Postby Aaron Kavli » Fri Dec 08, 2006 6:19 am
Howdy Daniel,
I am pretty new to ARMA (submission pending) with only two study sessions under my belt, though they were both awesome sessions with Jake Norwood. But being a newbie myself, here are my thoughts.
1) To start, I just worry about the basics. Aside from the "Where to Start" link, I have found the following articles very helpful and a place to start practice:
A Brief Look at Stances & Guards of Medieval Longsword <http://www.thearma.org/essays/StancesIntro.htm>
MasterCuts, What They Are and What They Aren't
<http://www.thearma.org/essays/mastercuts.html>
2) Learn some key words and phrases, as this will help you greatly in understanding other discussions, and it help cultivate the scholarly side of our study.
Sword Definitions and Terminology <http://www.thearma.org/terms4.htm>
Definitions and Study Terminology <http://www.thearma.org/terms2.htm>
3) Get thee a waster! If you have the basic tools, a starter waster can be made relatively cheaply. See the ARMA Odgen, UT homepage <http://www.arma-odgen.org> for a good article on making wasters (I've made two). Or alternately just start with an oak dowel or something for form work. Stay away from cheap wasters. As I found out the cheap ebay sort aren't cheap enough and are useless for any sort of contact work. If you have the cash, you can buy one too, look under the links for some waster makers. I suggest frugality until you have determined to stick with it. The nearby study groups probably have wasters you can use while practicing with them.
4) Start with some of the historical manuals on-line and read them. This really helps understanding what ARMA is all about and will make you (or at least it did me) really appreciate the time many ARMA members have spent figuring out what the old masters were talking about and how to apply it martially. Try working through and figuring out the moves being written about, which can be very challenging and rewarding.
I have been studying two manuscripts from the ARMA site. The first...
<http://www.thearma.org/Manuals/dobringer.html>
is very interesting as has the German next to it and is the oldest longsword text we know about (as per the article) on the Liechtenauer tradition. It is also somewhat hard to figure out, at least for me, in places. Which is why the second article I found...
<http://www.thearma.org/Manuals/Ringeck.htm>
to be very useful. It is a commentary on Liechtenauer's work and written because the the old master had "recorded his teachings in secret words, so that art may not be commonly spread." and has more specific instructions on things, making it easier (for me) to study. I find it also very interesting to compare how I interpret the former document's teachings to what Ringeck has to say.
Anyway, I know that was a long post to give someone who is suffering from information overload, but there are only 6 essays and pretty basic and have kept me occupied. Keep in mind of course that perhaps I'm going about it backwards, but sometimes it is easier for Student 101 to learn basics from Student 101.1 (or 101.001, or 101.0001). Hope that helps,
Aaron Kavli
pax vobiscum
Aaron Kavli
Author:The Prophet A'Resh (Buy at Amazon.com)