At what level does your training all seem to come together and really make sense?
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Rob, I really think it's a "multi-stage", continual process. I have been training about 8 years in TKD in a very traditional school with a self defense emphasis (not that this matters, just background info). There have been many stagesRob Broad said:At what level does your training all seem to come together and really make sense?
Good point about building on what you are learning, we are really lucky that our Instructor has introduced a sheet which gives us our criteria that we will be marked on for our upcoming gradding and which months we will be learning new things etc, makes training very clear.TigerWoman said:I dug this up again because I didn't see it the first time around. I have thought throughtout my training that some particular aspect was "clicking" like at blue belt when I finally start to get that jump spin heel. Instead of a crazy woman flapping her leg and getting nowhere near the target. That was for you Sarah. Then at red belt when sparring became actual opportunities that I could see. But now, I don't know if it is clicking-- at least before when I went to class. I think the program has to be an actual program, a progressive thing that builds something. Not just a whim of the day thing that it has been in our dojang for the last two-three years. We hadn't really sparred in months and then one sparring session, then another long period. How does anything click when you can't actually spar? I'm ranting. sorry. At older age, stuff can get away from you very fast. Even if it clicked before, it has to be reviewed and practiced to keep the level. TW
i like this explanation the best...so i don't think i need to restate it...Martial Tucker said:Rob, I really think it's a "multi-stage", continual process. I have been training about 8 years in TKD in a very traditional school with a self defense emphasis (not that this matters, just background info). There have been many stages
in my training where another "lightbulb" seems to click on, and I felt like I had advanced to a new level. So, to get back to your question, It seems fuuny to me, but whenever I think things have really "come together", as you described it, after a few more months of hard work, it's like everything has "come together" again on a higher level, and I look back at where I was and wonder how I could have felt the way I did at the time. Maybe that's the sign of a good school and/or a good teacher, or maybe it's also how you approach your training, mentally. I don't know, but I like this topic/thread, and anxious to hear other's thoughts.
BigNick, I like your statement. I have seen too many people that want too many things too fast. They are not willing to waiting and learn and I see them beat themselves up for it when they don't think they are moving ahead fast enough. If only they would see the little victories in their training instead of how many submissions they had during a class, etc.bignick said:it's the little glimmers i get every once in a while that they're all coming together....