for me it is only one person. But if i teach a mistake, it can be mutliplied many times.
So, I publicly apologize to Mr. Fist, for any comments percieved to be overly or unduly critical in response to his tread on the pattern and his video performance. I alos extend to him and his significnt other a dinner invite if they are ever near Chicago. As is my practice anyone can stop in and train and all I ask for visitors in return is that they teach a 15-20 minute segment.