Interesting topic: hidden techniques. Of course it depends on what you mean by hidden techniques. What are hidden for some are openly taught by other system, provided of course you were taught them.
1.
I am sure there are explanations which were not shared at times. That doesn’t
mean they weren’t there, just not shared.
2.
Or there were systems where techniques were shared at various levels of
training. Until you reached those levels those techniques were not shared. Such
as at 20 years of training. The need for those techniques may well have not
been needed, except in the past, so no reason to study them. Want is not
necessity, one can teach as one choses.
3.
Another tradition was planned extra movements between the kata sections. This
was shown by the writings of Shiroma Shimpan and Mutsu.
4.
Other traditions did not share but the most basic applications, and you were
encouraged to discover your own, but under the eyes of the instructor to guide
them.
5.
Itoman shared many applications from Toude, which fit many of today’s karate
traditions.
6.
There are family traditions which teach applications only after Black Belt.And
those applications have nothing to do with the kata. Those are training tools,
and the movement points are mnemonic devices to remember the actual techniques.
7.
Or you can define a technique as you will from a kata, and seek the skill to
find each possible application there and develop the skill to make them work.
One of my Isshinryu instructors spent 40 years working makiwara, so that each
strike could drop anyone no matter where he struck, and along the way shared
800 applications for the 8 kata of Isshinryu, and I only had a piece of his
studies and work.
Whether
there are instructor favorite applications, of course theoretically all you
need in one movement, and the time to deliver it with skill to enter the attack
and make it work. Of course that is the true secret of any technique.
Or
perhaps you have two techniques, and then no one knows which you are to use.
I
have a simple answer, any techniques which works is real. If it drops an
opponent it qualifies.
I
have experienced several of these answers. Enough to know that each of them can
work.
A
system or practitioner may or may not share as they choose. They are under no
obligation to provide you with answers.
For
myself the past several months I have been working on the use of a kamae found
in the Isshinryu SunNuSu (Sunsu) kata. Having realized ago that kamae tend to
be most viscious when fit into an attack.
Are
there Hidden Techniques”? Depends on what you define hidden to mean. Be sure
you don’t confuse the question with understand the meaning of a movement, with
the different task developing the skill to effectively use that meaning.
The
Ryukyu combat art of of seizing and controlling by means of pressure, is an
often overlooked aspect of Karate. While flow drills, locking, chokes,
submissions of all types, "muchimi"or sticking and trapping, and
sophisticated methods of percussion are now widely known... 挾術 Kyojutsu, remains a mystery.
Refer to this previous post -
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