Martial arts tips

Tigerwarrior

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Figured it would be a good idea to make a thread on tips. Little things you've learned in your training that helped. Can be anything. Share your wisdom with martial talk!

I'll go first. Tip: when punching if you try to punch hard you will punch with less force. If you use speed and your body weight you will punch harder than tensing and trying to put tons of power in your punch. In breaking I once couldn't break a board because I was so focused on power. Then My teacher told me to punch faster and use my body and not focus on putting strength from my arms. I broke the board. Same day, just one tip made the difference.
 
When you

- think about power/speed, that's not your true power/speed.
- don't think about power/speed, that's your true power/speed.

The day when you can punch with your arms behind your back and just punch with your body, you truly understand how to punch.

When you punch, try to pay attention on your knees. Is your knee coordinate with your elbow?
 
To all the people who've asked me what the best martial art is: The best martial art for you is the one you enjoy training in, because that's the one you'll stick with. When you stop enjoying it, find a new best one.

It's a wild ride, friends. Enjoy it.
 
If your opponent wants to

- bend his arm, you help him to bend more.
- straight his arm, you help him to straight more.
- drop low, you help him to drop lower.
- stand up, you help him to stand up higher.
- stand wide, you help him to stand wider.
- stand narrow, you help him to stand narrower.
- ...

To help your opponent is to help yourself.
 
The day when you can punch with your arms behind your back and just punch with your body, you truly understand how to punch.
This sounds like something the ancient Shaolin master would say to his disciple in a king fu movie.................BUT,

A great observation!! Even though our arts are quite different we agree on this concept. The arm motion in a punch is just the most observable, tail-end of the technique.
 
If you think

- you are better than your opponent, enter through his front door. You separate his arms away from his head and attack his center.
- your opponent is better than you, enter through his side door. You guide his leading arm to jam his own back arm. This way you only have to deal with one of his arms.
 
Learning relaxed, loose movement is much harder than it sounds. Occasionally train to the point of muscular fatigue, to the point that your muscles feel like washed out, wet rags hanging off you. Push past this point and keep going. Then you'll start to get an idea of what relaxed loose movement really feels like.
 
Practice everyday consistently. Just 20 mins daily will get you farther than 1 hr twice a week.
 
It's hard when you're supposed to be fighting but relax- your opponent will have to chase you all over the floor if you can move around better
 
Practice everyday consistently. Just 20 mins daily will get you farther than 1 hr twice a week.
This is good. Often times the process of motivating myself to practice or even attending class is difficult, but afterward the rewards are super. Good thought!
 
Trust the technique. Sometime trying to edit or "improve" a technique is what breaks it.
1st Trust the technique
2nd. Learn what the technique works best against.
3. Learning TMA, CMA: application learning works best when sparring is System A vs System B.
4. Family doesn't fight Family.
 
Think hard about why you're doing what you're doing. Especially when it's a technique or movement that seems silly as hell.
 

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