Okay, Doc...
Your definitions are incorrect from an educated perspective, not specific to a physical perspective, and anatomically wrong. I sorry you didn’t understand my explanation. “Bending over “ is not a Position as you say, but it is a physical act.
Forgive me, I should have said my definition of being ‘bent over’ in the context of the discussion. But as the question was what happens when kicked in the groin I stand by you begin bending over to become bent over, as per my definition. So now I’ve discussed the reaction and the final positioning.
And though you seem to think I am incorrectly educated, I think my definition is the same as yours for groin, just not in so much ‘scientific’ detail.
The “groin” is described as the area between the two (2) connecting points between where the femur attaches to the hip across the pelvic below the abdomen.
Space between the legs, below the bladder, including the testicles, etc. if applicable. Same thing, Doc.
IÂ’m afraid you miss the point altogether, and for the record, You are characterizing it as a quarter of a second not I, and you still donÂ’t seem to understand.
No, I get the point, these people only see the aftermath, not the act itself, like those who didnÂ’t see a bomb actually hit a building, but saw it fly apart as a result. My response was that the act and the result are for all intents and purposes instantaneous so why separate them. I used a quarter of a second to time frame it. ThereÂ’s no significance other than a quarter second is a very short time.
That too is not bending over. You are “tilting on a vertical axis” and have introduced another element in the buckle that takes you further away from what the conversation is about.
No, the technique was to display a point, the buckle is just a force on the lower part of the person as is the force on the top. I said bend and not tilt so that I didnÂ’t have to define tilt. IÂ’ll know better next time.
Now, if it works on the whole body, it will/should work on the upper portion of the body, their top momentum meeting the kick in the groin. So really it didnÂ’t take us any farther from the topic at all.
I have already said I disagree with what you call “bending over” and you actually are getting further from your own definition as you attempt to explain it in "technique terms?"
Haha, again, see above. IÂ’m not any farther than when this started.
Of course thatÂ’s according to your understanding. I know a bit about Ed Parker and his Kenpo, and the fact you draw on that information as your source is I'm afraid suspect in itself.
My information is suspect then? Interesting in that IÂ’ve done what I say and seen it done. You had said many times that there are no absolutes, never and always shouldnÂ’t be used because reactions differ. Yet you speak of anatomical facts and this is how a person moves, etc. when speaking of Sub-Level 4 stuff. You said a kick to the groin will not cause a person to bend forward, implying it never happens. IÂ’m just trying to see this from your angle and I just donÂ’t get it.
If an object that is hinged in the middle is standing vertically, and you push it backwards in the middle at the hinge. The top stays in place and the middle move backwards. It is not bending forward, it is moving away at the hinge. If you donÂ’t see the self-defense implication when we speak of Kenpo, than I cannot help you.
If their top comes forward or their hips move back while the top stays, they still end up ‘bent over’. The process to become bent over would be ‘bending over’.
Let me leave you with this, the crux of those manuals you are depending upon for your “knowledge” were written a minimum of almost thirty years ago with various updates and revisions over the yeas by various sources, and I have every version. The last version is 16 years old. They are conceptual and contain no specific information. If they are what you are relying on as your source then you will be lacking in many other areas as well. If you cited another perspective it would be different, but to discuss a technique and disagree “cause the manual said something" is a bit out there in this day an age. I know of no one that does that. Those are idea books to promote thought, and are not definitive on any subject. Additionally one of the reasons Kenpo kept evolving is because Parker would discover his own mistakes and rectify them. Ed Parker had a tendency like most humans to be wrong from time to time, and when he discovered mistakes or a better way to express or do something, he changed. So please don’t suggest I am somehow “dissin’” Parker because I disagreed with YOU.
Wow, I never said anything about a manual. You presume too much, Doc. My information comes from the techniques IÂ’ve learned. From watching my instructors do them. From doing them myself.
Of course kenpo is evolving, but those things you stated were about techniques that came after the system was in stride. Specifically two yellow belt techniques that were created after the fact (by Mr. Planas I believe) as a source for the children to learn, then added to the adult course later still. Since it wasnÂ’t created by him IÂ’m sure Mr. Parker went through it all thoroughly and examined it closely before allowing it into his system. I would especially hope so since it was first intended for children. DoesnÂ’t make sense to teach children a technique that, at least according to you, doesnÂ’t work that way.
And again, the art evolves, however, since many techniques show or imply that to strike the groin brings the head down in some fashion, (bending or flexing or whatever you chose to call it) disagreeing with my response does show problems with things Mr. Parker taught.
But IÂ’m not talking Kenpo, IÂ’m speaking of bodily reactions so whatever information you think you have picked up from whatever source is absolutely anatomically incorrect.
So am I. Things IÂ’ve seen and things IÂ’ve done, things my instructors have done. Things other people have done that IÂ’ve no personal connection to. You should know better, Doc. Absolutely and always are very similar, and youÂ’ve said yourself, there are no alwaysÂ’.
My ‘anatomically incorrect’ information I ‘think’ I have is called experience. Granted mine’s limited, but it’s enough to question.
So I see, but at least we have something we can agree on. I thank you for the exchange, but I have exhausted my explanations on the subject for the day. I must return to those who pay my salary before they decide they donÂ’t need me.
I’ve never said you didn’t have information that’s useful. I just don’t take everything you speak as gold either. Part of the journey is questioning things or people that don’t make sense. By all means return to your students, tell them I sad ‘hi’.
Joel