SaiFightsMS Posted December 16, 2001 Share Posted December 16, 2001 How do you take the weaknesses that you have and turn them into strengths? How to you go about the process of remolding yourself into a stronger person? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Karateka Posted December 16, 2001 Share Posted December 16, 2001 You have to work on the weakness. For phsyical weaknesses, you just have to keep working. Emotional Weakness, again you have to work on not being scared, doing drills. When you fight, try to be agressive. All it takes is hard work. It won't be quick and easy, but it can be done. "Never hit a man while he's down; kick him, its easier"Sensei Ron Bagley (My Sensei) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
moobrack Posted December 16, 2001 Share Posted December 16, 2001 I am weak with my left hand and always have been, I bought a pair of focus mitts to help my training at home, I am currently working on my left hand techniques than my right hand ones, my left leg is also weak, so I am working on my left leg techniques to try and improve power and speed, and most of all technique. Anthony Bullock1st Dan Black Belt - Shotokan Karate5th Kyu Yellow Belt - Aiki-Jutsuhttps://www.universaldojo.com Coming Soon Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jack Posted December 16, 2001 Share Posted December 16, 2001 You attack that weakness with unrelenting forwards momentum, always throwing your inner opponent off balance and strengthening yourself until that weakness is no more JackCurrently 'off' from formal MA trainingKarateForums.com Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jiggy9 Posted December 16, 2001 Share Posted December 16, 2001 Thats a good question, I can see how constantly working on it makes it no longer a weakness, but how does it make it into a strength....I'll have to sleep over this one. Shotokan Karate Black Belt ==Defend the path of Truth== Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SaiFightsMS Posted December 17, 2001 Author Share Posted December 17, 2001 Jack I like your phrasing of the inner opponent. I think much of the time our greatest enemy comes from within. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hanksohn Posted December 17, 2001 Share Posted December 17, 2001 all those replies were about over coming a weakness not making it a strength. I have bad hips as a result of competing in cross country and track for years as a teen. I tried for year to develop high side kicks and roundhouses and they always sucked. With a lot of practice I have gotten struggled to mediocre roundhouse kicks and decent cide kicks. But it still hurts and they are pretty weak if I try them cold. Best piece of advice I ever got on the subject(after tons of people gave me stretching tips, supplements, kicking drills) was this: "You should develop really good front kicks." And so I have. Yes, I still work the other kicks but mostly I work on having the best damn front kicks possible. Bill Wallace tore a number of tendond in his right knee. When it was reconstructed he left jujitsu and went to kickboxing. For every 50 kicks that someone else did with each leg, he was doing 100 with his left. And his left leg became a legend. Bill 'Superfoot' Wallace. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jack Posted December 17, 2001 Share Posted December 17, 2001 On 2001-12-17 07:48, SaiFightsMS wrote: Jack I like your phrasing of the inner opponent. I think much of the time our greatest enemy comes from within. Thanks for the kind word Sai (sorry, do you mind if I call you that?) but the phrasing itself comes from Sun Tzu's works "The art of war" I was merely trying to pass on some of his knowledge, and in doing so its hard to not use his terminology JackCurrently 'off' from formal MA trainingKarateForums.com Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
taezee Posted December 17, 2001 Share Posted December 17, 2001 weakness comes from the things we fear..direct confrintation of those fears makes us stronger..instead of avoidance...both physically and especially emotionally Javier l Rosario instructor taekwondo/hapkidounder master Atef s Himaya"whenever youre lazy enough not to train .someone, somewhere is training very hard to kick your *" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jack Posted December 18, 2001 Share Posted December 18, 2001 Another key thing for turning a weakness into a strength is visualisation. Visualise yourself doing that spinning kick, doing that break, performing that Kata, then go for it! JackCurrently 'off' from formal MA trainingKarateForums.com Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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