I want to start a technical discussion on the use of hip. Some threads in the kenpo section really got me thinking about the nitty gritty dirty details about our art and I think this rabbit hole is pretty much the ceterpeice of TSD training.
Here are a couple of questions to kick this thing off.
1. Why is the use of hip important? (this is for noobs)
2. How does your dojang train students to use their hips?
3. Which techniques do you feel you get power?
4. Do you translate the use of hip principle into your kicking?
5. What does your Grandmaster (or your teacher) have to say about this concept?
6. Do you think that our stance work articulates the body so that we can maximize our use of hip?
Hopefully, we can spin off some good questions and good discussions from this starter thread. If we get sidetracked, great! Lets start new threads. In the end, hopefully we can come to a deeper understand of TSD.
upnorthkyosa
I know, this is a VERY old thread. But I would like to see if we can get it rolling again as I feel it is at the base of our style.
1. Obvious, the hips are where all movement comes from. They generate your power and should be the starting place of all movement, both leg and arm.
2. This is a fairly deep question. SBD trains very heavily in the use of Hu Ri and makes it obvious in every movement. The best way that I've found of training the hips is through the use of our transition movements. The Chook and Shim, during basics, students are taught to "wind up" (chook) and then release (Shim). The wind up generally involves turning the body (and therefore the hips) to open or close the hips depending on the technique. For kicking, basically, it is a matter of where the hips are going. e.g. for Front kick, your hips should be moving forward, Side kick, rolling down and back, etc.
3. I'm not exactly sure what this question meant (not sure if UpNorth remembers either

), but here is an issue I have with power and hips. In kicking movements and blocks with a lot of sideways movement (side kick, ahneso pahkuro mahk kee), it is EASY to feel the influence of the hips. But how about in a standard Choong Dan Kong Kyuk? The punch should be generated from the hips, but it is hard to feel. I occassionally find myself throwing punches from the shoulder and have to concentrate on that hip motion. Front kick is the same, it is very easy to just snap the kick out there with no hip movement. So how do you emphasize the hip in movements like this?
4. Hips in kicking....honestly, in Korea we didn't train the use of our hips as much in kicking. It was always there, but not focused on. We did drills designed to get your hips moving, but it was never talked about. Since I've started training here with a strong FOCUS on the hips, my kicks have changed drastically, in power and technique.
5. Kwan Jang Nim Hwang isn't too subtle about this point...basically the use of hips is at the foundation of our style.
6. I think that front stance CAN be used to accentuate the hips, but only if used properly. It is easy to get into the habit of keeping the shoulders AND hips square. For me though, Hu Gul Jaseh is the most difficult stance in which to make USE of the hips. I don't feel that the stance naturally lends itself to the full motion of hip movement in hand techniques. Kicking, no problem, since your back leg is moving from rear to front by use of the hip. With hand movements though, you are dealing with a front arm, so the hips are easy to miss.
Basically, I'm most interested in getting this thread restarted to get other organizations and practitioner's views of the use of Hu Ri. Before I came to the US SBD Fed, I never got such a strong focus on hip movement. Having it here has really advanced my technique though.