Question
for the senseis who have trained with master Shimabuku on Okinawa back in the
day. What did a typical training day consist of (kata, kumite, etc etc)?
If this has been asked before, I apologize, and I appreciate anyone taking the
time to respond. It’s an experience I’ll obviously never have, so I’m just
curious what it was like for you
Bill
Pogue
I've asked this before. most of them said that you worked out on you own and TS
sat up on the water tank watching. if you were a good worker, he'd help you.
the classes i grew up with- one hour of charts and one hour of kata and kumite-
was apparently a marine innovation. since I'm in the nagle lineage, i presumed
nagle . i notice in other parts of the country, they don't have such a
structured training.
Victor That is pretty
much how it was explained to me. Senior students would instruct the new
students. All the others were pretty much on their own how hard they trained.
Shimabuku sensei was always watching, and when someone’s work merited more
training he would come out and show them something more. When he did so he
would show it 3 times and if you didn’t get it would then walk away shaking his
head.
As
a student of Tom Lewis before class a ½ hour or so many of us would gather and
work on basics, kotokite, other body hardening drills and other drills. Then
most often Sensei appointed someone to hold the warmup (Another black belt or a
brown belt depending on the night) and at times it would be Sensei. After warm
up about ½ the time would be on kata and about ½ the time would be on kumite.
Frequently Sensei would stay in his office watching, letting the other black
belts run things. He could knock off 50 knuckle pushups faster than we could do
50 regular pushups, and he could kick the heavy bag harder that I could with a
baseball bat. Class was always varied, never repeating itself.
I
remember my 3rd class. Sensei came out of his office, leaned against
the wall watching everyone. When warm-ups were concluded, he told everyone to
work on their kata, that was it for the night. I only knew the first 3 steps to
Seisan and that is what I did over and over for the rest of the class.
Years
late I questioned Sensei about how he would run the class. He explained he was
using the model of Shimabuku Tatsuo.
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