Originally posted by Rainman
Otay doc, it is the step throughs I am working on lately- step through attacks I mean. Some of the attacks are very singular (kicking punching) by position relationships. Kinda like designed for one step sparring- many older chinese systems have that stuff. Then move on to your chi sau and two man set for continueing attacks. So- what do you think about the singular step throughs? Or basically what does that mean to your- the singular step throughs that is.
thankyou
rm:asian:
You Sir, are very observant. You said it yourself. The "step through" comes from the old 1, 2, 3 step sparring drills from the traditional arts. I've only seen the step through in the Chinese Arts in Wu Shu, not the older "family arts." Two-man sets were designed to teach specific postures as well as offensive/defensive applications. "Chi-sao" was the extemporaneous component designed to teach sensitivity in the upper body.
Since then even the Chinese Knowledge is fading because the more recent "youngsters" want to compete. The same experience is happening in Indonesia because they want a "sport" version of Pentjak. Whenever an art panders to competition the knowledge begins to die, because sport application is always the lowest form of any art, (unless you're having death matches.)
Because many of the original imported instructors came from the traditional arts, they saw the step through as a legitimate attack as they do in Okinawa/Japanese/Korean arts. Ed Parker however didn't feel they had much in the way of an application offensively in a self defense based art. The truth is more subtle, with these step throughs being more "do" art than real application.
Like in a Japanese or Korean demo, they always "step back" so they can step forward when they attack. That's not likely in a real confrontation. People don't step away so they can have room to step through. However Parker recognized when a person is beginning to learn to defend themselves, the step through provides a measure of time to react, therefore he left them in. However, he advised a "step forward" from a "even footed" more natural stance like you would be more likely to encounter on the street is more realistic training.
My students stopped doing step throughs 25 years ago, but we do many things that are not in Motion-Kenpo. My advice: abandon step throughs unless they are specifically called for. Of course it does make the techniques harder to execute, but it's more real.
I also remember "back in the day" when if you were at the front of a technique line, you stood in a meditation horse. The theory was "If you can defend yourself from such an obviously vulnerable position, than real life would be easier." All of these things are part of the evolutionary history of American Kenpo. Ed Parker constantly changed. What you do in his art depends on "who" you were (despite claims he didn't teach everyone the same), "what" you learned (were you running a business?), "who" you learned it from, and (what evolutionary stage was Parker at) "when" "you" learned it.
"Don't try, do! Use the force."