Gary L Romel, Esq.
Are you an attorney?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Gary L Romel, Esq.
I think your article is correct in pointing out some of the ways that some people train kata in an ineffective way. But I feel like your premise is that this is the fault of the kata themselves, or is a necessary result of practicing kata, rather than people's misunderstanding of what they are for and how to train them.
Some of the training methods you propose are things which people would ideally be doing in addition to the kata anyway.
I disagree that longer kata require students to stop and start their movements, it is the reverse, in fact. The longer a kata, the more opportunity to practice flowing and transitioning between various techniques
Ever see taijiquan, or other northern Chinese martial arts? They have very long forms which are nothing but "flow". Breaking down a kata and mixing up the movements, drilling techniques and combinations in a more realistic manner with partners, is something that everyone should be doing if self defense is the goal.
It is not kata which stop someone from doing that, it is the misuse of kata in many modern martial art schools. Kata are useful in several ways: they are a catalogue of techniques, principles, and strategies.
They are a study in combinations, flow, and transitions that have been found to be usefull (at least in the case of traditional kata). They are a way to practice alone as well as to encapsule the system of fighting. They are a jumping off point for exactly the type of training you are proposing. The practice of a kata should culminate in a pratitioner being able to perform any part of any kata in any order, in any direction, exchange movements and adapt them to different situations.
You are right that some people have unreasonable and unrealistic expectations about what a kata is and how it applies to self-defense, and do not often go in-depth enough into their study. This is not an inevitable result of practicing kata, but is evidence that many people did not receive complete understanding of the kata and the styles which use them, which is a systemic problem in western commercial martial arts descended from instructors who received lacking instruction in the first place.
So ultimately, it isn't "what's wrong with kata". It should be "what's wrong with your training?" or "Are you training your kata in a useful way?"
If the only objective for training is combat efficiency in the shortest amount of time,
Unfortunately this response is getting to the league of War and Peace. I apologise to all who are trying to make sense of it but short of putting up 50 posts I don't know how else to handle it. If it takes you 15 minutes to read, please forgive me as it has taken me over four hours to write. Cheers!
Great, we agree on some things! A small minority..we at least agree on that.
I think it is sad commentary, but yes only a small number of karate schools train with reality based kata bunkai.
*******
If they spar, it becomes a dance, in which it looks not so much like the form or the techniques as practiced.
Sparring has absolutely nothing to do with kata. If sparring looks like a dance, it is a dance.
Train like you fight and fight like you train. Sparring should be used as a tool that leads to proper combative application. Thus, if Kata doesn't represent sparring, all the worse.
I repeat, sparring has absolutely nothing to do with kata and sparring from a distance has nothing to do with bunkai.
**********
Trying to memorize long sequence of forms is counter-productive to such a goal.
Memorising' long sequences is different to 'practising them until they bypass cognitive thought'. Memorising a kata for grading is useless as a means of self defence. It is just a test of memory.However, many of the guys training in the early days of karate only learned one or two kata in a lifetime.
Your highlighted quote is exactly what the article is trying to get across. That was the training of yesteryear, not the norm now. I think it better for a quicker turn-around to not have a student memorize long forms, and then sparse applications on the way. Most people these days don't have the patience to train that way, and most schools wouldnt stay in buisness if they did that.
Yesteryear was where this all came from. Training then wasn't commercial and my training now is not commercial either. If you are saying that commercialising martial arts is destroying the understanding of kata, I would agree, but that is a statement on where martial arts are today, not the usefulness of kata in RBSD.
***********
Then again, I have Erle Montaigue's book, "Dim-Mak's 12 Most Deadly Katas", and those kata are only a few moves. But they are moves in sequence.
Yup, good book, and good video as well. Only a few moves is exactly what I was talking about your own short kata, not the traidional long kata. I believe Erle created those for that exact purpose.
Erle did NOT create the kata. They are traditional Bagua or Dim Mak kata.
***********
It takes exponentially longer to get such muscle memory down, and prolongs the neuromuscular systems programming to execute the concepts in a dynamic real-time fashion.
Sorry, this does not mean anything to me.
I'm sorry about that, perhaps there is some literature you can find on the topic.
What I am saying is the sentence is a nonsense! Literature will not help me understand it.
**********
While keeping the tradition alive so as not to lose the rich history of the Arts is important per se, Kata needs to be taken with a huge grain of salt in the context of developing the combat viability of such arts and manifesting a high level of skill in a real situation.
This brings us to our fundamental difference. We train kata, as bunkai, in a close combat setting every session. It may be in small segments but it is always in sequence and it always follows the kata. It is practised in such a way that should the technique fail, the next move in the kata gives you back the momentum.
Would you agree that a majority of schools do not do this? (I think you stated this above). Small segments is exactly what I meant when I said break it up. Always doing it in sequence is shorting yourself on combative training, Ill bet that your sequence will not work everytime, to every attackers sequence. Especially if your move doesnt pan out as planned, it is very likely the next move in the Kata will not cut it.
Yes, I would agree that the majority of schools do not do this, but that is the problem of the teaching, not the kata. Using the bunkai as I have described in close combat will work every time. However, if the attacker manages to block the blow, or resist the technique, the next move in the kata will, most times, keep you with the momentum. If not you just have to start again.
***********
The only real reason for Kata in the Self-defense context is so students can grasp the concept on which the technique turns.
I really can't understand what you are saying. What is "the concept on which the technique turns"?
This is a very fact dependant statement and context. The concept could beintercepting/blending on a horizontal plane whilst driving through your targed, with a certain flavor even. Clear as Mudd?
No. This is not plain English. It makes no sense at all.
**********
This may be necessary to learn to adapt the concept to ones own physical specifications. Thus, such mimicry is important for the very early stages of a students development, but beyond the beginner level of teaching the concepts, Kata has no place.
If what you are saying is right, it seems a total waste of time teaching kata at all, and in fact I know a number of schools that have removed kata from their syllabus.
Yes, in the self-defense context, it can be a total wastebut as I said before, breaking it up and mixing it up in small segments drilled and applied over and over can be usefull, and can be included.
This is an oxymoron. Learning the kata is useless but learning the kata in small bits is useful?
*********
No matter how many years one perfects such forms; it will still not adequately prepare someone for a fight.
Kata, by itself was never intended to "prepare someone to fight". Kata is just a means of preserving and transferring knowledge.
You may get some disagreement on that from a large percentage of Martial Artists. I agree it is a means of preserving knowledge, but now we have video, e-books, and students need not perform and commit to long term memory such long sequences to preserve the arts. There is a cost/benefit to such traning, and depending on your goals, the long kata is to much of a detriment combativly.
Then I would like any one of that large percentage of Martial Artists to show me how the kata, without the bunkai, will help anyone to fight. It is a nonsense as kata is the kihon form of training .. the 'Shu' in 'Shu-Ha-Ri'
*********
Rarely is a Katas movement actually used exactly as practiced in a form, and even more seldom is the exact sequence of moves used.
Once again, you are describing exactly what we do every training session.
Do you do adrenal stress traininghow many times do you have a complete adrenal dump while practing in your training sessions? I am talking real-world, full contact, much different than a very controled clinical situation, which the vast majority of schools that do teach applications use. Again using the exact sequence necessarily makes a lot of assumptions about a real conflict. I bet in one session I can demonstrate how many of your sequences will fail you I've done so to dozens of instructors.
Full contact yes, with appropriate equipment. Adrenal Stress training? Not as a real life or death situation. I don't believe that is easily reproducible, even with equipment like "red man".
Saying that you can demonstrate that sequences of techniques will fail is just wind. Am I able to use the potentially lethal and destructive techniques on you on the off chance you might stop them? I doubt it, and I doubt my insurance would cover it. However, if you are every in Australia, you are welcome to train with us.
**********
Stop and Start: The Necessity of Continuous Movement.
Learning the kata is just the first step. Worrying about how a move looks, or how perfect you are performing it, smacks of competition or grading, not reality. Getting to the stage that the next step in the kata flows naturally is the whole aim of performing the kata over and over. Achieving the relaxation and fluidity you describe is what the objective should be. That is why it takes so long to achieve. That is why it is so much easier to learn Boxing or Muay Thai.
Yup, it does smack of grading, which was my first point. Many students focus on that grade. It does take a long time to achieve the above with a long kata, exactly my point. Such things can be better accomoplished, and at a much faster rate doing short motion drills/fewer moves strung together.
What do you suppose the percentage of Black Belts are that can beat a boxer in a real fight? I don't think its very good for the foregoing reasons.
Are you really serious? A boxer fighting without rules or as a boxer? A Black Belt karateka able to utilise all his techniques?
Same height and weight? Too many variables but the odds favour the karateka. But what has that to do with kata. You have already stated that very few schools teach kata as RBSD. The BB is just an average BB.
*************
Continuous movement is critical. Never assume a certain attack and defense will be effective. Never assume change of movement, direction, or method will not be required. Never assume that a certain sequence of movements will be successful. Making these assumptions can mean the difference between life and death.
Are you now saying that you can use kata but .. ? If so we have changed direction but let's look at it. Continuous movement is certainly desirable, and yes a certain attack may not always be effective. I purposefully left defence out of the previous sentence because by its very nature, defence cannot be within a kata or it would require an attack at a particular point. Defence can only occur in the opening move.
I said--''By nature, learning long forms tends to require the students stop and start their movements / techniques over and over again. This is a product of trying to put long sequences into memory. The longer the kata/sequence the more difficult to achieve such continuous movement.
I think your defense point is a semantical argument. If in the middle of an altercation the person throws another punch, kick, knee, elbow, et al, you will be neutralizing that attack somehow, and that contitutes a defense.
If you are using the bunkai as a fighting system, it is unlikely another punch etc will be thrown, but assuming for some reason it is, it doesn't matter. There are two scenarios. First the possibility of a strike is factored in or you stuff up and have to start over. But the specific act of blocking an attack is not in the kata and may or may not be inherent in the bunkai.
******
Continuous movement makes it more likely the opponent will not be able to recover, turning the tables and forcing them to react to you is more desirable than being behind the eight ball on movement. I call such principle Counter Offensive Tactics, but that is another article altogether.
No! No! No! Not another article. This article! This is what it is all about. In bunkai your very move creates the possibility of a predetermined response. Either they block or protect as you know they will or you knock their head off. What you have stated is what bunkai is all about. Mate, call it what you like. "Counter Offensive Tactics" is fine by me.
Lol, ok. I did not mention Bunkai in the article. I do agree that sometimes your very move creates the possibility of a pretermined response, but such response cannot be counted on, just as the next move in your kata sequence cannot be counted on. There is more that goes into my term...but again, another long explaination.
The response can be counted on in as much as he protects or he gets hit. Iain Abernethy has some great material out demonstrating just what we are discussing.
*************
Hit Me Dont Quit Me.
Kata is almost necessarily training one in the tit-for-tat mentality, and two-step, three-step fragmented methods. Teaching that for every exact attack, there is a counter, and such counter can be executed in sequence is a reckless fallacy.
Sorry Gary, where back on opposite sides. Kata ha no 'tit-for-tat'. Two step and three step stuff was constructed as sparring drill for tournament fighting. Nothing to do with reality. Almost all of that I have come across is done from 'sparring distance' and has as much in common with RBSD as a pelican has to a pumpkin.
Ha, love the pelican analogy. Again, a sparring drill should be a bridge to reality, unfortunately in most cases it is not. But that has lead to most schools using and teaching kata in such a fashion. I'm betting if you demonstrated your kata I could point out some examples...maybe, maybe your version is very unique.
My kata would not inspire you. My knees are too old to get too low. There are hundreds of thousands of martial artists who could perform better technical kata than me. But, again, the kata is kihon, basics, the Shu form.
The bunkai, as we train it, does not rely on a specific attack and I do not teach specific counters to any form of attack, even more importantly when weapons are involved. So we do not have counters either, although in a way you could say that perhaps our first attack is a counter in the strictest sense. We have a sequence of specific attacks that continue until the attacker is disabled, one move or five.The fact that we can do this very training session demonstrates that it is not 'reckless fallacy'. It is what you train. I have no problem that you don't train it, but keep an open mind to what is possible, even if you haven't seen it first hand.
Great, but a kata DOES offer a specific move, and thus a counter. Thus your bunkai seems to differ from your kata movement, which is another topic, and demonstrates the point of my article.
Kata offers a specific move but the bunkai might give you six or more applications. I search youtube before for an example of Gedan Barai and it took forever to find someone performing it the way we were taught. If you are interested we could perhaps discuss that in a different thread.
I definitely agree that attacking until someone is disabled is the way to go, but again that predetermined sequence is assuming your attacks may not be foiled, and that the next attack will be situationlly appropriate. Specifically with a weapon, such as knife, failing in such a continuous attack can be fatal, if you plan to attack to the head and miss as he ducks/stabbes, your non-dynmaic sequence has failed.
I am not sure any empty hand kata was designed to counter weapons. If there is one, I haven't seen any bunkai to do that and I definitely don't teach it.
If you don't actually fight full contact in your sessions you don't know that you can. If you don't train against fighters of numerous systems and numerous weapons full contact, then you don't know if you can use such predetermined sequence.
That has nothing to do with the effectiveness of bunkai, and the TCMAs and Okinawan martial arts were not designed to be used against trained fighters. The fact that they can is a tribute to the masters who developed the different styles. And, of course, I don't believe empty hand kata was designed to be used against weapons.
***********
Even predicting the response of the attacker in such sequence, and that your long sequence will counter is a big mistake.
The 'long' sequence is not going to eventuate. Either he blocks my elbow to his temple or he doesn't. Either he reacts to my eye gouge or he doesn't. In the application of bunkai you get the response you are seeking or he gets hit. If things go pear shaped, you reassess and re-enter the bunkai at the appropriate point.
Having burned in such long kata makes it more difficult to reassess, you don't have time to reasess the next step. If you blocks your elbow there are infinate variations of such block, and what the opponent does next, if he gets hit, all the more probable your next attack will land, but not gauranteed, my point stands.
No, your point doesn't make sense at all. If I am controlling one arm and hit him in the head with my other elbow, unless he is a mutant he only has one other arm to block with. He will lift that arm to protect his head. Whether it gets there in time is the question.
************
But the natural response of the foregoing should not be relied upon, and certainly a long chain of methods should not be expected to hold up so well in a dynamic chaotic attack.
OMG! This is like bipolar! One minute I'm on a high and the next I'm depressed!
Lol, I think you missed the should not be relied upon, CAN be expected is not the same, as a gauranteed response!
Pedantics!
If you are being subjected to a dynamic chaotic attack that you cannot reverse then I doubt any of your training will be of value, bunkai or no bunkai. The use of bunkai supposes you survive the initial attack in whatever way you will. You then start your attack. In a sparring scenario you have no idea what will be coming next, but in a real fight at close quarters it is the fact that you can control an attacker's limb or whatever, that makes it work. At the Jundokan the statement was made, once you engage you do not disengage until the fight is over.
I love the statement once you engage you do not disengage until the fight is over, great basic principal! Part of that is taking the center from the first motion(their balance), and not giving it back. Moving in to control limbs is essential, getting off the line, taking their balance, and simultaneously attacking until they are disabled..all part of the goal.
The point is that the next move in your sequence exacly as practed may not be adequate to reverse the attack at any stage.
That doesn't matter! I didn't want to complicate things but in our previous discussion some months back I explained how you could move within a kata bunkai or into another kata bunkai.
************
Many who train and rely on Kata are left to think the techniques will work the same way every time. This fails to take into account that every real world attack is different, small variables such as body position, angle of attack, timing, speed, and even the environment come into play--which requires the Martial Artist learn to apply their concepts in almost infinite variation. Manifestations of techniques are often on the fly, spontaneous, and not pre-planned tit-for-tat as Kata pretends.
Bunkai allows for infinite variation within the normal range of movement. Your last sentence starts fine. In fact I would say 'always' rather than 'often'. That is why you would never enter a fight with a certain course of action in our mind. You react, then respond. It is not pre-planned and it is not tit-for-tat. Your response is pre planned, only by virtue of your entry point into the kata. It is not pre planned before the attack.
Well there you go, so in that sense, Bunkai is not kata, and practices infinate variations, this is not how kata is performed, which was the subject of my article. I basically agree with the rest of your statement here, with the caveot that the entry point of the kata may not work exactly as practiced, it seems via your bunkai point you would agree.
Of course bunkai is not kata. Again, Kata is the kihon or 'Shu' form of learning. Bunkai is the application or 'Ha' form of learning. Kata is performed ONE way only, bunkai can be performed in an infinite number of ways. Your article is totally flawed because you are ignoring the application of the kata.
**********
The solution is to adopt the Hit me dont quite me mentality. This means that once a concept is learned to a degree, a partner simply throws whatever attack he/she desires; a right hook, left hook, straight, upper-cut, knife edge, etc. The response should be continuous (even if the attack is effectively neutralized or the partner stops). Your partner should be encouraged to keep attacking, moving, and responding if possible. Practicing variations of the technique and concept is a must.
Hooray! Gary, we're back on the same page. That is exactly what I am saying you should do! The difference is, I will use bunkai that is 'instinctive response' and you will use your 'instictive response' based on your training and experience. The fact that my training is kata based and your training is not doesn't make one of us better than the other, just different.
Great!! Different indeed, but would you agree mastering a few motions/drills/kata movements and drilling them until functional in such a variable and instinctive way is a faster route to combat viability? If so, then it follows that as one moves through the training a person who breaks it up more as I am advocating will also be at a much higher skill level combatively than someone who spents a lot of time on long sequences. After all, there is only so much time in the day!
How much someone trains is up to them. If they want to learn kata as a fighting system they will learn the bunkai. Whether they learn it in bits or whether they learn it as a whole will depend on their own level of understanding and the ability of their teacher to help them develop their bunkai. Nothing to do with faster or slower. If you want to learn to fight in a hurry learn boxing or Krav or Muay Thai.
Create Your Own short Kata
Once you learn a technique, identify the principal behind it, get down the basic mechanics, the concept of the movement, and why it works. This should be done through the hit me trial and error. Of course adjust power and speed with your skill level. Tread carefully as it will take at least twice the time to undo poor reactions that you build in.
​Please, don't create your own short kata. Select a short sequence from a kata you know very well and create your own short bunkai, then pressure test. Pressure test everything and if necessary get some other competent martial artist to critique it. Apart from the 'own kata' bit we are in total agreement.
Great! Call it Bunkai if you want, but your basicallyi advocating the same thing. The difference is that I am saying if you have to change from the Kata to the Bunkai to pressure test something effectively, then are wasting time doing the Kata, and being counter-productive.
I will spell it out again. Kata is kihon. It is the first step of learning the system. You can't pressure test kata. Once you know the kata you move to the next step which is the application of the kata, or bunkai. You can and must pressure test bunkai. Learning the kata is not a waste of time. Without the kata you do not have bunkai. If you don't use kata but choose to develop a response to a particular attack that is fine. That is what every system without kata does. What it doesn't do is help you if your bunkai goes pear shaped. That is what the kata does. What it doesn't give you is the angle of attack. That is what kata does.
Why not create your own? If a student understands how/why a method works, and wants vary those movements and mix them up, why not? I would'nt advocate a raw begginer do so, as I said it can have a place with such newbs to a degree. Such creativity helps a student instinctivly move and learn, so long as they pressure test it, and are supervised for basic mechanical / martial soundness I think it is very helpful.
You have fifty or more fighting systems that have been successfully used over centuries and pressure tested in life or death situations and you think you can do better! (The less effective kata died with their originators.) Well good luck, because without understanding the concepts of kihon kata and bunkai the Japanese method of learning it will be just a collection of techniques.
Great, an intermediate motion drill clip and a clip with some application ideas will be up in the next day or so. Perhaps you could share some Kata and Bunkai? Showing the relation betweeen the two?
Kata is all over the web, my bunkai isn't.
If the only objective for training is combat efficiency in the shortest amount of time, then I agree. Memorizing long forms, or using forms at all, are not necessary or efficient. Forms are a long term project. Knowing more of them and spending all your time memorizing new ones is not productive, that is agreed.
But again, that is not something wrong with the forms themselves, just people's approach to forms. There is more to taijiquan (and many martial arts) than just fighting, and learning to fight in a short amount of time is certainly not something taijiquan is known for. People only have to stop and start to remember what they are doing in the initial learning phase.
Once the memorization is complete, and after sufficient repetition, the form starts becoming muscle memory regardless of its length, and the flow begins. Yes, the longer the form the longer the learning process, but I see the benefit gained from spending that time to be worth it.
I also disagree that the long forms are not translateable [sic] to real combat. Like you said, if training progresses with the right priorities and in the right order, isolated techniques and partner drills are learned before and alongside the form, so you immediately know what the movements of the form are used for; the length of a form doesn't negate that.
So I get what you are doing, I just wouldn't do it myself. I relish in the long, patient path of self-discovery, some forms are good for this. To each his own, I guess. I think devoting some time to practicing the moving mantra or meditation of a long form is equally important as drilling combat applications of the techniques. This is built into the systems which tend to use forms like this, reaching back to their roots in health and longevity exercises practiced by monastics that were paired with fighting methods to create the ancestors of the styles we have now. So my argument is not necessarily with your logic, but there are divergent motivations for training
If immediate and efficient teaching of combat/fighting skills are the goal then you don't want forms at all, really, at least not longer than a few techniques in combination, and you want to spend maximum amount of time building attributes and learning to apply a small number of techniques against resistance. Based on the way the martial arts of China and those descended from China are structured, I come to the conclusion that this is not the only goal for most of them.
Wonderful post Jin Gang!
Exactly my point! My questions when interviewing a new student are 1) what are your primary goals in order of precedence? Self Defense? Health? Fun?, 2) How long do you want to study? Six Months? 60 Years?, 3) How much time per day/week do you want to train?, 4) Do you need combat viable methods for a particular reason now? (this is usually applicable to people in dangerous jobs, bouncers, LEO, etc.
Forms ARE a long term project. As you stated if the goal is combat efficiency in the shortest amount of time, then Kata is not the most optimal vehicle. The trick however is to maximize combat viability early on whilst not training in bad-habits and compromising long term depth of skill from developing. Kata should be taught in small doses, it sounds like the very few folks that use Bunkai as a vehicle to break Kata down are already basically doing what I am advocating.
I think this is a fair statement, but most here seem to agree that en mass most peoples approach are worthy of my critique. Taijiquan is certainly not know for this, when it was brought to this country by Chen Man Ching, it was a health dance, it wasn't broken down in the bunkai fashion, or the short flowing drills / application methods I use. Stop / Start--exactly as I said.
I can agree with this, but as stated before, the shorter drills practicing the concepts in a two man fashion are more efficient and effective at translating combat viable skill, both in the long term, and the short. The drills simply get more complex, more dynmaic, and impart more depth of skill as time goes on. Sure, I can agree in the health context for example the Taijiquan form can be worth learning. My article was addressing the kata as a vehicle for pure combat viability, and how it is not the most optimal method for doing so. I do / have taught the Taijiquan Long and short forms, it is however done in proportion to 1) the students goals, 2) their ability to move fluidly through the moves, and 3) it is not the focal point of the training. Trying to burn a long broken up form into muscle memory before the student is ready can be counter productive to the combat viability of the art--the gist of my article.
I think was basically agree here. Long forms taught in big doses compromise and corrupt the students muscle memory with bad habits. Doing the forms broken up, in small doses, along side small sections of the Kata is what I am advocating if one uses Kata. After years and years of training, a long form does not negate that--but it's still not as helpful as doing "bunkai", motion drills, two man drills, reaction drills, etc.
And there we have it. Well said, the article was about that divergent motivation, mine is mostly combat oriented, I believe for health there are many other better options to improve health / strength. My business partner is a football coach / weight trainer, this is his area of expertise. Moving mediation is important. But such meditation does not require one to attempt to memorize a form when doing so. There are simple methods, and free-flow methods just as effective. If the form can be done (which takes considerable time) as a moving meditation without thought, then great, but it's still not the most efficient method for combat viability--as we seem to agree.
Exactly my point. However, look at the five fists in Xingyi, they are short forms essentially, traditional, and very combat viable if worked well. LHBF as shorter animal forms, Bagua as well (palm changes, animal forms). Taijiquan, the least combat viable as a whole has the longest forms---go figure .
Again, thank you for the well thought out post.
Best,
Gary
What part of kihon don't you understand? It is 90% to 95% of what you will see in most Karate dojos the world over. Kata as you see it performed in class and in competition is kihon kata. At the top level, it is kihon kata performed very well. It is not in a form suitable for combat. Kihon kata is the first step in learning kata. The fact that many karateka do not progress beyond basic kata is not the fault of the kata. By writing the article you did you have promoted your ignorance of kata and the Japanese method of learning, ShuHaRi. :asian:Kihon (基本, きほん?) is a Japanese term meaning "basics" or "fundamentals." The term is used to refer to the basic techniques that are taught and practiced as the foundation of most Japanese martial arts.
The practice and mastery of kihon is essential to all advanced training, and includes the practice of correct body form and breathing, while practicing basics such as stances, punches, kicks, blocks, and thrusts, but it also includes basic representative kata.
Kihon is not only practicing of techniques, it is also the karateka fostering the correct spirit and attitude at all times.
Kihon techniques tend to be practiced often, in many cases during each practice session. They are considered fundamental to mastery and improvement of all movements of greater complexity. Kihon in martial arts can be seen as analogous to basic skills in, for example, basketball. Professional NBA players continue to practice dribbling, passing, free throws, jump shots, etc. in an effort to maintain and perfect the more complex skills used during a basketball game.
In Karate
Styles of karate differ greatly in the emphasis placed on kihon. Kihon may be practiced as "floor exercises", where the same technique or combination is repeated multiple times as the students move back and forth across the floor. Japanese kihon training is notorious for extended periods of kihon training. This style of practice is believed to ingrain the techniques into the muscle memory of the karateka.
Some styles employ "kihon kata" in teaching beginners. Additionally, kihon may take the form of prearranged partner drills whereby two students face each other and alternate execution of a technique. This approach combines repetition with training in distancing. Targets for punching and kicking, such as bags, shields, or dummies, are generally used at more advanced stages of kihon training to strengthen muscles, bones, and skin. Examples of traditional striking targets include makiwara, among many others.
Some styles have a small set of basic techniques that are practiced consistently every single class. Others might have scores of techniques that are each only practiced every couple of months.
Thank you, respect to you as well, no worries about being blunt. Debate the ideas, don't attack the person, good motto to live by!
Yes, actually what I have written IS based on scientific study. I have consulted PHD's in neurophysiology, experts in kinesiology, etc., as well as scientific literature.
You admittedly have done no scientific study. So, no your study is different, likely based purely on your limited experience. If your experience is different, great, we can discuss that experience as well as the science if you don't mind going some of your own research and reading.
Here are some quotes that are key from a few sources: The key to building good muscle memories is to focus on the quality of the quantity
...when you want to learn to do something well, break it into small parts and take each part slowly until you're able to do it very well.
When you repeat mistakes again and again, you build a muscle memory with those mistakes. That makes those mistakes even harder to overcome later. This is one reason why the saying "you can't teach an old dog new tricks" is often true.
The last quote highlights the error of learning a long form. It is much more likely that you will build in more mistakes, which can be very difficult to unlearn as you attempt to break it up and apply it later.
muscle memory comes from focusing on a single action or movement
--http://sportsnscience.utah.edu/musclememory/
The above quotes highlights why doing long Kata is counter-productive to learning functional applications that one can react with dynamically. Shorter flowing motion drills that I teach are more digestable, and ingrain into the neuro pathways faster, and allow for better reactions to the stimuli of a real attack.
The practice of martial arts, in fact, seeks in part to make martial movement instantaneous and reaction habitual. Practicing martial arts has as one of its goals supplanting conscious thought with physical reaction. This "habitual skilled remembering," in Connerton's terms, then "reenacts" aspects of the movement's "historical origin." That is, certain types of movement (or "bodily practice" to use Connerton's terms [72]) may evoke romantic or idealized aspects of the historical origin of movement forms.''
This romantic/idealized aspects are in part what I am referring too. The competition like kata is putting such things into the reaction system that are not realistic. The same is true with sport sparring. The physical reaction becomes tuned to a sporting outcome, not follow-through, or nasty injurious counter attacks.
http://lifehacker.com/5799234/how-muscle-memory-works-and-how-it-affects-your-success
Moreover, The more possible moves an athlete can execute in a specific competitive situation, the more time it takes for an opponent to react successfully. This relationship is known as Hick's law.
Thus, per Hicks law--Kata is giving you a string of possible moves to execute, diminishing your reaction time by the grouping process. (Schmidt, R.A. & Wrisberg, C.A. (2008). Motor learning and performance: A problem-based learning approach (4th ed.). Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics )
Excellent, well then you should be interested in the science and research (some above), behind what type of training produces combat effectiveness and efficiencymy views are well researched and backed by science and experience. I would be happy to read your book and compare notes, I will email you soon. You say your studies reject my premise, but you said above you did not do scientific study?
It is well established that smaller chunks of such physical activity repeated over and over and pressure tested increases reaction time. Hence by break it up mentality, and Flowing Motion drill training.
Nonetheless I will take a read and see for myself. But you really should do some actual research and seek out PHD experts, I assure you they will agree with me!
You assumption is somewhat false. I am advocating doing repeated forms, just VERY short forms that are fluid. These short forms should be repeated over and over, both very slow, and very explosively. Sparring incorrectly can lead to mal-training. Sparring is not really the learning phase of the methods, it's the testing phase, a phase that bridges to adrenal stress training, and near full contact training.
Well I think that is preposterous. Rank should be directly proportional to ones ability to apply their MARTIAL art. One's ability to defend themselves and actually USE the art in a fight should be inline with rank. It is a disgrace to see a blackbelt that cannot fight. That type of thinking reduces the MARTIAL arts to a dance, a set of movements that have no application or meaning. A martial artist devoid of fighting ability doesn't deserve to be called a martial artist, period. You couldn't be more wrong here, and that attitude is calamitous to our arts as a whole.
Definitely, I look forward to seeing your book and discussing further. I am genuine and sincere, but I don't hold beliefs per se, I have facts, science, and empirical evidence to back my methods. For many Martial arts become like a religion, they have a tradition, an axiom, and then engage in apologetics in the arts defense. I like to avoid this mentality. Many arts have different types of value, hence there is no true religion in that senseIt's all about what works, and why.
I look forward to reading your book, maybe I'll learn something. I will mail you my new Flowing Motion Drills DVD when it is complete at no charge.
Best Regards,
Gary
Hey Folks, wrote an article for my site; Thoughts,personal experiences, arguments welcome...
Window Dressing and Rank FodderMost involved in the Martial Arts and even those of you merely window shopping can picture students in fancy uniforms lined up doing a long sequence of moves. They copy off the other students in front of them, all while watching the teacher to carefully mimic their movement when he/she is in view. Rank in a majority of schools is largely dependent on the requirement of the performance of such forms or Kata. This emphasis on kata for rank gives the student a very false sense of security, and compromises the integrity of the arts. I have walked into countless dojos across the globe and witnessed Black Belts lined up with very poor mechanics, and unable to spontaneously deviate from their Kata under any duress. If they spar, it becomes a dance, in which it looks not so much like the form or the techniques as practiced. The arts need to be practiced until they bypass cognitive thought. Trying to memorize long sequence of forms is counter-productive to such a goal. It takes exponentially longer to get such muscle memory down, and prolongs the neuromuscular systems programming to execute the concepts in a dynamic real-time fashion. While keeping the tradition alive so as not to lose the rich history of the Arts is important per se, Kata needs to be taken with a huge grain of salt in the context of developing the combat viability of such arts and manifesting a high level of skill in a real situation.
The only real reason for Kata in the Self-defense context is so students can grasp the concept on which the technique turns. This may be necessary to learn to adapt the concept to ones own physical specifications. Thus, such mimicry is important for the very early stages of a students development, but beyond the beginner level of teaching the concepts, Kata has no place. No matter how many years one perfects such forms; it will still not adequately prepare someone for a fight. Rarely is a Katas movement actually used exactly as practiced in a form, and even more seldom is the exact sequence of moves used.
I can agree with part of that. In ALOT of schools, what you describe is the norm, however, there are schools out there that *gasp* actually make their sudents bust their ***, and where the teacher doesnt hand things out with fries and a coke...LOL! I thank God I train at one of those schools...where my teacher makes EVERYONE, kids and adults, earn their rank. If you suck, he tells you what you need to work on. I guess that's one of the things that seperates a commercial dojo from a traditional one. The problem is, is that if the teacher doesnt understand the kata, there's no way he/she can make the students understand. Theres a hell of alot more than just moving from one thing to the next, and so forth.
Stop and Start: The Necessity of Continuous MovementBy nature, learning long forms tends to require the students stop and start their movements / techniques over and over again. This is a product of trying to put long sequences into memory, recalling the next move or series of moves, and worrying about how the move looks, or how perfect the form. Moreover, the anxiety, even subconscious of trying to remember the Kata produces tension, and breaks the chain of relaxation and fluidity required to maximize combat potential.
Continuous movement is critical. Never assume a certain attack and defense will be effective. Never assume change of movement, direction, or method will not be required. Never assume that a certain sequence of movements will be successful. Making these assumptions can mean the difference between life and death. Continuous movement makes it more likely the opponent will not be able to recover, turning the tables and forcing them to react to you is more desirable than being behind the eight ball on movement. I call such principle Counter Offensive Tactics, but that is another article altogether.
Gee, thats funny, because katas IMO, are supposed to be just that...continuous movement. Not sure what you're looking at, but the ones I've seen look like they flow very nice.
Hit Me Dont Quit Me.Kata is almost necessarily training one in the tit-for-tat mentality, and two-step, three-step fragmented methods. Teaching that for every exact attack, there is a counter, and such counter can be executed in sequence is a reckless fallacy. Even predicting the response of the attacker in such sequence, and that your long sequence will counter is a big mistake. Some natural responses can be expected, like someone putting their hands up to protect the eyes and face, or flinching to protect the groin. But the natural response of the foregoing should not be relied upon, and certainly a long chain of methods should not be expected to hold up so well in a dynamic chaotic attack.
Many who train and rely on Kata are left to think the techniques will work the same way every time. This fails to take into account that every real world attack is different, small variables such as body position, angle of attack, timing, speed, and even the environment come into play--which requires the Martial Artist learn to apply their concepts in almost infinite variation. Manifestations of techniques are often on the fly, spontaneous, and not pre-planned tit-for-tat as Kata pretends.
The solution is to adopt the Hit me dont quite me mentality. This means that once a concept is learned to a degree, a partner simply throws whatever attack he/she desires; a right hook, left hook, straight, upper-cut, knife edge, etc. The response should be continuous (even if the attack is effectively neutralized or the partner stops). Your partner should be encouraged to keep attacking, moving, and responding if possible. Practicing variations of the technique and concept is a must.
Kata, just like SD techniques, are simply drills, a learning tool. Just like focus mitt training. Its training a response for a given situation, but by no means, is it *THE* only solution. The solutions are endless. I disagree with your assessment.
Break It UpIf you insist on learning a long kata, break it up into smaller pieces. Learn to transition seamlessly from one technique to the next without pause. Change up the order of the techniques, and if you have to start/stop often, you have learned too many moves, and strung more together than practical.
LOL...yeah, ya think! Again, its all how its taught and understood.
Create Your Own short KataOnce you learn a technique, identify the principal behind it, get down the basic mechanics, the concept of the movement, and why it works. This should be done through the hit me trial and error. Of course adjust power and speed with your skill level. Tread carefully as it will take at least twice the time to undo poor reactions that you build in.
Very soon I will be uploading some Flowing Motion Drills highlighting the above principals. I will include the solo short drills that are continuous and can be dynamic, as well as a good handful of combat applications taught slowly, and with real-time speed and power. Check out my YouTube page soon for the free lessons, they should be up in a week or so--will update thread when available. https://www.youtube.com/user/FlowingCombat/videos?view=0
Regards,
Gary R.
This I can agree with. As I said, if the student doesnt understand what the hell they're doing, the kata means nothing.
Hey Folks, wrote an article for my site; Thoughts,personal experiences, arguments welcome...
Window Dressing and Rank Fodder
Most involved in the Martial Arts and even those of you merely window shopping can picture students in fancy uniforms lined up doing a long sequence of moves. They copy off the other students in front of them, all while watching the teacher to carefully mimic their movement when he/she is in view. Rank in a majority of schools is largely dependent on the requirement of the performance of such forms or Kata. This emphasis on kata for rank gives the student a very false sense of security, and compromises the integrity of the arts. I have walked into countless dojos across the globe and witnessed Black Belts lined up with very poor mechanics, and unable to spontaneously deviate from their Kata under any duress. If they spar, it becomes a dance, in which it looks not so much like the form or the techniques as practiced. The arts need to be practiced until they bypass cognitive thought. Trying to memorize long sequence of forms is counter-productive to such a goal. It takes exponentially longer to get such muscle memory down, and prolongs the neuromuscular systems programming to execute the concepts in a dynamic real-time fashion. While keeping the tradition alive so as not to lose the rich history of the Arts is important per se, Kata needs to be taken with a huge grain of salt in the context of developing the combat viability of such arts and manifesting a high level of skill in a real situation.
The only real reason for Kata in the Self-defense context is so students can grasp the concept on which the technique turns. This may be necessary to learn to adapt the concept to ones own physical specifications. Thus, such mimicry is important for the very early stages of a students development, but beyond the beginner level of teaching the concepts, Kata has no place. No matter how many years one perfects such forms; it will still not adequately prepare someone for a fight. Rarely is a Katas movement actually used exactly as practiced in a form, and even more seldom is the exact sequence of moves used.
Stop and Start: The Necessity of Continuous Movement
By nature, learning long forms tends to require the students stop and start their movements / techniques over and over again. This is a product of trying to put long sequences into memory, recalling the next move or series of moves, and worrying about how the move looks, or how perfect the form. Moreover, the anxiety, even subconscious of trying to remember the Kata produces tension, and breaks the chain of relaxation and fluidity required to maximize combat potential.
Continuous movement is critical. Never assume a certain attack and defense will be effective. Never assume change of movement, direction, or method will not be required. Never assume that a certain sequence of movements will be successful. Making these assumptions can mean the difference between life and death. Continuous movement makes it more likely the opponent will not be able to recover, turning the tables and forcing them to react to you is more desirable than being behind the eight ball on movement. I call such principle Counter Offensive Tactics, but that is another article altogether.
Hit Me Dont Quit Me.
Kata is almost necessarily training one in the tit-for-tat mentality, and two-step, three-step fragmented methods. Teaching that for every exact attack, there is a counter, and such counter can be executed in sequence is a reckless fallacy. Even predicting the response of the attacker in such sequence, and that your long sequence will counter is a big mistake. Some natural responses can be expected, like someone putting their hands up to protect the eyes and face, or flinching to protect the groin. But the natural response of the foregoing should not be relied upon, and certainly a long chain of methods should not be expected to hold up so well in a dynamic chaotic attack.
Many who train and rely on Kata are left to think the techniques will work the same way every time. This fails to take into account that every real world attack is different, small variables such as body position, angle of attack, timing, speed, and even the environment come into play--which requires the Martial Artist learn to apply their concepts in almost infinite variation. Manifestations of techniques are often on the fly, spontaneous, and not pre-planned tit-for-tat as Kata pretends.
The solution is to adopt the Hit me dont quite me mentality. This means that once a concept is learned to a degree, a partner simply throws whatever attack he/she desires; a right hook, left hook, straight, upper-cut, knife edge, etc. The response should be continuous (even if the attack is effectively neutralized or the partner stops). Your partner should be encouraged to keep attacking, moving, and responding if possible. Practicing variations of the technique and concept is a must.
Break It Up
If you insist on learning a long kata, break it up into smaller pieces. Learn to transition seamlessly from one technique to the next without pause. Change up the order of the techniques, and if you have to start/stop often, you have learned too many moves, and strung more together than practical.
Create Your Own short Kata
Once you learn a technique, identify the principal behind it, get down the basic mechanics, the concept of the movement, and why it works. This should be done through the hit me trial and error. Of course adjust power and speed with your skill level. Tread carefully as it will take at least twice the time to undo poor reactions that you build in.
Very soon I will be uploading some Flowing Motion Drills highlighting the above principals. I will include the solo short drills that are continuous and can be dynamic, as well as a good handful of combat applications taught slowly, and with real-time speed and power. Check out my YouTube page soon for the free lessons, they should be up in a week or so--will update thread when available. https://www.youtube.com/user/FlowingCombat/videos?view=0
Regards,
Gary R.
A few general points from your application video (You botched the link, by the way. You may have fixed that by the time i post my reply though):
1; Youre practicing from too far away. I dont know if you were just doing that for the sake of the video, but he couldnt hit you let alone hurt you. If he throws a quick jab from that range, you can decide how youre going to walk all over him for being someone whos highly trained in the art of missing.
2; Your block in your first application looks like a more flowy relaxed version of the outer block im used to. You seem to be trying to close him up, where i try to open people up or get to an offset through my own movement rather than theirs. Not too bad.
3; So, you made a drill about doing an upward wrist strike, as oppose to the countless other things you could do which would permit more and better followups?
4; Youre practicing statically. Fights (i presume this is for fighting) are dynamic, moving affairs. This might not be so easy when the other person is moving (Ok, it wouldnt be easy at all).
5; He isnt resisting. If he threw those two punches, and you blocked them thusly, he should be in the process of throwing a third punch, or grabbing onto you, all the while moving forward and trying to drive you back. The elbow and head manipulation you tried would be a good way of getting hooked over your left shoulder whilst your left arm is busy trying to do technical stuff.
To be clear, i actually agree with the block. Im questioning the followup. Certain things work at certain ranges. Most Bunkai are done from a range where you can touch them with the tip of your elbow without leaning in or reaching - Just raising your arm up, bent 90 degrees. Youre working from medium range, where leverage isnt as effective.
6; The second block seems a bit far fetched. Considering that you need to identify the attack, choose your defense, unfreeze, and react, i doubt youd have time to reach across your body and do anything.
7; Strikes dont flow - At least not like in app 2. You cant block a punch then strike in with an elbow. That works in theory, but in practice, if the other guy seriously took the time to care, and didnt just thwack you with his left hand, since he can throw successive punches, you wouldnt have even seen the second punch coming. Youve moved in with your only means of defense on that side at that range indisposed trying to hit him with a not-very-forceful elbow. It certainly wont work in as a takedown.
To the third:
8; You actually demonstrated a more proper haymaker than most people do. I tip my hat!
9; Same problem. You indispose your free hand, leaving your head way exposed to a successive punch. If someone charged at you wildly swinging haymakers (baring in mind that the average person can swing about three to five of them a second), so far this defence would get you smacked in the back side of your skull whilst youre busy expecting him to care about your counterattack.
10; He isnt resisting, again. If he was swinging his body to his right, and youre trying to turn him to his left, at best youll reduce the power of the strike thats about to hit you in the head. But then, what about the next one?
I shant continue. Instead im going to lend a suggestion, instead of just picking out flaws.
Application 3; Block the same way, grab his shoulder, step in, swing your rear elbow into his head. Then follow up.
No offense, but if this is your alternative to Kata, and their inherent Bunkai, i may need to make a mental note to never go anywere near whatever it is youve learnt