Red Triangle student Posted April 25, 2004 Posted April 25, 2004 it is a fundamental to have fundamentals...lol... "To be elated at success, and dissappointed at defeat, is to be the child of Circumstances." I wish I followed that rule! ^^ I hate Losing!
italian_guy Posted April 26, 2004 Posted April 26, 2004 Thanks for your comments everyone! I think I understand what you're saying Italian. Our Hanshi always tells us that it takes time for your body to get accustomed to doing things that it normally would not do. A lot of techniques can go against the natural motion of the body. And as soon as you think that you'll never get it, something clicks and you wonder why it took you so long to perfect that technique. He always says to keep practicing and one day the light will come on and it will be like you've been doing it all your life. Hope I didn't put words in your mouth. Just trying to see if we're thinking about similar things. Yes You have understood what I meant. I tell you more. Few days ago I returned to my kickboxing class after a 3 weeks stop. I was expecting to fall into pieces after 30-40 min of the usual hard training, instead something strange happened, not only I did everything quite well but also I succeed for the first time in doing a decent spinning-hook kick. That really puzzled me . So keep practicing the basics! Results comes up when you don't expect and sometimes even a stop in training can be useful.
Quiet Dragon Posted April 28, 2004 Posted April 28, 2004 Great article gheinisch! I have found the same thing that italian_guy is talking about and it all ties back to what gheinisch originally was talking about. If we study and practice the basics diligently, we are creating muscle memory so that while doing kata or kumite or anything else, your muscles remember the movements or stances without having to work at it, it is total second nature. This is part of the big picture of martial arts. It should be second nature, to act without thinking. Without persistent practice of the basics, Kihon, then you have nothing to build upon. Red belt - Hon-Shin-Do
longarm25 Posted October 3, 2004 Posted October 3, 2004 Nice article PhilRyu Kyu Christian Karate Federation"Do not be dependent on others for your improvement. Pay respect to God and Buddhabut do not reley on them." Musashi
gcav Posted October 4, 2004 Posted October 4, 2004 Nice. Train like your life depends on it....Because it does.
Highler Posted January 16, 2005 Posted January 16, 2005 This has definitely helped with my perception of karate. As a whitebelt i am always desparate to learn new moves and techniques and can get a bit impatient and frustrated at times. This has made me realise to just take it as it comes and instead of trying to cram as many things into my head as i can, and probably getting them all wrong, i will concentrate on perfecting the basics first. Thanks 'The cat taught the tiger everything he knows. One day the tiger turned on the cat and the cat ran up a tree. That was the one thing the cat never taught the tiger.'
karatekid1975 Posted January 16, 2005 Posted January 16, 2005 I'm wondering why I haven't read this article yet LOL. Anyways, for a while, I was into learning the fancy stuff. But I realised a few months ago that my simple side kick was "lagging." So I forgot about the fancy stuff (for how long, I don't know), and I worked on all my basic stuff. I cleaned up a lot of them that I haven't worked on (except in forms) in forever. Now my forms look sharper and cleaner. And a simple side kick is my fav kick I can do the jump spinning whatever kicks, but I perfer the simpler stuff now (oh Lord ...... my age is showing LOL). Laurie F
ninjanurse Posted January 18, 2005 Posted January 18, 2005 Welcome to the club Laurie!!! "A Black Belt is only the beginning."Heidi-A student of the artsTae Kwon Do,Shotokan,Ju Jitsu,Modern Arnishttp://the100info.tumblr.com/
fangshi Posted January 19, 2005 Posted January 19, 2005 Good job ! Yes the foundation is the strongest part of any structure. We are not so much individual beings as individual points of perception within one immense being.
bushido_man96 Posted November 16, 2006 Posted November 16, 2006 Great article, and points relevant to all! It all starts with the basics, and we when we all get older, and can't move as fast, jump as high, or spar as long, we will still be able to perform the basic moves. https://www.haysgym.comhttp://www.sunyis.com/https://www.aikidoofnorthwestkansas.com
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