An Overview of Karate
Author: Alan Kintel
Date Posted: January 21, 2007
Karate can help build and fine tune the character of a person,
developing agility and physically fitness skills in the process.
Karate student and masters mature and become enabled to handle more
difficult situations in life, too, working within a community, respecting
the teacher.
Karate is actually a form of art that teaches a student how to
develop the inner self. It teaches restraint, patience and calmness.
Established by Gichin Funakoshi, karate was founded with 20, one
being to pursue karate for the whole life. This meant that a person
should practice karate so that it becomes part of the inner self,
and it should be done without harming others or the self in the
process.
And during karate training, students are all treated in the same
manner with the same tough standards so that all reach the same
level or plane.
A couple of interesting items to note about karate is that it teaches
people how to overcome stress plus constantly seek to improve life.
Karate also teaches people to build strong relationship bonds and
trust.
And as students learn karate, they interact with society and pass
their art along in subtle, meaningful ways. They share their capacity
for patience and restraint in the fast-paced world today, restoring
harmony and balance, respect, equality, courtesy and fairness, presenting
stable minds and inner beings.
The Meaning Behind the Scenes
The word Karate actually refers to China or open hand with the
first part of the word: “Kara;” and hand or “te.” And today’s karate
training is divided up into two Japanese Kihon forms that involve
footwork, punching and posture techniques with focus on foot placement:
Kata and sparring also known as Kumite.
While Kata features physical and combat postures, it also focuses
on attack sequences while students wear protective gear. And sparring
is more relaxed, protective gear not required but recommended for
safety.
Since literacy was not high when original karate techniques were
established, the training focus was mainly on movements, postures
and sequences; in other words people focuses on the karate physique,
with no standard patterns and interpretations. Simple forms of the
kata were a block, punch, throw, joint strike or lock.
And the various karate styles throughout the Eastern culture that
developed each used different training equipment, or “hojo undo”
in Japanese, to focus on their own specific techniques. Some equipment
is known as the chi-ishi, makiwara and nigiri game – each with different
weights or grips to develop strength.
About The Author
Alan Kintel is a writer that concentrates on helping people better
themselves, for cutting edge information you NEED to know check
out his website at http://someofthebest.info
Article Source: JKD Street Combat
- online collection of Karate articles.
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