Postby Doug Marnick » Tue Jun 08, 2004 7:57 pm
Thank you for your replies. Based on your responses, I can make a comparison based on certain training in my life: sports and music. (Obvious differences to deadly combat aside) Anyone who has played either will also relate to these concepts of instinctive reactions based on training, practice, and experience. I know the easiest way to screw up a classical piano piece is to THINK about what I'm doing. I just have to go with it. Also, reaction time in sports is integral to success. Therefore, I look forward to the years when my reaction to an attack is a reflex rather than a choice.
To conclude, I found the following item recently that addresses the topic in question, if JC doesn't mind: "We can only speculate about how much theory and how many rehearsed techniques might have been forgotten or ignored once actual battle was joined. ...training must have centered not only on the physical execution of movements, but upon conditioning the individual mentally, emotionally, and psychologically. Honor and courage had to be called upon to overcome fear and stress. There are numerous examples of this understanding throughout Medieval literature and in Renaissance fighting manuals (Medieval Swordsmanship, Clements, p250).
Doug Marnick
NYC
"The sword was a weapon of grace, nobility, and honor... which was little comfort as you slowly bled to death in a dung-filled moat."