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Mars Healey wrote:I'm having this discussion with my peers over what to call a sequence or 'kata' as it relates to practicing Ringeck's techniques?
At this point, we're calling them katas, but that has too much of an Eastern Martial Arts connotation. Does anyone here have any insight as to what the Western teachers called their practice sequences?
Jeffrey Hull wrote:I totally appreciate the arguments made by the fellows here, as kata may often be wrongly practiced in any case. Hence the sort of statment I have heard from karateka now and then in conversing with them, when they tell me of how they had a revelation that kata was not being done seriously in their particular school, that they found they needed to realise what every move actually meant, rather than treating it like a dance choreographed to music meant to win at a forms-competition. Hence, they "got it" regarding what it ought to be.
Just personally speaking, however, it does not bother me to equate the flourish or flourysh of 15th Century English longsword texts with kata. I do not consider the proper intention and practice of flourysh and kata to be unlike. It is about knowing what each move is meant to do, and doing those with intensity in an integrated routine. Of course, you can certainly do flourishing that is free-form.
Matthew_Anderson wrote:Perhaps I've never seen kata done correctly then, but I have never seen a kata in which the techniques were performed in a realistic way as they would be when fighting. It always looks very artificial to me. I like to flourish more like a boxer would shadow box, simply throwing combinations, moving in and out of range, parrying, etc. Not going through a pre-determined set routine of any kind. Of course, my experience with Asain schools is limited, the only Asian art I studied is Judo and we never did anything like kata, we just learned to throw each other around and choke each other and so forth.
Jaron Bernstein wrote:I am loath to see WMA develop overly long forms lest the same problem recur. The other thing is simply for historical accuracy, I am unaware of long preset routines in WMA practice.
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