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  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

He did use the classic forearm blocks. But there were a couple others. The "wax on, wax off" movements are called "knife hand blocks" (shuto uke) in many styles including mine. The "paint a fence" movements are called "chicken blocks" in my style, although I never really knew why. That name does not seem as universal though. There may be another name for it in other styles.

Oss!

Paranoia is not a fault. It is clarity of the world around us.

Posted
The "paint a fence" movements are called "chicken blocks" in my style, although I never really knew why. That name does not seem as universal though. There may be another name for it in other styles.

I think "chicken beak" after the formation of the hand. In some styles, the fingers will all come together as a point, and the action used is like the "pecking" motion of a chicken. I guess, anyway.

Oss!
  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

We had a "Chicken wrist" technique. I always thought it was after the way a chickens foot looks when they lift it. I vaguely remember a chickens foot having the same sort of look as your wrist when you put your fingers together and point them downward.

Oss!

Your present circumstances don't determine where you can go; they merely determine where you start. - Nido Qubein

Posted
We had a "Chicken wrist" technique. I always thought it was after the way a chickens foot looks when they lift it. I vaguely remember a chickens foot having the same sort of look as your wrist when you put your fingers together and point them downward.

I always thought that this was more of a chicken beak strike.

Oss!
Posted
We had a "Chicken wrist" technique. I always thought it was after the way a chickens foot looks when they lift it. I vaguely remember a chickens foot having the same sort of look as your wrist when you put your fingers together and point them downward.

I always thought that this was more of a chicken beak strike.

Chicken beak was a downward motion with the fingers. Chicken wrist was an upward motion with the wrist.

Oss!

Your present circumstances don't determine where you can go; they merely determine where you start. - Nido Qubein

Posted
We had a "Chicken wrist" technique. I always thought it was after the way a chickens foot looks when they lift it. I vaguely remember a chickens foot having the same sort of look as your wrist when you put your fingers together and point them downward.

I always thought that this was more of a chicken beak strike.

Chicken beak was a downward motion with the fingers. Chicken wrist was an upward motion with the wrist.

Ah, ok. I get ya now. We call the upward motion an ox-jaw strike.

Oss!
Posted

Wait a second! The blocks from The Karate Kid are real? I thought it was something the people made up. Wow I never knew that.

Oss!

I have ninja monkies in my brain and they are using it as a trampaline.

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