Those of us over at the HEMAA don't generally want that either. By and large we're all in love with the Art and just want to share and discuss it.
http://hemaalliance.com/?p=1319
Bookworms and Swordsmen
Hang around martial artists for any length of time, and you will inevitably hear, ‘hey, I have a book you have to read.’
HEMA in particular has an abundance of reading material. Just look at the list of manuals that exist sometime, it’s rather daunting. I was concerned I was going to have to read all of them in order the first time I saw the list. This is because I am a silly and easily impressionable man with a poor grasp on reality at times.
However, one of the things about this art is that inevitably, someone will encourage you to do some reading. So with that firmly in mind, here are my thoughts on manuals, the culture of martial reading, and some thoughts on how to train.
Have you trained this morning? If not, don’t read. Instead take a technique you know already, even if all you know is a single basic technique and step, and go out and practice it. All done? Good, now that you’ve spent some time improving something you already know, it’s time to read up.
There is a tendency among people with a hobby to jump into everything at once, and the martial arts are no different. People in Judo want to do the really sweet throws right away – instead we spend hours learning how to fall properly so we don’t die when someone inevitably throws us. People in HEMA want to perform amazing techniques and attacks, because they’re awesome.
The manuals cater to this mindset – in the Liechtenauer tradition there’s a quote in many of the books: The Zwerchhau (a type of cut in the German longsword material) counters (literally “breaks”) all downward strikes made from above. (source – Wiktenauer Ringeck article).
When I read that, I was hooked. Zwerchau breaks all from above? Awesome. I only ever wanted to do zwerchau from that point. I’d wait for someone to cut from above, and throw one of those babies!
Well, this was dumb, and I’ll tell you why. Gaining this little bit of knowledge eclipsed other good training in my mind. I still couldn’t do proper footwork, didn’t have a sense of measure worth noting, and couldn’t even do more basic cuts than the slightly complex zwerchau, and yet here I was convinced I knew how to stop everything from above. A little knowledge had proved a dangerous thing, and I went and overreached. A few thwacks upside the head, face, and arms from Ben showed me just how wrong I was, and I dropped my mental notions of the superiority of the zwerchau pretty quickly, returning to my focus on the basics that Ben was teaching us, as I should have been doing the entire time.
Now, before you think I’m going entirely in the ‘reading is bad, mkay’ direction, let’s reign it in a little.
Picking up the manuals I have is still one of the best things I ever did for my understanding of the Art. In studying the manuals I have and what they have to say to eachother, I learn more about each technique than I could ever dream of, and I reinforce what my teachers have shared with me. However, that is the emphasis – I am using it to reinforce things I have already learned. I’m not ready to set out into the manuals by myself right now. Remember, I was invited to write this blog because I am still a beginner, and a beginner’s place is to learn under the guidance of a teacher.
So, even though I study the English longsword material and read up on it, and practice the stuff (it’s a series of solo-practice exercises similar to eastern Kata), I don’t try to push it into class. I don’t suddenly consider myself an English Martial Artist. My primary focus is showing up at Kron Martial Arts meetings and completely grokking the lessons that Jason and Jonathan have to teach. After the lessons, I go home and pull out my manuals, and study what the books have to say about the techniques I learned that night.
So, the manuals are a good thing. I heartily encourage people to go to the wiktenauer, or to buy a copy of their preferred book online. Heck, do both. The many perspectives on presentation and interpretation are fascinating to look at, and the more widely read someone is the more they can understand about what they do.
However, remember that gaining control in the Art is about practice. Michael Chidester recently commented that meditating on a specific text and its mysteries isn’t going to magically impart knowledge of the art. Nothing will replace actually going out and training, training, training.
So like I said earlier – learn a lesson from someone who knows what they’re doing, in any way you can. Then go out to your practice area of choice and perform that technique until your muscles know no other way to move.
Then go find a text for the thing and see what the masters had to say about what you’ve learned.
Then go practice it some more.
Yours fraternally,
William Cain
Kron Martial arts, Team Katame