Postby John_Clements » Mon Jun 16, 2003 9:59 am
Ok, fair enough. No harm done.
I think I know why there is some confusion here.
No one fights stationary, or in affixed position without moving in some way. This is what I was getting at.
A person can indeed stand perfectly still, hold a weapon over their head and cut all the way downward, vertically or diagonally. This stationary action would be “a cut while standing still.”
Why anyone would possibly want to do this is beyond me and I can’t see that any master is really saying this.
From my experience it would be too easy to avoid by the opponent and is not nearly as strong a blow as it could be by cutting while moving.
If instead, you step or you pass (forward or backward) as you cut, you’d add range to the strike, allow for better timing with it, and hit with more force.
If we understand them correctly, this is consistent with what all those other quoted manual sources are saying.
If however, we are awaiting an opponent who strikes first, we might find we could set aside or displace his cut as we stood there without doing the above, and just slash or chop down quickly on his forearms right as he moved in close enough.
We do this all the time.
Though, I can’t imagine the feet are perfectly still without one moving a few inches, and the body certainly leans in as you strike with any technique. Sometimes both feet even make a short shuffling burst but without changing position. So, once again it’s not “standing still.” There is “movement” of more than the arms at work. And that’s what I am stressing.
Similarly, if you lifted your blade to meet an oncoming downward cut you could also stop it without need to step or pass but move the same as above (there’s even a video of this on the ARMA site somewhere, I believe).
Even further, as the opponent cut you might step off diagonally to the side with one foot, stretching yourself out on the other leg, slashing as he goes past, and again, you would not really be moving your feet as you struck, but you still had to step to do the action and turn your body/hips to execute the move –thereby not being stationary or “standing still.” Which again, is what I am stressing.
Is this making sense?
By the way, none of Fiore’s instructions about “not” stepping would seem to exclude lifting and replanting the foot in a sort of stomp as we cut. That would not be a “step” because we have not really moved. Both feet remain in the same place. Yet, we are not “stationary”.
After all, with these moves we must ask, does he say, “I never move my feet at all,” or does he only say, “I don’t step with either foot as I cut.” Because, again, it’s very hard to imagine that while all these other period sources stress moving when fighting for your life, Fiore was advising to just stand there stationary.
If we had a definition of exactly what he meant by “step” and “foot”, it would help a lot.
JC
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