The first time
we consider the height it can seem daunting. Eight
feet seems like a pretty good distance up in the air! Here are a couple
of thoughts to consider.
First, I'm taking for granted that
everyone who trains also does stretching exercises. The minimum that a person
should be able to do is to stand up straight, bend forward and lay their palms
on their insteps. If one can't do this yet then that goal has to be reached
first.
An alternate goal to that one is to be
able to do a front leg raise so that one's foot will go straight up over their
head. If one can't do this yet then that is another goal to pursue first. (To
see how you are with doing this, sit on the floor in a "hurdler's
stretch" position, bend your upper body forward and touch your elbow to
your knee.)
Another goal is to be able to do a front
knee raise (just like a front leg raise except that you keep your knee bent) so
that, without bending forward, you can bop yourself in the shoulder with your
knee. (To see how you are with this without doing the knee raise, do a deep lunging
step forward and then bend your upper body forward and rest your shoulder on
your knee.)
If, in your case, you can already raise
your leg over your head (kick higher than our head), then you are already approaching
the seven foot mark just because of your height. That means you actually only have
to jump up about one foot in the air!
Now, to sort of see where the
"bottom" of your jumping kick ability is, stand up straight with both
feet together, bend your knees and then jump straight up in place. Have a
friend standing by (maybe on a chair - being careful not to fall off) and
taking note of how high your eyes go off the ground. Hold the broom out to
where your eye level reached and use that as the starting point for the jumping
kick height. Everyone I've known has been able to jump kick to at least as high
as their eyes went. (Your standing jump, depending on your effort, probably
took you anywhere from five inches to one foot off the ground. This means that
your beginning jump will reach seven feet easily and maybe get to seven foot
seven, based on how high your eyes reached. You may even be able to hit your
starting point height without having to jump!)
The remainder of the height (up to where
your fingertips went) is built from the power of your launch (one step, one
knee up, one kick up).
I always start out classes with
"roadwork" and to break the monotony of the running I include jumping
over small obstacles and so on. Although the front jumping kick is not a
beginner's kick, you can get beginners used to the idea of "getting
air" right from the start of their practice.
Jim Keenan Dotokushin-kai
Isshinryu Karate
I have always thought that jumping was a good practice. Just my personal quirk. I have also always had people practice both jumping for distance and for height.
To avoid physical bias, here's a
standard I used for the height of front jumping kick that everyone should be
able to attain.
Stand up straight and raise one arm
straight up above your head. Keep your shoulder relaxed and down (don't extend
your shoulder upwards).
Have someone hold a broom out so that it
touches the tips of your fingers. Drop your arm and step away. Taking only one
step, one should be able to touch the broom executing a double front jumping
kick.
Just a little test I used to do that has
the advantage of having everyone jumping to the same relative difficulty
whether the jumper is five foot three or six foot two.
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