Maybe you feel you have a stronger bead on things and you can make that judgement. I dunno.
The only thing I have is curiosity. What am I seeing? What is being shown? What are the hands doing? What are the arms doing? What are the legs doing? Is the technique for punching or is it for grappling or both? What are the limits of the technique? Does the technique following similar principles found in CMA. Is the technique used in other system in which I may be able to reference?
All of this curiosity is part of learning. I do the same thing even when I'm sparring and I try to figure it out so that I know how to deal with it, or figure it out so that I can understand where I find success. failure, or risk.
Just because he's the teacher doesn't mean I can't question or probe, or ask, or analyze.
If he has serious students, I expect they know what material is worth using as reference, and what isn’t.
This I don't believe. I've seen too many TMA artists fail against take downs because they were trained to believe that they could punch their way out of a good take down. I've seen too many people like Rokus who rose to higher ranks than I have achieved only to abandon all that they trained. I've seen too many CMA students train hundred's of techniques but only know how to apply basic kicks and basic punches.
"Serious Student" could simply mean that one is serious about forms, etiquette, and cultural tradition. "Serious Student" does not mean one knows how to apply the techniques that are taught.
This is a 29-second video without any explanation in English.
In fighting you have even less time than that to figure out your opponent's strategy and what he's trying to do, yet many of us are able to figure that out.
I understand the Etiquette thing, and the save face thing, and don't question the teacher stuff. I know for many to do so is an uncomfortable thing. But I don't let what's uncomfortable stop me from trying to understand. And I don't by into the "If you really want to understand then train that system." I spar System A vs System B. I gain better understanding by asking and questions, taking that information that they give me, analyze it so I can come up with a Jow Ga answer. There are a lot of people out there who train but don't understand.
Some may think I'm attacking the teacher but I'm not. I'm asking about the technique, I'm analyzing what I see, I'm analyzing what those movements could be. If it's a punch, then what are the pros and cons of using it as a punch? But some in this thread are even uncomfortable about asking that question. Nothing I've done is outside of critical thinking.
Getting back to the idea of context. Who did the filming? Why was it being filmed? For whom was it intended? Who decided to post it on the internet? Was that posting done with his blessing? Perhaps this was a short, spontaneous lesson meant for a couple of people, and was never meant for the internet.
So I'm going to bring up this question and share my thoughts.
1. Who did the filming? Do I ask this question when I see BJJ videos, boxing videos, or any similar video that shows someone teaching something?
2. What is he saying? He's speaking English. Translation: When he kicks. One , Two like that (as he hits the groin). Again... One, Two. One, Two, Three. This is convenient, understand that it's convenient not separate
There's nothing wrong with trying to understand a system that you don't train in. Like I've aways said. Focus on the technique and not the teacher. If you were to spar against me, my teacher won't come to mind. You will only see the technique and you'll have less than 29 seconds to figure out how I'm trying to attack you.
Focus on the technique and not the teacher. Application creates Form,