repz
Green Belt
Anyone train in for the Jundokan organization of Okinawan Goju Ryu? i saw some videos of that Taira dude, and I'm feeling his flow in bunkai. Are all goju schools under Jundokan move that way? Or only those who trained with Taira?
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This school has Taira as the head leader of their organisation. The guy said he moves a lot like Taira. But I was wondering if all Jundokan moves that way. Basically, I want something different from the shotokan I trained in. I want circular blocks, more hand strikes over punches, maybe some strikes in combo to the groin neck in a combination, that sort of thing.
I go on youtube and there isnt much Jundokan vids. The school that are from there do "flow" in their vids, which is what i would like i would want to learn.
Awesome, thanks for the replies. I dont mind some overlap with techniques from my old shotokan days, but I need something different to keep me going. I reasoned Kyokushin was what I needed, but I had some even more serious overlap with my many years of kickboxing.
This I would like to learn... notice the "flow" that I speak of.
If this is what is in store for me if I were to train in jundokan goju, then I would definetly join up and stick with this just because its new to me, and looks fun.
Just looks like good goju to me. Any advanced study group should be able to provide a similar training situation, although the 'flavor' of the flow drills might differ depending on the ideas being worked on.
So goju usually move like this? I would feel better in my choice if this was a common trait, then just a jundokan trait. I wouldnt want to rely on one set method by one organisation (meaning if they move away I can still join another goju ryu and still be somewhat comfortable in knowing I'm still using traps and circular soft movements and flow like i like).
So goju usually move like this? I would feel better in my choice if this was a common trait, then just a jundokan trait. I wouldnt want to rely on one set method by one organisation (meaning if they move away I can still join another goju ryu and still be somewhat comfortable in knowing I'm still using traps and circular soft movements and flow like i like).
At higher levels, yes. Keep in mind all of the various goju ryu-ha have their own unique spin on things. Some have more of the formal kumite two man sets which must be memorized. Others like to focus more on kaki or sticky hand applications as the student becomes advanced. I believe Taira Sensei to be very innovative - his expression of goju is among the most dynamic.
As a beginner to goju-ryu, be prepared to learn and practice the static techniques and drills. You will likely have to do months of it to build a proper foundation before you are shown the training you seem intrigued by, so be forewarned so you can talk with the sensei about your mutual expectations.
Here is a Shoreikan drill - they do some of the same things, as does the Meibukan.
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