Showing posts with label BASIC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BASIC. Show all posts

Friday, 14 October 2016

The importance of passing on knowledge to colour belts.

As a Black belt or as a senior belt there are several reasons why it’s important to pass on the knowledge that you have accumulated over your own years of martial arts training to colour belts. In my opinion these are the main reasons.
  • Teaching the next generation
  • Different way of training and learning
  • Duty to club
  • A new path for your martial arts journey

Teaching the next generation
One of the best parts of being a martial artist is being able to share the experience with other people. You can share this knowledge in a few different ways such as teaching, assisting in classes or just partnering with another student to teach them a specific technique or pattern. Passing on your knowledge is a great way to open up other avenues for your own learning as well though.

Different way of training and leaning
Passing on your knowledge actually helps you with your own journey. While teaching techniques to other students is useful for the other student, it is also useful for your own learning. When you are teaching others you are having to focus on, what you are doing, how you are doing it and why you are doing it. It cements it in your own mind at the same time you are teaching someone else.
Lets for example take a look at if you were performing a Dollyo Chagi (turning kick); It’s not just, kicking with the top of your foot on a sidewards angle. We can break down what we are doing into 5 individual moves;
  • Lift knee as high as you can, and on a slight angle out.
  • Pivot your base foot on your toes and ball of the foot with a hip pivot.
  • Extend the kicking leg, and hit your target.
  • Retract the kicking leg at the knee first, and pivot hips back original position.
  • Place kicking foot one ground.
While you are talking about these components with a student you may also talk about the following;
  • Lift your knee high as the higher you lift your knee the higher your kick will be.
  • Pivoting your base foot, allows your hips to open, and reduces the risk of knee damage.
  • Pivoting your hips when kicking helps with the power of your kick.
  • Retracting your foot first allows you to do a second kick if required faster.
  • Placing your foot down where you want it, sets you up for the next move or kick.
When we go through the steps and talk about other details with someone else, we actually improve our own techniques and become better martial artists. So with your teaching, its not just about the other person, you are actually still training and learning, just in a different way.



Duty to club
Doing your duty to your club I feel is very important. It’s a way of thanking your club for the time, effort and resources that they have used to help get you to where you are now. Most students will hopefully find that their martial arts training has helped in other areas of their life as well. Dloing your duty is also helping your club become better as while you’re helping one student, it frees up your head instructor time to help other students on a more in depth level or allows them time to run the club better.
Doing your duty to your club also shows that you care about your club and the students in it and this will help you in becoming a better teacher. It will give you a stake in the achievements of the other students so when they achieve, it feels like you achieve as well.

A new path for your martial arts journey
As mentioned above, teaching others allows you to analyse your own techniques and improve them.  It also brings new components to your training, a new angle of focus and patience is needed as different people learn at different speed and in different ways. Being able to change and adapt to this and to different situation helps you with your own martial arts journey. Teaching others also helps with your own self-confidence and abilities. Being able to stand in front of a group of people takes a lot of guts and can be nerve wracking but you need to have faith in what you have learnt and achieved and know that you wouldn’t be asked to do it, if your head instructor didn’t think you were able to do it.

Ben Tuckfield

Ben holds the rank of 3rd Dan in Taekwondo and is part of the leadership and instruction teams at Zone Martial Arts servicing the Sutherland Shire area from the Taren Point
location.

Tuesday, 7 June 2016

Fundamental Theory of Haidong Gumdo and Martial Arts

I started writing a short blog based on the fundamental theory of Haidong Gumdo.

SPIRIT         MIND         BODY




As I wrote it though, I started to see that this applied to a much broader viewpoint and the more I thought about it, the more I saw it applied to martial arts as a whole and then I wrote some more and thought about it more and realized it also reflected my views on life as well. So this week and in the next three weeks, I am going to go into detail on the three aspects that form the fundamental theory of Haidong Gumdo and how they can apply to everyone. I think they go beyond just Haidong Gumdo.

Today’s society is characterized by technology, information and globalization. We can stream television on nearly any device. We are bombarded by information from websites, emails, Facebook etc. and this puts a lot of stress on our lives. What is the last thing you do at night? Is it to say goodnight to someone you love, or look at Facebook on your phone? What is the first thing you do in the morning? Have a good breakfast or check your emails? We are more connected than ever but we are also less connected in some aspects as well.

The modern age has brought us some good things. I can communicate with some friends I made in trips to Korea or family overseas really easily. I have access to training drills and martial arts experts with a click of a button.

These are good things but it also has brought on other more negative aspects. Our faster pace lifestyle means that we have a lot going on so when we need to eat, fast is our friend. This attitude has meant that we eat more fast food and this has not helped our waistlines and leads to other weight based illnesses, trust me I know. The ability to watch TV or play games on nearly any device has the potential to lead us into a very sedentary life. Sitting on the couch is great, but it shouldn't be so often we leave a dent in our favourite chair. So although there are some great positive outcomes for living in the current age, there are some potential negatives as well.

Martial Arts offers a solution to some of these stresses though. Learning Taekwondo or Gumdo (or any martial art for that matter) offers physical training, etiquette, respect for others, self-control, meditation and breathing practices that all help to improve physical and mental health. Haidong Gumdo breaks these down into three categories, Spirit, Mind and Body.

The next series of blogs will look into each one of these in more detail and show you how it applies to more than just Haidong Gumdo, it applies to all martial arts and more importantly, how it applies to all aspects of your life.


Mark Underwood

Mark is a 4th Dan Master in both Taekwondo and Haidong Gumdo (Korean swords). He has also trained in other styles of martial arts. He is currently the owner and head instructor for Zone Martial Arts in Sydney, Australia.

Thursday, 26 May 2016

Foundations of Traditional Taekwondo - Basic Techniques

This is the final post in my series on the Foundations of Taekwondo training. I listed them as basic techniques, poomsae, sparring, self-defence and breaking. These are what I believe are part of traditional Taekwondo training. I have gone into detail about most of them but I have left basic techniques till last and I have done this on purpose.

The word basic implies that these techniques are something for beginners and that once it is mastered it can be forgotten in favour of something more advanced. This can’t be further from the truth. These moves are fundamental to all of our training. Without these basic techniques, all the other aspects of Taekwondo I have been talking about are irrelevant. In many respects, the other components,
poomsae, sparring, breaking and self-defence are like the walls of the house and the true foundation of Taekwondo, the thing the walls are built on, are our basic techniques.

If our foundation is weak, if our basic techniques are not continuously practised then like a house built on sand, all our work will be swept away when we need it to stand strong.

Everything we do in Taekwondo whether it is for sport, self-defence, combat, health etc, is done by performing basic techniques. If you are sparring you are using basic techniques against an opponent, if you are performing patterns then you are using basic techniques. If you are doing self-defence against an attacker then you are using basic techniques in a practical way. So what exactly is basic techniques? The most common way of defining basic techniques are:
  • Blocking techniques (Makki)
  • Punching techniques (Jirruegi)
  • Strike techniques (Chigi)
  • Kicking techniques (Chagi)
And that’s it. This is also the basis of all the "official" or basic interpretation of poomsae application since all techniques must be in one of these categories. Each category can be subdivided of course. Blocking techniques (Makki) can be divided into upper section, middle section, and low section blocks. And these can be divided into even smaller subgroups. I will not delve into every grouping as that would make for too long a post.

Traditional taekwondo schools see that these fundamental movements need to be practiced in isolation so that each movement can be perfected with perfect form, speed, power and accuracy. This is often done with line work. Either moving backwards or forwards through the hall against an imaginary opponent or stationary. I am sure you agree that good basic techniques should contain with all the attributes above, but if you think about it you will notice that "line work" will only get you so far in terms of perfect form, but what about power, speed and accuracy?


The early masters of Taekwondo used several training aids to help them to perfect their techniques and one of the most important ones was the "Dallyon Joo" or "forging post" in English. It was essentially what the Japanese called Makkiwara and it is a striking post with a padded surface. All the "blocks", kicks and punches was trained by relentlessly pounding the Dallyon Joo over and over again. Impact training and conditioning was seen as very important maybe just as important as line work, and a great deal of time was used to train each technique so that it could be used with great power in a combative context. Modern clubs have replaced this device with block pads and punching bags and these all have their place and can help with generating power. Some clubs develop conditioning as well using other methods but the Dallyon Joo was essential for the original martial art that became today's Taekwondo.

The Dallyon Joo was not the only training aid as power and speed was seen as important but accuracy too was seen as paramount. Accuracy is the most important thing in a martial art. In a real fight you might only get one chance to strike your opponent and you need to put him down with that one technique. Historically, early masters of Taekwondo trained for this using different training aids like removing their shoes to kick them while their partners held them in their hands, like we use paddles today or hitting a small target (for example a nut) tied so that it floated at chest height or so above the floor (connected to the ceiling by a string) and kicking/punching it without stopping trying to hit it as it bobbed and weaved.

Another but largely overlooked part of basic training is the health aspect. The techniques of Taekwondo if done correctly does improve health. The stances strengthens the legs, the hip twist for power generation trains the hips, and lower back, the pulling hand tightens up your back muscles, the high kicks improve range of motion etc. Coupled with proper breathing training the fundamental movements of Taekwondo is great for your body.

Basic techniques are the fundamental in Taekwondo and are something all martial artists should be practising again and again. Always go back and re learn the basics, your skills will improve vastly if you do.

Mark Underwood

Mark is a 4th Dan Master in both Taekwondo and Haidong Gumdo (Korean swords). He has also trained in other styles of martial arts. He is currently the owner and head instructor for Zone Martial Arts in Sydney, Australia.