Carol Kaur said:
From a meditating position:
1. Step in to a right neutral bow while executing:
a. Right inward block
b. Left back elbow strike
2. Immedately execute a right handsword at the same height of the block, palm down
3. Shift into a forward bow while:
a. Left shotgun to eyes
b. Right cocks
4. Return to a neutral bow while:
a. Right spearhand to solar plexus
b. Left checks(?)
A couple of questions on these opening moves...
While the right spearhand is executed to the solar plexus, does the left hand return to check position?
How practical is the spearhand strike? I guess I could see it useful on the eyes. I'm sure a spearhand to the solar plexus would hurt, but it sees as if there would also be a risk of jamming up my own fingers in the process. Would there ever be a case where the a spearhand is used instead of a punch?
Thanks :asian:
Before I start a diatribe, are you more interested in a progressive answer that's applications based, or in one that supports the "traditional" core database of kenpo. They differ. Particularly if you're willing to bend the rules a bit, there are some fun things you can do with this.
Incidently, the left hand checking at the right shoulder should return to the shoulder with some authority as a slap-check. Progressive or not.
Some schools, realizing that not everyone will have the finger strength, thickness, or development as some of the older brutes in the system, have modified it to either an inward palm-heel strike, or a an upward rising rigid-hand strike to the groin.
Conceptually, it's a visitation to the master-key sequencing demonstrated in 5 swords, and a bunch of other techs. The concept that drives the sequence is more improtant than the natural weapons one chooses in it's expression. Block/chop movement of the lead hand to a high line, followed immediately by a more powerful rear-hand strike (also to the high line...some people emphasize spearhand, others palm heel, others still inside-downward overhead palm heel/rake [which is my personal fave & choice])...now the guys got his hands up. The next strike thrown to the high line will bump into his inadvertant guard as he covers against follow-up blows, or simply puts his hands to his bloody eyes in natural response to the shotgun. This governs that the next strike should go to where the hands are not...midsection, or lower. I've seen some schools switch that right hand to a vertical thrust punch, others uppercut (targeting costal cartilage line of the ribs, which pretty effectively takes the wind from the guy, particulalry if you target the any of the acupuncture points, Spleen 16, Stomach 23, or Gall Bladder 24), still others follow it with a lead leg low-line snap kick to the knee, back of knee, groin, or fibular head (front, side or roundhouse variations). Are they pure? The way it is written in the manuals? Nope. But are you interested in either conditining your fingers to become weapons (lots of finger press-ups, spearing buckets of rice or sand, etc.), or breaking them on the vertical spear hand in the middle of a self-defense scenario, effectively losing the use of your right hand while in the middle of needing it really really badly?
While I do not ascribe to purist kenpo, having decided *personally* that much of it is fluff and filler to appease the consumer masses, I do believe that practicing SOME of the forms is a great way to program some of the more important options into muscle memory. I think the master movements in this first part are worth engraining. I do not think most practitioners have any businesss training that spearhand. I have done the silly conditioning, and can spear a guy in the abdomen without breaking my hand. Still, I wouldn't do it. Why chance that this one time, I may have the angle wrong? What if I tear off a fingernail on a piece of clothing? (that stuff hurts)
Personally, when I train this form, I angle that final vertical spearhand up and in a bit, to the carotid triangle. I can ride the angle of the attackers forearms up to that target, and find the sweet spot, even while their hands are up to cover their face...no one instinctively covers their face by making their elbows touch accross the front of their body, and that leaves the opening and angle for planting a re-inforced 4-finger spear right in the saran-wrap that spreads from ear, to windpipe, covering the carotid artery pulse point.
But that's my own wierdness...I could be wrong.
Regards,
Dave