Tuesday 30 October 2012

More than one way to skin a kata (part II - Extracts)


This second part of the series on supplementary kata exercises is grounded in the idea of seeing each kata as if it was a book full of information. Why not taking small elements out of it and making them individual exercises?

I'm going to make some examples here taken directly from our style's kata, even tho I am aware that they won't make sense to anyone who doesn't know to what I am referring to exactly.


#1 - Stance transitions

In many ways, stances are the true foundations of good karate technique. While in sparring or fighting you are not moving around in formal stances, they are definitely going to be used as part of both attack and defense techniques. Perhaps without being fully aware of it, you often enter a stance as a reaction to the opponent's attack, and you also normally end your counterattack in a stance as well.

But it is already a very hard work to learn one single stance properly, and particularly frustrating when you notice that you have stopped thinking about proper stance for a while and you have now moved backwards instead of improving. With each stance being difficult to "nail", it clearly gets even harder to move from one to the other making sure that they are both correct, and that the transition between the two does not leave you dangerously without balance.

Every kata goes through many stance transitions, thus it provides a lot of excellent suggestions for practicing these: just choose one stance you feel particularly weak at, find it inside a kata you are familiar with, then take either the technique which leads to that chosen stance from a previous stance, or the technique that from that chosen stance leads to the next. You now have extracted a very short and simple exercise to repeat over an over with total focus on that stance transition.

A special case of this can be a "pivoting" exercise, where you take two or more stances that follow each other while one foot of yours remains in the same spot on the ground all the time. An example can be found in the three beginning moves of the Gekisai kata, where the left foot never lifts or shifts, only rotates in its spot, while the body goes through three different stances as it turns left, move forward and then backward.

Another interesting extract I've been practicing myself, is the fast consecutive forward-backward steps in shikodachi stance from the kata Seiyunchin. It is very difficult to walk on a straight line in this stance (in fact it is even pretty hard just standing still, it's the stance most demanding to your legs muscles!). This two-moves sequence from the kata seems to be truly useful if repeated on both sides while following a straight line painted on the floor to keep your direction of movement under check all the time.

#2 - Stance verification

A somewhat different idea compared to the previous, in this case I want to focus on a more specific challenge common to all stances, which is that of getting the right distance and angle between your feet.

There are some occurrences in kata where you have to turn a certain angle starting from a certain stance and ending into a mirror image of the same stance (i.e. same stance but done on the other side), without lifting or shifting your feet. An example with the sanchindachi stance is found in the kata Sepai which contains a swift turn 90 degrees in this stance, followed by a slow turn back. Another example is found in Shisochin kata, where there is a 135 degrees turn between two mirrored zenkutsudachi.

The point here is that when you are turning like that on the balls of your feet (i.e. without lifting nor shifting them) and both the starting and the ending stances should be correct, then if you didn't have just the right distance and angle between your feet in the starting stance, either the direction you're facing after the transition will be incorrect, or your ending stance will be very visibly wrong: the distance between the feet will still be right, but the ending stance will be too wide sideways and too short frontally, or otherwise too narrow sideways and too long frontally. By repeating the transition right and left, you can each time adjust your feet slightly until the ending stance looks and feels the same as the starting stance.

#3 - Kihon Ido and Kihon Kumite samples

As a continuation to the previous points, in a kata you can find slightly longer sequences of moving techniques that can be extracted and practiced individually as Kihon Ido or together with a training buddy as Kihon Kumite, with the latter taking inspiration from the bunkai or coming up with original ideas.

In particular, it might be useful to look for sequences containing unusual and rarely used techniques, that you normally never practice as such, and by extracting that sequence you can have a small exercise to dedicate some training time to that technique. This especially includes those which are so much based on subtle movements and footwork that cannot be practiced alone but only in the context of a sequence.

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