Postby Stacy Clifford » Fri Nov 09, 2012 1:51 pm
The point of a florysh is to practice making different moves and techniques flow together smoothly and increase your efficiency of movement. You can only use what you already know, obviously, but the more you learn, the more you can incorporate into your florysh, and you will get better the more you do it. Each florysh should be spontaneous and unique, using both offensive and defensive actions, just like shadowboxing as I mentioned before. Pausing during the florysh to reset yourself in a guard is perfectly OK, and sometimes necessary after an awkward transition; it's also natural in a fight to exchange a few blows and then back off for a second before going back in, so think of fighting rhythm as you do it. String together different combinations of cuts, thrusts, and defenses and notice which ones come easy and which ones you need to work on if they feel awkward. Don't forget to practice different footwork and change directions as if switching opponents (that one's dead, next please...). Try not to be too repetitive. You may find some combinations you want to turn into separate practice exercises, which will only help you get better. Ultimately you want to be able to florysh at full fighting speed, but sometimes you'll need to slow down and practice at half speed to work things out before speeding up again. Keep your eyes on your imaginary opponent, not your feet or your sword. That's all I can think of for right now, but floryshing is an amazing learning tool (and great exercise) that will improve your skill a lot if you use it well. Let us know how you progress with it.
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Stacy Clifford
Free-Scholar
ARMA Houston, TX