Victor Smith
Blue Belt
There are teachers who can explain dozens of applications for every kata movement. I have experienced them in Chinese, Okinawan, Japanese and Indonesian arts.
Their students do not spend any time trying to figure anything out. Instead they spend their time working to get the applications down, and the part that's up to them is to learn how to select responses and make them work.
Other instructors may show how each movement can handle 99% of attacks, and the student then learns how to just take a techinque and stop the attacker.
Part of the reason a lot of applications are not shown until a student is extremely advanced is simple, they can't do it. Without total faith in their ablity to make a technique work, they will invariably turn to a technique they believe in more strongly. For raw self defense that is fine, but the inability to acutally use their art is why long term instructors share information very slowly. It's not because they want to hold anything back, its because you can't share what the student is not ready to do.
Then again, if you can stop an attack, is it pertinate whether you have 100 different ways to do so, unless you really want the challenge to address your art in fullness.
That is a personal question, and really the one that defines where your art will go. Not where a qualified instructor can lead, but whether you have the determination to go beyond what you want.
Their students do not spend any time trying to figure anything out. Instead they spend their time working to get the applications down, and the part that's up to them is to learn how to select responses and make them work.
Other instructors may show how each movement can handle 99% of attacks, and the student then learns how to just take a techinque and stop the attacker.
Part of the reason a lot of applications are not shown until a student is extremely advanced is simple, they can't do it. Without total faith in their ablity to make a technique work, they will invariably turn to a technique they believe in more strongly. For raw self defense that is fine, but the inability to acutally use their art is why long term instructors share information very slowly. It's not because they want to hold anything back, its because you can't share what the student is not ready to do.
Then again, if you can stop an attack, is it pertinate whether you have 100 different ways to do so, unless you really want the challenge to address your art in fullness.
That is a personal question, and really the one that defines where your art will go. Not where a qualified instructor can lead, but whether you have the determination to go beyond what you want.