Postby John_Clements » Wed Dec 18, 2002 12:36 pm
Yes, as was discussed on the Elist recently, the issue was raised about the legitimacy of teaching or demonstrating techniques slowly or without realistic intent and energy. My view of course, is if I can't show real defenses and counters to moves attempted by an unskilled assailant how can I justify they would work against an earnest opponent? If you have mastered the skills they either work or they don’t. I suspect it’s at the heart of much of the problem with modern approaches and interpretations from study of historical sources among a great many practitioners, in my opinion.
It is one thing to be shown moves slowly so you can learn them a step at a time and acquire the correct form and body mechanics. It is one thing also to continue to practice them yourself this way for awhile. However, from my experience I am unquestionably sure that to learn actions correctly they must be performed as they were intended: full speed and full power. They are not understood as lethal any other way. When someone is trying to kill you, you don't hit slow or soft, you don't displace his blows by being slow and soft. The historical manuals are full of admonitions to train hard and strike strongly. This is how I teach and the sucess of the results have been self-evident.
I have said before, if techniques cannot be preformed effectively this way they should be scrutinized even more than ever. If an instructor, for whatever reasons, cannot demonstrate actions this way, their understanding is also questionable and you must view the validity of their techniques or understanding with healthy skepticism until you are satisfied you can make them work at full speed and energy.
In martial arts, and swordplay in particular, there are just too many things, too many actions and techniques, where you need real energy from your opponent’s movement in order to practice how to properly counter and redirect it effectively. Without this you end up with a delusion of how such motions actually work.
If you try to do displacements and counter-strikes and the other person is hitting with a much weaker energy and speed, making their moves slow, soft, or out of range and off-target, you will never learn to make proper movements against forceful attacks. You will fail to grasp the dynamics at work, and your interpretation, your reading of the source literature, and, I argue, your grasp of the concepts within the manuals will all be highly flawed and distorted. And all because they were done soft and slow all the time.
W'ell present an article on this topic in January.
JC
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