FearlessFreep
Senior Master
It seems to me that for all the focus on spinning and jumpng and twisting that most kicks in Taekwondo are actually pretty linear. It seems like it you look at the actual path that the weapon travels, it seems to go directly toward the target with a slight arc or curve that allows the other various body parts to give the weapon greater speed and more efficiency. Most of the spinning doesn't change the path of the weapon much, just gives it more power (try to think of the path your foot travels doing a front side sidekick, a back side sidekick, and a spinning side kick; the path is pretty much the same, what changes is how body momentum contributes energy, and therefore speed and power, to the kick)
It seems to me that if I think of the mechanics of a kick ("foot drive up, twist hips, bring thigh in, swing foot around, etc..") that I slow down, but if I just think "weapon into target", then I'm much quicker and more powerful.
It seems to me that if I think of the mechanics of a kick ("foot drive up, twist hips, bring thigh in, swing foot around, etc..") that I slow down, but if I just think "weapon into target", then I'm much quicker and more powerful.