isshinryuronin
Senior Master
In Chinese culture/MA, I read that is bad luck to start with the left foot. This may affect how forms may begin. Anyone out there that can comment on this from a cultural point of view?
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Iâm not Chinese, but Iâve never heard that before. Interesting.In Chinese culture/MA, I read that is bad luck to start with the left foot. This may affect how forms may begin. Anyone out there that can comment on this from a cultural point of view?
A: Dear judge! What crime have I committed to deserve 10 year in prison?In Chinese culture/MA, I read that is bad luck to start with the left foot. This may affect how forms may begin. Anyone out there that can comment on this from a cultural point of view?
In Chinese culture/MA, I read that is bad luck to start with the left foot. This may affect how forms may begin. Anyone out there that can comment on this from a cultural point of view?
Hmm ive never heard this.In Chinese culture/MA, I read that is bad luck to start with the left foot. This may affect how forms may begin. Anyone out there that can comment on this from a cultural point of view?
I donât see Musashi here speaking that one leg or the other have a specific concrete yin or yang status.It's related to yin-yang. Depending on the form, stepping with the left/yin leg is a defensive and stable or "inwards" martial philosophy, and wouldn't be interpreted or received as "outwards" or aggressive enough. That's from what I recall.
Ironically, Musashi talks about this in Go Rin no Sho (this is a paraphrased quote):
["When you move forward, use the principle of in-yo, and when retreating, also use the principle of in-yo. The body should move as one with the feet, and the timing of stepping is vital in determining advantage or disadvantage. The foot that moves and the foot that stays reflect the alternation of yin and yang."]
Chinese like to force folks to be right handed. They force everyone to write right handed, even say you can't write Chinese characters with your left handThe first step taken in our fundamental form is with the left foot.
My first sifu is left handed. He told me there is tremendous pressure for people to NOT be left handed, so when he was young he was forced to do things right handed. Iâm not sure what the source or reasoning behind this is, but I vaguely recall it having to do with left being regarded as evil/bad or some such.
He is Chinese-American but his parents were immigrants.
I have never heard that from any of my Chinese Shifus, my wife, friends or their families. However this could be regional. There are superstitions in the North that no one in the South ever heard of and vise versa. I imagine these things can also be based on province of origin.In Chinese culture/MA, I read that is bad luck to start with the left foot. This may affect how forms may begin. Anyone out there that can comment on this from a cultural point of view?
I have not heard this information before. I assumed stepping occurs when the right foot moves forward. Given that most people are right-handed, this would be the natural step. Moving left foot forward foot first would require a shuffle.In Chinese culture/MA, I read that is bad luck to start with the left foot. This may affect how forms may begin. Anyone out there that can comment on this from a cultural point of view?
Let me tell you all what prompted me to ask this question. I recently got a book on Okinawan karate history and was reading about naihanchi kata (called tekki in Japan), which is considered one of the "master" forms of karate. Most all Shorin based styles have this form and most all begin it cross stepping to the right with their left foot (the feet start together).I have never heard that from any of my Chinese Shifu
This was the case in Sweden too up to the mid 1960âs , I had some teachers that quite hard handed tried to force me but I was more hardheaded and didnât give in.Chinese like to force folks to be right handed. They force everyone to write right handed, even say you can't write Chinese characters with your left hand
I have a long time had this very far fetched idea that the Naihanchi kata have same origin as XYQ and therefore some striking similarities(but I also see some striking similarities with TJQ too)Let me tell you all what prompted me to ask this question. I recently got a book on Okinawan karate history and was reading about naihanchi kata (called tekki in Japan), which is considered one of the "master" forms of karate. Most all Shorin based styles have this form and most all begin it cross stepping to the right with their left foot (the feet start together).
I learned, however, that it was not always done this way, that naihanchi (originally called dai pochin in Chinese) previously began with the right foot stepping to the left since beginning with the left foot was bad luck. It was Itosu who changed it to its current form and passed this on to other masters.
Isshinryu is one of the very few styles that begins this kata stepping to the left with the right foot as the author claims to have been the original method. Choki Motobu did it this way as well, and this is probably where my style got it from. He did study with Itosu, but also with Matsumora who could have gotten it from another teacher and so kept the kata's original Chinese beginning.
An interesting bit of karate history I'll look into a little more. Thanks for everyone's replies.
Whatâs the name of that book, whoâs the author?I recently got a book on Okinawan karate history and was reading about naihanchi kata (called tekki in Japan),
naihanchi (originally called dai pochin in Chinese)
I've seen it translated as 'internal divided conflict', but who knows!Whatâs the name of that book, whoâs the author?
The name âNaihanchiâ has long been debated without any clear finality to what it mean - Nai may be âinner/insideâ?, Han - âhalfâ, Chi - âearth/soilâ? .
What to make sense out of that one can work on.
But what does the author of your book translate the supposed Chinese âdai poshinâ to ?
Some has made reference of the Naihanchi stepping to how crab walk, so perhaps Haipangxie ?
I would aver that since 'Naihanchi' is used in several Asian dialects and MA's styles, it takes on a different meaning from country to country. It can be seen as a stance, a form or Bunkai. References to Funakoshi infer it was more about the latter.Whatâs the name of that book, whoâs the author?
The name âNaihanchiâ has long been debated without any clear finality to what it mean - Nai may be âinner/insideâ?, Han - âhalfâ, Chi - âearth/soilâ? .
What to make sense out of that one can work on.
But what does the author of your book translate the supposed Chinese âdai poshinâ to ?
Some has made reference of the Naihanchi stepping to how crab walk, so perhaps Haipangxie ?
Yes, the name probably formed with old Okinawan dialect trying to sound the way an old Fujianese dialect pronounced the name of the exercise.I would aver that since 'Naihanchi' is used in several Asian dialects and MA's styles, it takes on a different meaning from country to country. It can be seen as a stance, a form or Bunkai. References to Funakoshi infer it was more about the latter.