robertmrivers
Orange Belt
Smith Sensei,
While I appreciate your comment, I believe I said nobody would start a fight from that position. I didn't say anything about training. There are people in this world who start jiyu kumite (free sparring), not practicing ippon kumite (pre-arranged one-step sparring) in this position. I've been doing this for a while now... I have seen Korean stylists as well as Karate stylists break down into this forward stance/ down block positions (gedan no kamae) prior to defending themselves in a practical exercise or during sparring practice. This is not the intent of the technique. Your comment about what the down block "could" be in your training actually backs up my point. This gedan no kamae is NOT a static fighting stance. It is the complete defensive technique. Of course BEGINNERS use the format to practice their techniques in all styles. The problem is when a 3rd or 4th dan is still using a "down block" as a block... the transition to a higher understanding of the kata should have been started by then.
You offer some nice examples of the gedan barai tichiki (hogen for application)... condescending, but nice (I am sure you didn't mean it like that...). Of course I could go the tuite route and apply kansetsu waza at the elbow (maybe throw a little triple warmer pressure in there) as my application or any number of wrist locks, or I could go the kyusho route and apply the covering hand as a strike to the liver point at the ribs as I grab underneath to the large intestine point on the forearm, pull him off balance creating a sympathetic reaction exposing gall bladder 20 striking it with the inside of the forearm as the "block" comes up to the ear and then striking stomach 5 at the jawline as the "block" comes down. We haven't got time to discuss the implications of moving forward vs. turning 90 degrees vs. turning 180 degrees.
Perhaps we are training differently as you are still trying to introduce the chambering motion of the block as a rear elbow...I didn't know we had any orange belts in this discussion... just kidding. I have a 7th dan in Sarcasm.
Of course no disrespect is meant in any of these comments... I think we all enjoy a little debate and love to "toot our own horn" every now and then. Our experiences ARE different, we are in different regions of the country. But, I have a curriculum vitae a mile long...just as you do with names like Motobu Chosei, Bill Hayes, Angi Uezu, Ko Uehara, and others on it. I think a mistake people make is they try to assume one's training level based on a topic specific forum discussion. I respect you and your accomplishments. But, the things you describe and the material you teach in your ryu ha are not unique... they are foreign to people who have not had similar exposure to good instructors, but from a traditional karate point of view, these are all concepts that anyone practicing the forms should be exposed to early on in the training.
JT, bro, keep doing what you're doing...don't listen to any of us any more. Its got to be confusing. But...you will find yourself asking some pretty hard questions at some point in your training. You can just chalk it up to experience when the time comes.
Best
Rob
While I appreciate your comment, I believe I said nobody would start a fight from that position. I didn't say anything about training. There are people in this world who start jiyu kumite (free sparring), not practicing ippon kumite (pre-arranged one-step sparring) in this position. I've been doing this for a while now... I have seen Korean stylists as well as Karate stylists break down into this forward stance/ down block positions (gedan no kamae) prior to defending themselves in a practical exercise or during sparring practice. This is not the intent of the technique. Your comment about what the down block "could" be in your training actually backs up my point. This gedan no kamae is NOT a static fighting stance. It is the complete defensive technique. Of course BEGINNERS use the format to practice their techniques in all styles. The problem is when a 3rd or 4th dan is still using a "down block" as a block... the transition to a higher understanding of the kata should have been started by then.
You offer some nice examples of the gedan barai tichiki (hogen for application)... condescending, but nice (I am sure you didn't mean it like that...). Of course I could go the tuite route and apply kansetsu waza at the elbow (maybe throw a little triple warmer pressure in there) as my application or any number of wrist locks, or I could go the kyusho route and apply the covering hand as a strike to the liver point at the ribs as I grab underneath to the large intestine point on the forearm, pull him off balance creating a sympathetic reaction exposing gall bladder 20 striking it with the inside of the forearm as the "block" comes up to the ear and then striking stomach 5 at the jawline as the "block" comes down. We haven't got time to discuss the implications of moving forward vs. turning 90 degrees vs. turning 180 degrees.
Perhaps we are training differently as you are still trying to introduce the chambering motion of the block as a rear elbow...I didn't know we had any orange belts in this discussion... just kidding. I have a 7th dan in Sarcasm.
Of course no disrespect is meant in any of these comments... I think we all enjoy a little debate and love to "toot our own horn" every now and then. Our experiences ARE different, we are in different regions of the country. But, I have a curriculum vitae a mile long...just as you do with names like Motobu Chosei, Bill Hayes, Angi Uezu, Ko Uehara, and others on it. I think a mistake people make is they try to assume one's training level based on a topic specific forum discussion. I respect you and your accomplishments. But, the things you describe and the material you teach in your ryu ha are not unique... they are foreign to people who have not had similar exposure to good instructors, but from a traditional karate point of view, these are all concepts that anyone practicing the forms should be exposed to early on in the training.
JT, bro, keep doing what you're doing...don't listen to any of us any more. Its got to be confusing. But...you will find yourself asking some pretty hard questions at some point in your training. You can just chalk it up to experience when the time comes.
Best
Rob