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Shifting your weight back helps you pull them onto your strike, but if you are moving forward then shifitng you weight forward won't be wrong.Why is it that in class knife hand blocks are always in back stance? If I use a front stance is that wrong?
IMO nothing is absolutely "wrong". If it works or if it is needed, then surely a knife hand block from a front stance is correct.
However, there's usually good reasons for why codified styles do things the way they do. It's because someone influential at some point in the past found it good to do that things that way and passed it along.
For your specific question, I myself practice shuto uke from more of a side facing stance than a front facing one. I do this because I think the applications for a knife hand motion are more natural or efficient from this position though surely exceptions exist.
Look at this video for example. Look at how the defender chops from a non-frontal position before transitioning to a horse stance for the take down. IMO it's more clumsy to do it from a front stance, so he doesn't show it that way.
Why is it that in class knife hand blocks are always in back stance? If I use a front stance is that wrong?
I don't know the specifics of your training, so I'll share a generality. Often, the initial stance used in training a movement is used for one of three common reasons. 1) It is one of the most common stances used with that movement. 2) It makes it easier to use the specific body movement that goes with the hand/arm movement. 3) It makes it easier to see and/or avoid some common mistakes, so you can practice doing it right more often.Why is it that in class knife hand blocks are always in back stance? If I use a front stance is that wrong?
Why is it that in class knife hand blocks are always in back stance? If I use a front stance is that wrong?
Why is it that in class knife hand blocks are always in back stance? If I use a front stance is that wrong?
Specifically...What in particular do you disagree with Paul?
No, it's not, because it serves no purpose there. Why would you perform a movement that has no practical function? Hikite is for pulling your opponent onto your strike. You wouldn't pull your hand back to your hip for any other reason. As Motobu said:- never have a dead hand. A hand sitting on the hip is a dead hand as it is doing nothing. If it has no purpose, you would pull it back to your chin to guard.Your rear hand returning to your hip is fine
Shuto-uke is for seizing your opponent with Hikite and them pulling them onto your shuto strike, so there will not be any distance between you and your opponent.The back stance let's you maximise the distance between you and your opponent
Shuto Uke is for self defence, not fighting, so there won't be anything coming. It is for use preemptively (which is why it is often found at the beginning of kata) and once you have hit you keep hitting until they are no longer a threat, then you retreat. You don't take turns hitting each other like you do in sparring, he does't get a turn, so there won't be anything coming.and by keeping back you have as much room as you can to see what's coming.
Specifically...
No, it's not, because it serves no purpose there. Why would you perform a movement that has no practical function? Hikite is for pulling your opponent onto your strike. You wouldn't pull your hand back to your hip for any other reason. As Motobu said:- never have a dead hand. A hand sitting on the hip is a dead hand as it is doing nothing. If it has no purpose, you would pull it back to your chin to guard.
Any explanation which only explains what some part of the body are doing, but not all (as is the case with most explanations of movements as "blocks") is incorrect. Unless an explanation of a technique adequately and practical gives a function why all the parts of the body are doing what they are doing, then it is wrong.
Shuto-uke is for seizing your opponent with Hikite and them pulling them onto your shuto strike, so there will not be any distance between you and your opponent.
Shuto Uke is for self defence, not fighting, so there won't be anything coming. It is for use preemptively (which is why it is often found at the beginning of kata) and once you have hit you keep hitting until they are no longer a threat, then you retreat. You don't take turns hitting each other like you do in sparring, he does't get a turn, so there won't be anything coming.
Sorry, but I stopped reading once I got to this point. It is not practical to have your fist on your hip don't nothing. It's a dead hand. What is practical (if it's not performing hikite) is to have it guarding your chin, like boxers, who it has been shown have the most powerful punches.The practical purpose of the hand on hip is a wind up for a big punch.
Well that was juvenile. But I suppose it's easier than considering where you might be wrong.Sorry, but I stopped reading once I got to this point. It is not practical to have your fist on your hip don't nothing. It's a dead hand. What is practical (if it's not performing hikite) is to have it guarding your chin, like boxers, who it has been shown have the most powerful punches.
Chambering your hand on your hip is part of the utter nonsense that was trotted out in the 80s and before (along with "blocks"). If people still believe this then they don't understand the very art they claim to teach.
The question I have for you is if you don't block how do you stop incoming attacks?
I agree completely except that simple blocking is not for beginners, it's for emergencies.I'll take a shot at this one...
The actual "block" is the smallest part of it. Footwork, body/torso movement, and head movement the the real key. Some karate schools refer to it as tai sabaki. Standing squared up and doing a textbook 2 handed jodan uke is going to get you hit in any realistic encounter (unless of course you have lightning-like reflexes and/or your opponent is among the slowest people on the planet).
The best place to be during a punch (other than not being there at all) varies on the situation. Standing straight in front of your opponent, kata style (the absurd breakdown of kata) is perhaps the worst place to be. Sometimes the best place is very close and in front, other times it's very close and off line, other times it's far away and center or off center.
If your tai sabaki is correct, the "blocking hand" does very little; it'll either just knock it away, deflect it further off course, or attack the limb. Simple blocking is for the very beginners.
All IMO and easier said than done. I get hit far too often with far too many things to claim any expertise on the matter
What didn't you like Tez?
Paul D had a temper tantrum and left the forum, which is not a great loss because he never stuck around to answer the whole poked in his arguments anyway.