Friday, August 26, 2011
Featured Student of the Month - Tabea
Thursday, August 4, 2011
Kung Fu Haiku
Dave is a Level 4(Green) student at Wu Dao
One for each of the Ji Ben Gong:
1)Oh! So many forms
My limbs will not stop aching
We must go again
2)Classes every night
Floor Drills, Forms, and Self Defense
These make up my life
3)Kungfu means hard work
Repetition is the key
We refine ourselves
4)Kungfu on the brain
What did I do before this?
Probably ached less
5)No Kungfu tonight
Instead- dinner and laundry
Life gets in the way
6)I can kick the bag
But I can not re-chamber
Bad habits die hard
7)Yesterday I ate
A heaping plate of bitter
Same again today
8) Shi-fu grunts “Not bad”
It’s the highest form of praise
Don’t get used to it
9)I am dripping sweat
And the warm-up is not done
Its one of those nights
10)My hips do not stretch
As far as I’d like them to
What’s a guy to do?
11)I have bruises from
Star blocking with a partner
Curse my tender bones
12)Eighteen Ji-Ben-Gong
The monk makes them look easy
We still stumble through
13) How does the form go?
What’s that move for anyway?
These things escape me
14) I must learn the staff
I thought it would be easy
Now it makes me weep
15) Kicking high is fun
Sometimes we overreach, though
Then we pay the price
16) Sitting in horse stance
The way it makes my legs feel-
How much longer now?
17) Muscles sore again-
A feeling that has become
Like a dear old friend
18) At the end of class
Some water and a lie down
What more could you want?
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
No Greater Excuse
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Be The Technique
I used to have this one Aikido teacher - a really insightful guy - who threw out all the superfluous moves and had me practicing only a few essential, blatantly practical moves and throws. His theory behind stripping everything bare was that you shouldn't have to train for 20 years to finally have a style’s effective techniques revealed and taught to you. Why read War and Peace when you can just skim the CliffsNotes?
At the time it made sense, and it's a very tempting approach, but it forgets to consider the concept that, as Shi-fu (and Kung Fu Panda) says, in martial arts "there are no secrets."
Lately, a lot of us have been attempting to apply some of the Shaolin techniques into sparring (while simultaneously tweaking them to avoid the limb-braking parts). One of the main problems I've come across is that it's just so darn hard. It’s very tempting to consider trashing all but a choice few Shaolin techniques that obviously show promise in the ring. You know, like the straight punch.
This is a terrible idea.
Having only a few moves at your disposal would have an extremely negative impact on how much of a style you actually internalize. Like many styles, Shaolin is explicitly made up of movements and forms that are designed to train your body to optimally execute effective fighting techniques. There’s not a single wasted movement in what we learn. The trick is figuring out what each (seemingly) superfluous section of a technique actually does. If you don't DO those sections, then you run the risk of severely limiting that technique's range of application. But, how do we figure out what those sections and techniques do?
We’ve all heard it a thousand times: "Do a technique 1,000 times, you know the technique. Do it 10,000 times, you ARE the technique."
While I might feel like I "know" how to do many of the techniques in Shaolin (at least passably), I certainly have not gotten to the stage where I feel like they're internalized.
I better go get training.
Sunday, January 2, 2011
My First Tournament
By Hana C.
Hana is Youth Level 3 (Orange) student at Wu Dao and won first place in her division
About a month ago, I attended my first Kung Fu tournament, which took place in Boston, on a Saturday. I was signed up to compete in the forms division, and was working on Xiao Hong Quan at the time. The day of the tournament, I woke up at 9AM, which for me is an extremely early time to get up on a Saturday morning. After having a filling breakfast, I spent about an hour or so practicing the form on the porch, along with Shira, who was also entered in the same division. There were still a few moves that were far from perfect, and which I tended to trip up on. However, we didn't spend too much time going over the form that morning, because we had already been working on it for at least half a year, had already tested for the next belt, and did not want to get too tired of it before the actual tournament. After a quick lunch, we were lucky enough to get a ride to Boston.
The facility where the tournament held was surprisingly small. It was the first Kung Fu studio I had been in other than Wu Dao, and the small space emphasized how big and accommodating Wu Dao's training area is. I had been warned before hand that my form might move me outside the boundaries that had been set, and was prepared to have to take an awkward step back if that was the case. After filling out the required paperwork, we had a good amount of time before the teens were scheduled to perform the forms for the judges, and so we watched the two ongoing events, which at the time were push hands and the forms of the younger students. Many of the students there were from Wu Dao, and although I might be biased, I honestly thought that their forms and their performance were amazing. Our uniform also seemed to be the most "official", as a lot of other schools had the same pants, but required only a T-shirt. I was also proud to see Rom win his entire division with a very martial performance.
I had expected there not to be many people in our division, but it turned out that there were enough to split us into a boys group, and two girls groups based on experience. Three boys from other schools went first. Their forms were very sharp and quick, and I was impressed by their power and clean performance. Next, the three girls who had been training the longest went first. One of them performed a Karate-style form that involved a lot of hissing and not very much movement, as opposed to many of the other forms I had observed.
In my division, Shira and I were both performing the same form, and she went first. In my opinion, her form was almost perfect: it was executed cleanly and with more power than usual. Luckily, when I performed the form, there was enough room that I did not have to shuffle. I did mess up in a few places, but the momentum of the form made it easy to play off the mistakes and keep going with relative fluidity.
Overall, I learned a lot from this first tournament. It definitely confirmed that repetition is key; because of how many times I had done the form before, I wasn't completely thrown off when I made a mistake. I also felt that if I had practiced just a bit more, those mistakes could have been avoided. Hopefully, this experience will help me in future tournaments, which I definitely plan on attending.