Postby Stacy Clifford » Wed Jun 13, 2007 1:47 am
While I generally think any exercise is good exercise, I tend to believe that the best way to exercise the muscles you're going to use in a swordfight is to pick up a sword and swing it. In Houston I open every class each week with 9 different cutting and thrusting exercises that total up to about 320-380 cuts in a large variety, depending on which exercises we do that week. I try to put strength and speed into every cut from first to last, both to give myself a good workout and to set a good example for the class. After all the cutting, we alternate each week between the touch drill, press drill and footwork drills, and recently we've added a running pell attack drill every week. I'm not one to do much running, weight lifting, etc. on the side, but I find that this exercise keeps me in a fighting shape I'm quite happy with, and I can say that none of my fellow Houston members are pushovers either.
I've also noticed that this exercise routine has an effect on the new members that come through our class. Newbies show up because they want to know how to use a sword, not just get exercise. When they see us sweating hard with swords in our hands for 30 minutes every week, they realize 1.) we take this subject seriously, 2.) we know what the heck we're doing, 3.) we have physical standards that all experience levels are expected to maintain, and 4.) that our drills and exercises are not abstract (mostly), but directly relate to actual fighting. This tends to weed out a lot of people. If I had to guess, maybe 1 in 5 new people who show up at our class stay more than a couple of months. Of the ones that do though, I wouldn't say any of them are marginal people we "put up with" to keep our numbers up. They try earnestly and fight hard and we're happy to have them. That was never our intent in doing class that way, it is just a beneficial side effect we have all noticed here.
Whatever exercise routines your study groups are doing that you find beneficial and enjoyable, I say keep it up and keep experimenting. In my opinion though (for what it's worth), good hard cutting and lots of it is both the best exercise you can get for swordfighting and the best recruiting tool you can have, so don't neglect it.
0==[>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Stacy Clifford
Free-Scholar
ARMA Houston, TX