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Home Fitness and Sports Fitness Some of the Things Taught Wrong in Classical Karate Training
Some of the Things Taught Wrong in Classical Karate Training PDF Print E-mail
Written by Al Case   
You know, Karate sometimes gets a bad rap. You see all the UFC guys trashing their opponents, and you wonder why, if Karate is so darned good, you don't see it in the octagon. The problem lies with Classical Karate training methods.

You know, Karate sometimes gets a bad rap. You see all the UFC guys trashing their opponents, and you wonder why, if Karate is so darned good, you don't see it in the octagon. The problem lies with Classical Karate training methods.

In traditional karate classes students are lined up, and they kick and punch and do everything together. This is great, for beginners. The unfortunate fact, however, is that one rapidly progresses from being a beginner, and then needs to have a different teaching method.

Class exercises are fine to warm up, but there is no real exchange of information going on between teacher and student. Oh, you think that everything is in the forms, that you just need to do the forms and enlightenment will burst upon you? Well, true to a certain extent, but there is also the fact that if you hold to this opinion too hard you are saying that karate is for stupid people.

Oh, I'm serious. Look, Karate, be it goju or shotokan or uechi ryu or whatever, depends on physics. And, once a person has mastered the first set of physics, there is a second set of physics pertinent to the mind and the spirit. But, because of antiquated training methods, methods that were used to control unruly children (not teach them) nobody in the martial arts really knows what the second set of physics is.

Let me take one instance and play with it a bit. I ran into a student who demonstrated terrible form, and he had taken a year of traditional martial arts classes. He was terrible, but-smile in the eyes of his instructor-he was extremely stiff and rigid.

So his shoulders overextended, his body was always turned the wrong way, his punches wouldn't hurt a six year old girl, but he was deemed good because he was rigid. All his muscles locked into place at the execution of technique. And, you can see this same tendency on any number of youtube Karate videos.

Now, one of the first concepts of real fighting is, 'a sitting duck is a dead duck.' Heck, the reason that gangster told you to hold still when he's talking to you was because he wanted a motionless target. This goes against the true karate somebody would learn if they could get past the stiff, no data teaching that is prevalent in nearly every karate class on the planet.

Real Karate is liquid, and the focus points are so short they can't be perceived, and the karateka is able to move in any direction without preparation or telegraphing. True Karate is like a whip, and only the fist tightens, and that momentarily when it smacks through some fool's face. Karate is a study in motion, not in rigidity, and that is just one of the problems with Classical Karate Training.

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