Shinobi Teikiatsu
Green Belt
Just a quick thought, if you've only been training for two months, and let's say you've been training three times a week, and possibly doing some practicing at home, then you're probably proficient enough to name your base techniques and apply them in a fairly competent fashion. However, short of you being a prodigy, you're probably not proficient enough to adapt them to new situations, and probably get a little fuzzy in some aspects of the core principles of your school (this is assuming a best case scenario in which you're getting some form of training at least 5 times a week)
That said, how can taking an injury that will cripple you for months at a time help you at all? Back when I trained in Taijutsu, I broke my hand (an unrelated event) and was forced to train on my left side exclusively. Did it help my left side? Yes. When my hand came out of the cast, though (six weeks later), I felt it more like dead weight,and could hardly use it any techniques, simply because for those past six weeks, I had to treat it like a baby and make sure it didn't get touched or dirty, and then once it came off, it was a foreign object to me. And this all happened within my second year of training, when I had already gotten a pretty good grasp on the basics of training and could run through all the techniques and ukemi with my eyes closed.
Point is, putting yourself in a situation where you could get crippled is not only unhealthy, but detrimental to your training, this early on. I'm not saying a Shihan should put himself in this kind of situation, but if he did (and that is entirely his choice), then he is probably more readily able to adapt to the injury (as far as training with it goes) than a kyu level student would be.
Just my two cents.
That said, how can taking an injury that will cripple you for months at a time help you at all? Back when I trained in Taijutsu, I broke my hand (an unrelated event) and was forced to train on my left side exclusively. Did it help my left side? Yes. When my hand came out of the cast, though (six weeks later), I felt it more like dead weight,and could hardly use it any techniques, simply because for those past six weeks, I had to treat it like a baby and make sure it didn't get touched or dirty, and then once it came off, it was a foreign object to me. And this all happened within my second year of training, when I had already gotten a pretty good grasp on the basics of training and could run through all the techniques and ukemi with my eyes closed.
Point is, putting yourself in a situation where you could get crippled is not only unhealthy, but detrimental to your training, this early on. I'm not saying a Shihan should put himself in this kind of situation, but if he did (and that is entirely his choice), then he is probably more readily able to adapt to the injury (as far as training with it goes) than a kyu level student would be.
Just my two cents.