Strength, Flexibility and Power in Martial Arts
Author: Pete Nisbit
Date Posted: March 19, 2007
Were I to state three major attributes possessed by an exponent
of any martial art, they would be these three: strength, flexibility
and power. These, combined with the extreme fitness and rapid reflexes
of any athlete, are essential components in one who would profess
to possess the skills required of a master of any martial art.
Let us discuss each of these individually. First strength. Strength
is the body’s potential to exert force, and is gained by conditioning
the muscles of the body by imposing increasingly higher demands
upon them by an opposing force. To put it in simple terms, this
can be achieved by lifting weights, where the muscles are extended
when overcoming the force of gravity on an object, or by isometric
exercises where the muscles are not moved but exerted against an
immovable object such as a wall or another equal set of muscles.
An example of an isometric exercise is pressing the palms of the
hands against each other. Neither will force the other back, but
constant pressure will increase the blood flow in the muscle and
increase the size and hence the strength of the muscular fibers.
The old Charles Atlas method.
The Russian Special Forces train by the former method using Russian
kettlebells. Kettlebells are weights with a ring and handle so that
they can be lifted. Using kettlebells every part of your body can
be worked, building the supreme strength required of a master of
his or her art.
Flexibility is essential and is attained through continual practice
of dynamic relaxation techniques. Flexibility is supreme relaxation
of the muscles and joints of the body. It was said by the karate
master George Matson that “Achieving complete control over your
muscles is perfection.” The Russian Cossacks achieved this by continually
cutting into water with their sabres, keeping the muscles totally
relaxed and tensing only at the moment of strike.
This build up so much strength and flexibility that they could
slice an opponent from the shoulder to the hip with a light sabre.
Gruesome though this may seem, the same techniques are used to this
day, only the sabres and water have been replaced with axes and
logs by Russian boxing coaches.
Finally power. Power differs from strength in that it is the body’s
ability to exert force in any one direction. Size and strength are
nothing if the big guy can’t exert a punch in the exact direction
it should be exerted. Power depends on the use of strength and the
levers of the body to exert maximum force in exactly the right direction.
That is what makes the difference between a student and a master
of martial arts.
The master understands the reflexes and use of the central nervous
system to use the levers of the body to direct the maximum power
possibly from the strength of the muscles to a single point. The
student aims the fist at the same point with possibly more strength,
but with only a fraction of the power.
Extreme fitness training and teaching in the combination of the
levers of the body and the power of the muscles to produce supreme
martial arts ability is essential to anyone who wants to become
a master of his martial art.
American John Du Cane professes that through the teaching of the
Chinese art of qigong you can attain the degree of vitality required
to attain complete martial flexibility. Russian Pavel Tsatsouline,
on the other hand, teaches the secrets of Russian kettlebell training
as provided to the Russian special forces, and how the combination
of the supreme strength developed by the kettlebells combines with
the flexibility of qigong to provide true supreme martial arts power.
About The Author
Find out more information on the teachings of John Du Cane and
Pavel Tsatsouline on Peter’s webpage http://www.welshhealth.com/russian.html
where you are given the opportunity to access the secrets of true
martial arts flexibility, strength and Russian
power.
Article Source: JKD Street Combat
- online collection of speed and power training articles.
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