J
Jason Davis
Guest
Ok Right off, I know a lot of styles don't do forms and i know that a lot of people are going to say "a form is just a form", and this might upset a couple of people. but still, I'm going to ask.
Sometimes when I see videos of "masters" performing a form/kata or whatever, It seriously looks like a monkey screwing a football. Then when I see some of these so-called "sparring" matches or "real fight" videos on the internet it looks like 2 monkeys screwing a football. Why is this? Are they just not trying or what?
I don't know if this is what forms and sparring are supposed to look like or not, but I can definitely tell you I would be sitting in horsestance for about and hour if I tried to push that stuff on my teacher.
Tell me if I'm wrong or not, but aren't you supposed to issue power when you perform a form/kata or are you just supposed to go through the movements. I'm confused I was thought that when you do a form you issue power every time you show a technique and you use perfect form. If it's soft style like tai chi you still show the power but it is done a lot slower with the same perfect form thus making it soft.
As for sparring goes, if I don't use good technique when he spar again I will be sitting in horse stance for about an hour. I honestly believe that 1960's and 70's kung fu movies have 1,000,000 times more technique shown in the fight scenes than any sparring video I've seen on the internet or any modern day movie for that matter. Again this is still just how I was thought to do it and I thought that the reason to do forms/katas is to teach you the moves to use and the correct form to use when you use them in a fight. I thought that when you spar/fight it was supposed to look just like you were doing a form.
This is why I thought you were supposed to practice so much and put so much time and effort into martial arts. I thought that you were supposed to practice the techniques so much that it became second nature and you could actually use what you learned and not just try to brawl. If your not going to use what you've learned, aren't you just wasting time?
I seriously thought that a form/kata was supposed to look like you were really fighting someone, and a fight/sparring match was supposed to look just like the form (I know you have to change the technique according to what the other person does, but still).
Maybe I am totally wrong though. If so someone please enlighten me I would really appreciate it.
Sometimes when I see videos of "masters" performing a form/kata or whatever, It seriously looks like a monkey screwing a football. Then when I see some of these so-called "sparring" matches or "real fight" videos on the internet it looks like 2 monkeys screwing a football. Why is this? Are they just not trying or what?
I don't know if this is what forms and sparring are supposed to look like or not, but I can definitely tell you I would be sitting in horsestance for about and hour if I tried to push that stuff on my teacher.
Tell me if I'm wrong or not, but aren't you supposed to issue power when you perform a form/kata or are you just supposed to go through the movements. I'm confused I was thought that when you do a form you issue power every time you show a technique and you use perfect form. If it's soft style like tai chi you still show the power but it is done a lot slower with the same perfect form thus making it soft.
As for sparring goes, if I don't use good technique when he spar again I will be sitting in horse stance for about an hour. I honestly believe that 1960's and 70's kung fu movies have 1,000,000 times more technique shown in the fight scenes than any sparring video I've seen on the internet or any modern day movie for that matter. Again this is still just how I was thought to do it and I thought that the reason to do forms/katas is to teach you the moves to use and the correct form to use when you use them in a fight. I thought that when you spar/fight it was supposed to look just like you were doing a form.
This is why I thought you were supposed to practice so much and put so much time and effort into martial arts. I thought that you were supposed to practice the techniques so much that it became second nature and you could actually use what you learned and not just try to brawl. If your not going to use what you've learned, aren't you just wasting time?
I seriously thought that a form/kata was supposed to look like you were really fighting someone, and a fight/sparring match was supposed to look just like the form (I know you have to change the technique according to what the other person does, but still).
Maybe I am totally wrong though. If so someone please enlighten me I would really appreciate it.