FearlessFreep
Senior Master
Agreed with Jeff, wrist grabs are easy to teach, to beginners especially, because they are non-threatening compared to other forms of attacks (like punches, bear hugs, etc...), but they start teaching you how the body works and moves and what directions forces can work on the body, and how to apply pressure, etc. I never really saw wrist escapes as simple "if someone attacks me like this, I will escape like this" but more as demonstration points of how to move and apply pressure to the other person to escape and avoid being hurt myself.
Like a recipe when watching the cooking show. The recipe itself teach how to make a certain meal, which is good and useful in out's own right. Watching a chef build a meal from that recipe also teaches you how to user salt and other spices, how to apply heat, how to use milk as a base, etc...and those simpler applications become building blocks for many other recipes
Wrist grab escapes are 'easy to teach and easy to demo but start the course of buildng and understanding in applied body mechanices that is useful in many other situations
Disclaimer: Like many, I don't formally study Hapkido, but my instructor has a strong background in it so our self-defense draws from some Hakipdo techniques
Like a recipe when watching the cooking show. The recipe itself teach how to make a certain meal, which is good and useful in out's own right. Watching a chef build a meal from that recipe also teaches you how to user salt and other spices, how to apply heat, how to use milk as a base, etc...and those simpler applications become building blocks for many other recipes
Wrist grab escapes are 'easy to teach and easy to demo but start the course of buildng and understanding in applied body mechanices that is useful in many other situations
Disclaimer: Like many, I don't formally study Hapkido, but my instructor has a strong background in it so our self-defense draws from some Hakipdo techniques