Dwi Chugi
Orange Belt
Doomx, thank you for the welcome. I enjoy reading the posts from fellow hakidoin and martial artist in general. You will find that I find a true interest in seeing others view on the art that I love. I may not find everything valid for me that is posted by others but I will always keep an open mind and value others views. I love to ask questions on how other styles and systems of Hapkido and martial arts train.
Kong soo do, great posts. I agree you have to train "live" to prove what works vs. what is shown just because it's part of the system. It is true that a fight is dirty and ugly. It does not look like an aiki/Hapkido demonstration. I also think you have to train compliantly at first to get the technique down. We train different types of techniques different times of year. We do more techniques off of dynamic attack vs static wrist or lapel grabs. Please don't get we wrong we do train defense off wrist and lapel grabs its just my belief one is attacked with someone entering in with a technique then some one grabbing a body part. I live in Daytona Beach, Florida and the temp reaches 97 degrees with 100% humidity in the summer. We usually dress in shorts and a tank top. We are usually sweaty so wrist breakaway's or someone grabbing your shirt is not usually an issue.
What kind of live training do you do in kong soo do? How do you make it realistic without hurting each other? How often does your dojang train live?
As I posted earlier we run lines where the head of the line is attacked straight on, a circle where the person in the center of the circle is attacked at random by the people on the outside of the circle at random and finally different types of sparring. Yesterday's rules were you were allowed to punch, kick, knee as hard as you wanted to the body and lightly to the face. Throws and take downs were legal and grappling to submission was ok too. Our main goal however was to get our opponent down while staying on our feet. Tuesday we will be doing the circle as our live training.
Kong soo do, great posts. I agree you have to train "live" to prove what works vs. what is shown just because it's part of the system. It is true that a fight is dirty and ugly. It does not look like an aiki/Hapkido demonstration. I also think you have to train compliantly at first to get the technique down. We train different types of techniques different times of year. We do more techniques off of dynamic attack vs static wrist or lapel grabs. Please don't get we wrong we do train defense off wrist and lapel grabs its just my belief one is attacked with someone entering in with a technique then some one grabbing a body part. I live in Daytona Beach, Florida and the temp reaches 97 degrees with 100% humidity in the summer. We usually dress in shorts and a tank top. We are usually sweaty so wrist breakaway's or someone grabbing your shirt is not usually an issue.
What kind of live training do you do in kong soo do? How do you make it realistic without hurting each other? How often does your dojang train live?
As I posted earlier we run lines where the head of the line is attacked straight on, a circle where the person in the center of the circle is attacked at random by the people on the outside of the circle at random and finally different types of sparring. Yesterday's rules were you were allowed to punch, kick, knee as hard as you wanted to the body and lightly to the face. Throws and take downs were legal and grappling to submission was ok too. Our main goal however was to get our opponent down while staying on our feet. Tuesday we will be doing the circle as our live training.