The Secret Of The Fighting Arts
Author: Mike Selvon
Date Posted: July 09, 2007
The fighting arts began as a means to hide combative applications
from kings and other rulers, who restricted the use of fighting
arts to keep peasants from fighting back or rebelling. As a result,
the peasants developed the fighting arts that did not look like
they were fighting.
By doing this, they could still practice combat without looking
like they were training for protection. Many of the practices used
a prearranged kumite that involved two men in an instance of choreographed
fighting.
The beginning lessons in karate involve several combative applications
that might seem like a waste of time to unskilled karate students.
Learning how to stand properly, as well as throwing and blocking
a blow, are some of the essentials that beginning students must
learn.
They are also taught how to focus by using a variety of breathing
techniques. These might seem unimportant initially, but these lessons
provide a solid foundation for a much better understanding of the
fighting arts.
One of the first things a white belt learns is the kata. Unlike
prearranged kumite, a kata is designed for a single person to practice
against an invisible opponent. Each level of the fighting arts has
a different kata.
The basics of that particular rank are put into the form for the
student to practice. The very first kata a student learns might
be nothing more than how to move in a basic stance and coordinate
punches and blocks in different directions. The complexity increases
in direct proportion to the rank.
For the first few months, the new student becomes accustomed to
these very basic combative applications. As the student nears his
first test, he is introduced to the prearranged kumite. Prearranged
kumite takes the techniques learned in the kata and helps the student
learn what it feels like to actually block or throw a punch.
Prearranged kumite is all about contact: it's like sparring with
a script. This combative application in its most simplistic form
teaches a student how to move with another person in a fundamental
set of movements -- with general targets such as the head, chest
and lower abdomen.
The student moves in with a strike to the head and his partner
is required to block it. Step by step, they move through the head/chest/down
sequence: first one way, then acting as the attacker. Students will
practice this until they can move quickly and with good form.
The other part of prearranged kumite, in the fighting arts of karate,
is the bunkai. For this, the kata itself is transformed into a two
person routine. Unlike the prearranged kumite, where a set of three
identical moves are repeated between partners, the bunkai incorporates
all the twists and turns, strikes, blocks, stances and take downs
(in the higher levels) of the kata for that rank.
When the bunkai is mastered, both students should be able to move
at top speed without pulling any punches or kicks, like actors in
a fight onscreen.
Later down the road, once all of the basic combative applications
have been mastered and the student has achieved the rank of brown
or black belt, there is still one more step. At this point, the
student of the fighting arts is taught the hidden applications behind
the basic prearranged kumite.
He finds that an open hand block isn't just a block, but can be
used to grab an opponent as well; or what might have looked like
a strike, is actually a cleverly disguised take-down. The black
belt is only the beginning -- the learning never stops.
About The Author
Knowing the art of martial
arts is an asset for protection. Claim your free karate secret
gift, and more useful information about the fighting
arts from Mike Selvon's portal, and leave a comment at his martial
arts blog.
Article Source: JKD Street Combat
- online collection of General Interest articles.
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