Thursday 16 February 2017

Mark in South Korea - Part 2 - Taekyun

I am so nervous. It’s been over a decade since I first heard about the traditional Korean martial art of Taekyun. Some say it is the origin of modern Taekwondo and others say it is something completely different in its own right. The art nearly disappeared during the Japanese occupation of Korea but was maintained primarily through a single master who continued practising during this time.

For me, training in Taekyun has been a dream I was never sure I would be able to fulfil. In 2014, I visited Korea and spent many hours searching the backstreets for the location of the Taekyun headquarters in Insadong I had read about. I was unsuccessful. When I returned in 2015 I tried again to find the Taekyun club but still with no success. This time though I found it and was able to contact them about training.

So here I am, about to start a new martial art, one I have been dreaming about for years and I was nervous. I have been doing martial arts for years and this is not the first time I have stepped out of my comfort zone to try something new but it is the first time I have done it in a different country in a language I am not fluent in.

I walk down the little alley and garden to the training hall. There is a man outside hitting a tree with the back of his hand. To me it looks like he is conditioning his hand but it could just be a cultural thing I haven’t experienced. I open the door and step inside but no one is there. I call out in English and Korean but nothing. So I step back out. The man who was hitting the tree comes over and asks if he can help me. He introduces himself as Chan Jae but quickly tells me to call him Charlie. I am not sure if that’s a nickname he already has though or if he doesn’t want to hear me butcher the pronunciation of his actual name. Charlie is a student of Taekyun himself and quickly helps me get ready for my first class.

Taekyun is very fluid and movement based and it’s a bit like dancing and that has never been my strong suit. We go through a warm up and I just following along as best I can. No single person seems to be running anything though. We line up because it’s time to start and someone starts the music which your movements are timed to.

After the warm up though the Grandmaster arrives and he singles me out straight away. His name is Master Ki-hyun Do. Grandmaster Do asks about my martial arts history and looks excited that I am keen to train in Taekyun. He tells me he will teach me three things tonight.

Triangle Stepping (Pum Balgi).
The footwork in Taekyun is based on a triangle system. You start with your feet shoulder width apart and the bottom two points of the triangle and then one at a time you step a foot onto the top triangle point and then back to its starting spot. You move your arms back and forth in time with your steps. I feel very awkward at first and the Grandmaster tells me to do this one hundred times and leaves me to practise.
Bend the Knees
After I reach about forty on my count Grandmaster Do takes some pity on me and comes over to improve my technique. He tells me the second thing he will teach me is to bend my knees. Every time I step, whether forward or backwards I must bend my knee noticeably. He leaves me to continue my one hundred movements and to be honest, now that I am bending my knees it feels much better.
Natural
Grandmaster Do returns again just as I am nearing one hundred. I think he was counting as well to test me and make sure I was dedicated enough to do the one hundred. Frankly if he hadn’t come back at one hundred I would have kept going. It felt really good to move this way. It was then that he told me the third thing he wanted me to learn. Natural. He said Taekyun is a martial art that works on people moving naturally. It should feel natural. By this point I understood. At first it was awkward but now it felt natural.

He did teach me a few more things this lesson. Some great breathing techniques which really showed me just how much further I have to go in training my breath for martial arts. There is an art itself in this which I have been keen to learn and I am hoping he will teach me more. Overall my first Taekyun lesson was fantastic and I am looking forward to a lot more training in this traditional art. Maybe I might get to kick something soon.

U.N.T
Mark


















Mark Underwood holds the rank of Master in three martial arts, 5th Dan Black Belt in Taekwondo. 4th Dan Black Belt in Haidong Gumdo (Korean swords) and 1st Dan Black Belt in Gongkwon Yusul (Korean MMA). He has also trained in a number of other martial arts styles. He is currently the owner and head instructor for Zone Martial Arts servicing the Sutherland Shire area from the Taren Point location 

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