one of the best things my jkd teacher taught me was that all martial arts contain all the answers. I just saw chad say something similar in the thai forum.
lots of us jkd/mm/fma/etc'ers often mention that we didn't like our tae kwon do or karate upbringings.. that our classroom experiences in those arts soured us, and even prepped us for recognizing the value of our eclectic styles. i'm one of those people as well.
my instructor would often hear me knock traditional arts, and point out that they contained my kali knowledge, just in a different form. I thought this was crap.
recently, i was doing some drills with triangle footwork. while i was drilling, i was standing on the female triangle. one foot was at the triangles point, the other was on it's right corner.
i was stepping to center with the right foot, so both feet are on the tip of the female triangle.. then i stepped back to the right corner of the male triangle.
i was stunned to realize that what i had just done was step backwards while in a tae kwon do ready/fighting stance.
for years i have touted what a bogus form of footwork this is, while talking about the wonders of fma/boxing/jkd footwork.
and here i was doing a damned ready stance again, whether i wanted to admit or not.
i find lots of things like this in traditional arts.. and therefore i try to keep in mind that there have to be good tae kwon do classes SOMEwhere.. hell, i even recently found out that some tai chi practitioners know how to fight. can you believe that? well, i never would have. it's amazing how a person can learn the correct movement, and still not have the foggiest idea how to use it...which is what most traditional classes seem to spawn..yet, sometimes you see the hidden meaning within the movement, it's application, and you're blown away that an art you learned and dropped 10 years ago had the answers right within it, if only you'd had a teacher who could have translated it.
anyone else find anything they wanted to mention? any thoughts at all?
dwayne
lots of us jkd/mm/fma/etc'ers often mention that we didn't like our tae kwon do or karate upbringings.. that our classroom experiences in those arts soured us, and even prepped us for recognizing the value of our eclectic styles. i'm one of those people as well.
my instructor would often hear me knock traditional arts, and point out that they contained my kali knowledge, just in a different form. I thought this was crap.
recently, i was doing some drills with triangle footwork. while i was drilling, i was standing on the female triangle. one foot was at the triangles point, the other was on it's right corner.
i was stepping to center with the right foot, so both feet are on the tip of the female triangle.. then i stepped back to the right corner of the male triangle.
i was stunned to realize that what i had just done was step backwards while in a tae kwon do ready/fighting stance.
for years i have touted what a bogus form of footwork this is, while talking about the wonders of fma/boxing/jkd footwork.
and here i was doing a damned ready stance again, whether i wanted to admit or not.
i find lots of things like this in traditional arts.. and therefore i try to keep in mind that there have to be good tae kwon do classes SOMEwhere.. hell, i even recently found out that some tai chi practitioners know how to fight. can you believe that? well, i never would have. it's amazing how a person can learn the correct movement, and still not have the foggiest idea how to use it...which is what most traditional classes seem to spawn..yet, sometimes you see the hidden meaning within the movement, it's application, and you're blown away that an art you learned and dropped 10 years ago had the answers right within it, if only you'd had a teacher who could have translated it.
anyone else find anything they wanted to mention? any thoughts at all?
dwayne
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