The
purpose of that study is not to learn more and more applications but to more
firmly believe in the underlying principles of those applications to get to the
time when you can apply any movement into any attack and make it work. That
requires never ending study of the application potential and of course the
greater study of the application realization.
I
have found too often the brain becomes lazy. When you were originally told the
application was XYZ the brain stalls there and decades later you find the
application potential is also ABC. However it was easier to stop at XYZ and you accept that is the answer. Suddenly
you find from a new source a whole range of superior applications, really
really good ones, and your brain stops there. And whole ranges of other answers
are never considered.
Today
I ran 3 kata, or at least what I call 3
kata today, Seiunchin, Nihanchi and Seisan. They are not much to look at but
even with my more limited potential by running them I recall with clarity what
they ought be. That is important to me, for what you don’t do, you lose unto
becoming vapor-wear. Something to easy to descend to these days.
But
performing my Seisan kata, an entirely new range of applications for the 2nd
row came to me. What I already had were sufficient, including a range of superior
ones from Sherman Harrill or his students Garry Gerossie or John Kerker.
Of
course once I understood them my mind shut down. Today I realized an entire
range of new possibilities.
I
am just going to focus on the opening of the potential. After using it you can
see the entire range of possible answers that become available. Everything in
you training provides many possibilities.
Now
in the kata you have just turned and executed two open hand shuto down blocks.
The
next movement you cross your hands, then cutting down with one descending
shuto, as the other hand moves up. That movement where you cross your hands is
where I see a new possibility.
The
way I learnt this section as the side where the foot steps forward, both hands
rise as the front foot outside hand
performs a bent wrist side block. As that
begins to form the other hand rises to cross wrists and then begin a
descending shuto strike. That momentary section where the hands intersect is
where I see an option to exploit in a different way. (Unfortunately all of my
films show this being done from the rear.)
Against a right
grab or strike:
1.
Block
inward with your left forearm (using the ‘<” created by the formation of the
cross block). This begins the potential I never explored.
2.
Complete
the cross block ‘X’ by flowing your left hand over their arm and your blocking
right inside forearm.
3.
Then
your right hand flows down with the descending shuto strike (or a parrying
block) moving their attacking arm down and away.
4.
This
is where you choose the options for you right palm strike to conclude the
movement.
Whether
the attacking arm is the left or the right arm of the attacker it works the
same way, just your follow up options depend on what you wish to accomplish.
Work to always
look for more possibilities.
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