Wednesday, December 2, 2020
Belt Colors and Their Meaning -- Chief Instructor's Blog December 2020
Sunday, November 1, 2020
Oher Aspects of Balance -- Chief Instructor's Blog November 2020
As
I stated in last month’s blog, balance is one of the key skills to master a
martial art. In that blog, I discussed
the physical aspects of balance and ways to practice/improve. In this blog. I will discuss the other
aspects of balance besides being physical balance: emotionally, mentally, energetically.
Emotionally
As
a martial artist, to be effective, you cannot let your emotions control
you. You cannot let anger, fear, pride,
passion, anxiety result in how you react.
While emotions can help motivate or help move you to action, it cannot
control your reaction. If you are
running high emotions, you cannot be in control of your techniques, you will
not be precise, and you will not be effective.
In addition, if you react based on emotion (for example, if someone
makes you angry and you react by striking them), this is not honorable and this
is not what martial arts is for or about.
So, as a martial artist you need to understand what triggers you and
practice controlling your emotion before responding, especially
physically. The best thing to ensure
you are controlling your emotions is by controlling your breathing. By practicing deep, smooth, and even breathing, it will
decrease your heart rate and improve your ability to control your emotions,
even when triggered or under high stress.
For more information Emotions in the Martial Arts, read my January 2015
blog, Emotions in the Martial Arts.
Mentally
As
a martial artist, being balanced mentally is also critical. This includes being able to remain focused, disciplined,
and have attention to detail not just during martial arts physical training but
in other aspects of your life. By being able to maintain same mentality in all
aspects of your life it will become who you are regardless of the
situation.
Being
balanced mentally also means equally practicing and being proficient in the
four mindsets and of a martial artist:
Shoshin, Fudoshin, Zanshin, and Mushin.
For more information on the four mindsets, suggest you read my December 2019 blog, Four
Important Mindsets of a Martial Artist.
Energetically
For
martial artists to be energetically balanced:
(1) You should strive to be
grounded at all times
(2) Your energy not only
matches your intent and the intent needs to be appropriate. If in class, and with a partner, appropriate
level and intensity of energy depending on your partner and drill, so not to
harm your partner or yourself. If
defending your life from an attack on the street, energy and intent should be
to do damage with each technique until you feel safe.
(3) Your energy matches what
your mechanics can handle (e.g., if you are flowing too much energy and you are
not aligned or grounded physically, you will be pulled off-balance)
(4) Your energy is constant
and consistent. If your energy level
goes up and down as you move through forms or during sparring, every time it
goes down, you leave yourself vulnerable.
A
key to maintaining consistent and even energy is to ensure consistent, constant
breathing.
In
the end to be truly balanced your mind (focus), body (mechanics), and spirit
(energy) must all be integrated and acting in unison.
Regards,
Kelly
“To gain mastery you must unite the qualities of spirit, strength, technique and the ability to take the initiative.” ~ Sadami Yamada (1924-2010), 6th Degree Balk k Belt in both Judo and Aikido, author of The Ancient Secrets Of Aikido and The Principles and Practice of Aikido
Thursday, October 1, 2020
Physical Balance -- Chief Instructor's Blog October 2020
Balance is one of the key skills you master as a martial artist. When we discuss / practice balance in class most of the time we tend to think or focus on techniques like kicks or other one-legged stances. This may be because these are the times we challenge our balance the most, so it may be why we think and practice balance more for these techniques. Yet there is much more to balance than not toppling over during kicks or those one-legged stances.
- Being physically balanced consists of many things for martial artists:
- Even / physical equilibrium
· - Equal distribution of weight
· - Symmetry
· - Stability
· - Controlling one’s center of gravity
· - Retaining one’s balance
Some
things to think about when it comes to being physically balanced:
ALIGNMENT:
Alignment
is at the core of being physically aligned.
By being physically aligned it ensure balanced use of muscles versus
skeletal system as well as controlling one’s center of gravity.
STANCES:
In
stances like attack stance and horse stance, you want equal distribution of
weight on between your legs/feet and on top of the equal distribution/ equal
pressure on your feet.
For
the one-legged stance such as when kicking or for cat stance, for the base leg,
you want equal distribution of weight/pressure across the foot and not more
weight or pressure in the inside or outside of the foot or heel versus ball of
the foot.
LEFT VS RIGHT:
We
all tend to favor one side. As a martial
artist we should strive to be equal left versus right sides. This includes physical force – that is throwing
as much force on one side as the other.
We
also tend to be more flexible on one side versus the other. As martial artists we strive to be flexible
equally on both sides which may mean spending more time on one side to balance
ourselves out.
This
also includes movement and ensure we move equally well, transition from stance
to stance in all directions equally well.
USING ENTIRE BODY:
For
me, being physically balanced also means not overusing one part of the body and
using the entire body.
Various ways to improve the different
aspects of your physical balance in your martial arts practice includes:
No reciprocal practice. When we use reciprocals,
we can easily compensate with the stronger side of our body and not being aware
of it. By practicing just one side at a
time we can easily tell if one side needs more work than the other.
Practice all techniques on
both sides.
Some techniques tend to get more practice than others because they are
only performed on one side in a hyung (for example, extended spear hand). As
mentioned in class a few times, this was never meant to indicate that technique
is only good when thrown from one side.
Therefore, besides just practicing both sides, the practice of mirroring
the Hyung is also a great way to practice techniques on both sides but also
help you move equally well in all directions.
Go slow. Going slow will
definitely help your stability and controlling your center of gravity. Going slow can be much more challenging than
going fast and by going slow your balance will improve. For more on this, see my November 2018 blog, Go Slow to Go Fast.
Practice with your eyes closed. We use our eyes to help with our physical
balance, so with eyes closed you must really focus on alignment, use of center of
gravity, using all your muscles, etc. to stay balanced versus your visual
clues.
Focus on feet/stances: As practice, focus on your
feet and your stances practicing that equal distribution of weight and equal
distribution of weight/pressure along the feet.
This also includes using all your feet and leg muscles in your stances
and not just dumping weight onto your joints.
For more information and recommendations on improving your stances, see my
July 2018 blog, Stances Start With The Feet.
Focus on using all the muscles.
This is discussed above, but using all your muscles pertains to the
techniques themselves as well. It means
when you through a punch for example your arms (biceps, triceps, forearms),
shoulders (deltoids), back (trapezius, latissimus dorsi, scapulae, rhomboid),
chest (Pectoralis), and
stomach muscles (abdominal) are all engaged and working together. Practice
focused on each muscles or groups of muscles to ensure they are all engaged. Using the resistance bands are another way to
get feedback or insights if using all your muscles together.
Improve your flexibility.
If one side is less flexible then the other, then focus on improving
that side so even. This may mean more stretching on one side then the other or
taking up practicing something like yoga.
Focus on alignment: While practicing, focus
on alignment (shoulders over hips, knees pointing straight ahead, etc.). You
can find other information on alignment in my January
2017 blog, Alignment:
Critical to Protecting the Muscular Skeletal Body and my January 2018 blog, Key
Alignment & Motion Fundamentals.
There is so much to balance and ways to
improve your physical balance. What
aspect of balance is your most challenging?
What aspect of balance do you find the most enjoyable to practice? I encourage you to look at the various
aspects of physical balance whether it’s challenging or not and practice each
one.
Regards,
Kelly
"Better learn balance.
Balance is key. Balance good, karate good. Everything good. Balance bad, better
pack up go home. Understand?" ~ Mr. Miyagi, fictional Okinawan karate in The Karate Kid saga.
Tuesday, September 1, 2020
The Reciprocal -- Chief Instructor's Blog September 2020
Sunday, August 2, 2020
Inner Mental Technique -- Chief Instructor's Blog August 2020
Gichin
Funakoshi, founder of Shotokan karate is quoted as saying "Inner mental
technique is more important than the physical one”.
I have discussed in
several blogs the importance of training the mind – specifically in the 2017
September blog “Training The Mind by Staying Focused “and the October 2017 blog “Training The Mind Through Attitude/Intent”. In
both of these blogs, training the mind is in reference to improving and/or
ensuring your physical techniques are effective which could mean the difference
from being killed or staying alive.
However,
training the mind is as important in the first two self-defense principles. As I have said in class and written in several blogs, Han Moo Kwan Tae
Kwon Do is to be used only if options do not exist to avoid confrontation and
conflict.
The first principle in self-defense is to be aware. Be aware of your surroundings at all times, and more aware at times where you are
in places that have higher risk. Unfortunately,
over the last decade or two, those places we thought may have zero risk
(schools, churches, etc.) are not completely risk free to experiencing
violence. Being aware means staying
focused and not being distracted (such as by walking while reading your text
messages or listening to loud music while running or walking). Massad Ayoob, an American firearms and
self-defense instructor, is quoted as saying ”To be safe you need first an
awareness of the danger and a healthy level of common sense.”
The second principle in self-defense is avoidance. Avoidance can occur through a variety of
actions. Avoidance could be not entering
a dark alley because it does not feel right.
Avoidance can be seeing a mob to the left and deciding to go to the
right and around the block to get where you need to go. Avoidance could be not reacting to someone who
is taunting you and escalating the confrontation to a physical one. Avoidance
could mean hiding from an assailant, running away from danger, or playing
dead. Avoidance is handing over your
wallet if someone asks for it while pointing a gun at you. What you would do to avoid violence may be
slightly different depending on the scenario (For example, if are on a plane
that is in the air versus outside in an uncrowded place). And what you may do to avoid a confrontation may
be different if you are by yourself versus with your friends or family member. There are hundreds of potential scenarios to
consider. I highly recommend that you
take time and mentally go through various scenarios and have a plan. Not that the plan can’t change, but by mentally
thinking through scenarios, you will be better prepared to protect yourself
and/or your friends/family though avoidance. If you can’t think of scenarios, every time
you see a violent encounter on You-Tube or the news, spend time to mentally go
over how you would have avoided that scenario.
You can find additional information and references/resources
on awareness and avoidance in my August
2009 blog, “More
Awareness” and my March 2014 blog “Awareness
Revisited”.
Given the current stay-at-home orders and our lives
are a bit slower than they were six months ago, now is a great opportunity to
take the time to be aware of our surroundings when we do go out and to go
through various scenarios mentally and think through how we would avoid a
confrontation.
Regards,
Kelly
"The secret principle of martial arts
is not vanquishing the attacker, but resolving to avoid an encounter before its
occurrence. To become an object of an attack is an indication that there was an
opening in one's guard, and the important thing is to be on guard at all
times." ~ Gichin Funakoshi
(1868-1957), founder of Shotokan Karate
Wednesday, July 1, 2020
Martial Arts and Life -- Chief Instructor's Blog July 2020
Monday, June 1, 2020
Adding Variety to Practicing Hyung -- Chief Instructor's Blog June 2020
In this current environment, is your solo training getting stagnant? Are you looking for some variety to mix it up and stay motivated? Adding variety to your Hyung may be the answer.
So, here are some other suggestion for you (some I have mentioned in other blogs, class notes, or in class itself), but sometimes it helps if all ideas are in one place.
1. Practice the Hyung mirroring all the techniques. For example, start to the left, versus the right. This has several benefits. (1) If you have not noticed, in most Hyung we do more techniques on the right then the left. So, by mirroring you are physically balancing yourself out. (2) If exercises are performed to increase muscle strength on one side of the body, voluntary strength can increase on the contralateral side [Ref. 1]. (3) It also helps train the mind. Sometimes we get stuck mentally and by doing things similar but different it helps create new neuropathways.
3. Practice with your eyes closed or blindfolded. We have done this in class from time to time. In doing so, you will learn if you are using mostly visual ques to stay square then ensuring your physical movements are perfectly square. This will also force you to use and enhance your other senses.
4. Practice starting at a different orientation, like starting at a 45-degree angle to a wall. We have also done this in class from time to time. And similar to the above, by doing so, you will learn if you are using mostly visual ques to stay square then ensuring your physical movements are perfectly square.
5. Practice each technique very slowly. This will help you focus on making the techniques very precise, challenges your mental focus, and it will help improve your balance tremendously.
6. Practice each technique as fast as you can. This will help you work on speed, breathing and cardiovascular endurance.
7. Practice each technique with devasting power and force with an intent to do damage. This will help you work on breathing and cardiovascular endurance and aligns with the Han Moo Kwan philosophy.
8. Practice using only a single stance. For example, practice Pyung Ahn 1 all in Cat Stance. This will give more practice in each particular stance and challenge your mind to do something different.
9. Practice with only one arm. We have done something similar in class during sparring, but not necessarily Hyung. This will challenge your mind.
10. Practice with no reciprocals. This will force you not to rely on the reciprocal for force or power.
11. Practicing just visually going through each technique imaging you preforming each technique precisely. Visual practice has shown to be very effective in sustaining and improving techniques.
12. Practice with a book on your head. This practice will definitely tell you if you are working from the center and staying level throughout the Hyung.
13. Practice the Hyung with loud noises (music, tv, etc.) in the background. This will help work on your focus and mental strength. This is similar to having someone in class trying to distract you.
14. Practice the Hyung by starting in the middle or the third move or the tenth move. This will help you really break down and learn the Hyung versus a body movement from start to finish.
15. Practice the Hyung with ankle and or/ wrist weights. This will help build muscular endurance.
16. Perform some explosive moves then perform the Hyung. For example, doing 25 pushups then go through the Hyung. Or perform 25 burpees and then go through a Hyung. This will help work on your cardiovascular endurance as well as your mental strength.
17. Practice sections of a form until you can perform it precisely. This will also help you really break down and learn the Hyung versus a body movement from start to finish.
18. Finishing at Starting Spot. This is usually more for advanced students, but you have probably noticed that the Hyung do not start and finish at the same spot. By practicing such that you do, you are discovering what adjustments need to be made to finish at the starting spot. The ability to adjust stances to be able to move to an exact spot is a vital skill in self-defense and sparring.
19. Practice the Hyung with more expansive moves (but never lock out elbows). This is also usually more for advanced students. By being more expansive, it improves your range of motion, but will also challenge you to stay grounded and connected with your center.
20. Practice Hyung with short strikes. This will challenge you to improve you power and aligns with the Han Moo Kwan philosophy.
21. Create your own Hyung (one of my favorites). I like to use the Kibon patterns and replace the techniques. For example, instead of low block and attack punch (Kibon Hyung), maybe you try Medium Block and Extended Spear Hand as the pattern. Or maybe you try High Block followed by Knife Hand. You can mix up the techniques and the stances. With all the various techniques and stances, we practice, you can end up with creating hundreds of Hyung to practice. This is a good way to practice techniques and challenge you mentally. In self-defense you have to be ready to use all your techniques starting from different places and in different stances. This is a great way to get more comfortable to use any technique, in any stance, from any angle.
22. Perform Hyung studying your energy. This is also for more advanced students. The concept is to ensure each technique, move, or transition direction of focus and movement, technique or transition to the next technique matches the direction of the energy.
- Go through Hyung with open hands extending energy; watching where energy is directed
- Go through Hyung with open hands extending energy; viewing if leading, dragging energy
- Go through Hyung just moving from one technique to the next flowing energy and not pausing between techniques
- Go through Hyung, noticing where your energy is retreating and adjust
Stay safe, stay heathy and look forward to the time we get to practice together again.
Regards,
Kelly
References
1. https://journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/japplphysiol.00531.2006, Retrieved 29 May 2020
“Like textbooks to a student or tactical exercises to a solider, kata are the most important element of karate” ~ Gichin Funakoshi (1868-1957), founder of Shotokan Karate
Friday, May 1, 2020
Value of Practicing Outside the Dojang -- Chief Instructor's Blog May 2020
As the shelter in place or social distancing continues to extend through May (at least in the Bay Area), many of you may be getting discouraged about not having classes to go to and believe your skill may be degrading.
"Tomorrow's battle is won during today's practice." ~ Samurai Maxim
Wednesday, April 1, 2020
Ultimate Goal of HMK – To Know Ourselves, To Better Ourselves -- Chief Instructor's Blog April 2020
"Fear comes from uncertainty; we can eliminate the fear within us when we know ourselves better." Bruce Lee (1940 –1973) American-born Chinese Hong Kong martial
Sunday, March 1, 2020
Why Do We Practice That Technique? -- Chief Instructor's Blog March 2020
Some of you might be wondering why we spend time working on some techniques (especially if the technique is considered part of the basics we practice the start of every class), if the utility of it does not seem that extensive. Some examples that come to mind are spear hand and high kick.
Spear Hand:
Martial arts masters used to practice spear hand in a bucket of sand or gravel to strengthen their spear hand. It is also said that some masters filed the tips of the first three fingers, so they were all the same length to make a more effective, stronger spear hand.
So, one may ask, if we are not training in this manner to make an effective Spear Hand, why do we practice the Spear Hand at all.
At a beginner level, the benefits to practicing Spear Hand include a simpler motion technique to enforce keeping arms close to the body during the strike, introduction to close in strikes, introduction to another open hand technique which in of itself helps strength the hands differently than fists.
At the intermediates level, the Spear Hand is another technique to train the body to throw techniques linearly, more practice with shorts strikes and utilizing the body versus just the arm, to continue to strengthen the hands, and an open hand technique that is usually easier at the beginning for students to practice flowing energy.
At an advanced level, the Spear Hand is an excellent technique for refining and practicing extending through the target physically, linear techniques, practicing throwing techniques energetically to be as effective as closed hand techniques without filing off the tips of the fingers.
High Kick:
At a beginner level, the benefits to practicing High Kick include improve flexibility in the legs, balance practice, understand the importance of a lock leg in a simpler motion, and preparation for learning Turnaway Kick.
At the intermediates level, the High Kick is excellent technique to practice focus and intent downward as well as upward, and to practice some basic leg sweeps.
At an advanced level, the High Kick is excellent technique to practice flowing energy in kicks and directing the flow in various directions (upward, downward, plus inside out and outside in) as well as refining sweeps techniques.
Everything we practice in our club has utility. Some of it may not seem obvious or may take time to master in such a way that the utility and effectiveness is understood, but all of it has value. The Spin Kick, for example, has selected uses - as a counterattack or a secondary move when the opponent has forced you to start a turn. However, the value of practicing includes improving balance, regaining your focus/intent quickly, and targeting, to name a few. This is why Mr. Kim would say about the spin kick: “Practice. Never use”.
So, even if the technique is limited or will take years to be effective in its use in a self-defense scenario, one should practice with the same focus and intent as every other technique.
Regards,
Kelly
"Do not place hope in finding a secret technique. Polish the mind through ceaseless training; that is the key to effective techniques." Kyuzo Mifune (1883 –1965), one of the greatest exponents of the art of judo after the founder, Kanō Jigorō and the author of The Canon of Judo
Saturday, February 1, 2020
Are Nerve Points Effective For Self Defense - - Chief Instructor's Blog February 2020
You may have heard of pressure points, nerve points or vital points. The theory of these points is typically associated with meridians and energy lines in the Eastern cultures to nerve clusters in Western cultures. Whichever names you have heard have been part of martial arts for at least the last century and most likely even longer. Vital points are discussed in the Bubishi [Ref. 1], a classic Chinese work handed down from master to student in Okinawa for generations describing the philosophy, strategy, medicine, and techniques used to master the art of karate-do.
These points in the body can cause various reactions when force is applied: pain, numbness or weakness in a muscle, fixed reaction, paralysis, and even death.
In Vital Point Strikes by Sang H. Kim [Ref. 2], a vital point is described as “a pressure sensitive point on or near the surface of the human body. Vital points function like gateways to the nervous system, the main controller of the body, allowing you to use pain to influence the actions and reactions of an opponent. Even a single strike can cause serious damage, unconsciousness or, in rare cases, death.”
The Dim Mak or touch of death technique in martial arts is a vital point strike technique. Some have speculated the Dim Mak technique was the reason for Bruce Lee’s death.
In our Club, we do discuss and from time to time practice against nerve points. However, we do not focus on them or practice them as an effective technique for self-defense.
The problem with nerve points as a means for self-defense is you must be extremely precise and to be precise you must practice these techniques a lot. In addition, not everyone has the same pain threshold or reaction to nerve points. Some people have zero reaction to certain nerve points while others are very sensitive. Some people have higher thresholds of pain and therefore do not react the same to nerve points as others. And if people are on drugs, they may have no reaction at all to force applied against these nerve points. And those nerve points that are really dangerous and could cause death, from a practicality standpoint we don’t believe we cannot really practice them safely.
So, if you are trying to end an altercation quickly, you can not rely that a nerve point will be accomplish this goal.
So, if this is the case, why do we even bother discussing practicing nerve points? For one, self-defense is more effective when you go after vulnerable parts of the body. Therefore, I believe an understanding of anatomy, the human body and its vulnerable points (and nerve points can be vulnerable) is fundamental to a self-defense based martial art like Han Moo Kwan. When we do practice nerve points, you will hear me say, I think of them as icing on the cake – if I strike a vulnerable point that is also a nerve point and the person has more of a reaction because it causes more pain or numbness in the muscles, etc. then it is just a bonus.
Regards,
Kelly
References:
“It is not possible to become a great martial artist without an education. The serious Karateka should study anatomy and physiology, grappling, swordsmanship, archery and strategic tactics, etc. Cross training and study must balance your training in order to understand the way.” ~ Gichin Funakoshi (1868-1957), founder of Shotokan Karate
Wednesday, January 1, 2020
Training the Martial Artist's Four Mindsets - - Chief Instructor's Blog January 2020
In my last blog, I discussed four important martial artist mindsets: Shoshin, Fudoshin, Zanshin, and Mushin. I also stated you must consciously train these mindsets as well, just like consciously physically practicing a form or a technique. Some of you may be wondering how you would go about training a mindset. So, in this blog, I will describe some ways to train these mindsets.
Shoshin: Beginner’s Mind
Fudoshin: Immovable Mind
To train your Fudoshin mind you must work on keeping your focus on the task at hand and not be distracted. I discuss focus and concentration in my August 2010 blog, Focus and Concentration (http://hanmookwan-svl-chiefinstructor.blogspot.com/2010/08/) and in my September 2017 blog, Training The Mind by Staying Focused (http://hanmookwan-svl-chiefinstructor.blogspot.com/2017/09/). As a summary to those two blogs, some ways to practice this are:
Some examples are: focus on your breathing and making it smooth, during the attack stance techniques focus on keeping back leg locked, focus on powerful penetrating techniques. Notice if you become distracted and immediately get back to your focus item.
In addition to the above, in all you do you must remain positive and confident. In Gichin Funakoshi’s, The Twenty Guiding Principles of Karate [1], his fifth principle is “Mentality over Technique”. Funakoshi states, “….in martial arts mental faculties are more important than technique. The former must rise above the latter.”
So, if you start to doubt something or have a negative response, think of two positive experiences of where you performed a technique well or were successful to help overcome the negative thoughts. \
Zanshin: Remaining Mind
To train your Zanshin mind you must work on your intent and attitude while practicing. I discuss this topic in my October 2017 blog, Training The Mind Through Attitude/Intent (http://hanmookwan-svl-chiefinstructor.blogspot.com/2017/10/). In summary you must practice all your techniques, hyung, sparring and self-defense with an attitude that your life depends on it. You must practice all your techniques with the intention to do damage.
In addition, you need to practice being aware. I discuss this in a couple blogs including my August 2009 blog, More Awareness (http://hanmookwan-svl-chiefinstructor.blogspot.com/2009/08/) and my March 2014 blog, Awareness Revisited (http://hanmookwan-svl-chiefinstructor.blogspot.com/2014/03/). For me, Gichin Funakoshi states it best in his 16th principle in The Twenty Guiding Principles of Karate [1], when he states “Consequently we should adopt the attitude that when leaving our gate we are entering into the midst of many potential enemies and should stay mentally alert.”
It also means listening to your instincts if you feel unsafe, paying attention to the people and the events around you, expanding your awareness when you are in areas that are unfamiliar, and noticing areas/events where you are more at risk (and avoiding them if possible).
Mushin: No Mind
Mushin comes from practicing over and over and over again such that you react without thinking. It means being grabbed hundreds of times and focusing on that one technique to escape until it becomes second nature and then moving to another technique, then another then another. It means being so comfortable with your arsenal of techniques you flow from one to the other without hesitation.
So, again to be proficient in these mindsets, you must train – train the body and train the mind.
Regards,
Kelly
“Do not place hope in finding a secret technique. Polish the mind through ceaseless training; that is the key to effective techniques.” ~ Kyuzo Mifune (1883-1965), Judo Master (10th degree)
References: