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#2 |
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"But my question is that my sensei told me that when doing ashisabaki (spelling: or perhaps ) that your weight should be 50%-50% and that you should pretend there is a rubberband around your ankels snapping your back foot forward as soon and u take a front step, also vice versa going backwards. I was just wondering is it taught the same when you started ashisabaki?"
Maybe not in the first session, but yes as to the message. ...and the spelling is OK. Richard |
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#3 |
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"But my question is that my sensei told me that when doing ashisabaki (spelling: or perhaps ) that your weight should be 50%-50% and that you should pretend there is a rubberband around your ankels snapping your back foot forward as soon and u take a front step, also vice versa going backwards. I was just wondering is it taught the same when you started ashisabaki?"
Yes, me too! |
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#4 |
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"But my question is that my sensei told me that when doing ashisabaki (spelling: or perhaps
![]() Yep. b |
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#8 |
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Originally posted by Achilles
I ascribe to what's called the "1 in 10 rule". For every 10 kenshi who start kendo/kumdo, only 1 is left after a year. I hope you're still in the game in one year's time. haahaa .. well, More or less, I agree with you.... but i have seen the ration of 1 in 20 or 30 rule before. ..... Also refering to Ben, I think achieving to 1st Dan is not exactly difficult for most. But somehow, I'm more concern beyond shodan dan. I have seen like 4 in 5 shodan suddenly gone missing after they achieve shodan...... makes you wonder..... what happen there :P |
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#9 |
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Hmmm...... questioning your sensei's instructions on your first day.... interesting ;-)
It seems that rubber band analogy is common, but bear in mind when you are comparing how other people have been taught that your sensei may often tell you things so that you overcompensate and therefore correct something about your own footwork, he can see your footwork, we can't. Often we won't understand something until we have done it repeatedly for a long time. It can be explained to us verbally, but you don't 'really get it' until you have it down. I am assuming that you have chosen a good sensei, so you should follow what he tells you; as you progress, if you ask, you will find everyone has an opinion, and you may find that later at a seminar you are told to do something two different ways by different sensei (how often does that happen?). IMHO too much different information may be interference when you are starting out. Follow your sensei until you have the technical understanding to appreciate and compare styles. This isn't a criticism of you asking a question, and I am sure you are following your sensei, just something to bear in mind. Good luck, it's a long road J |
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"I ascribe to what's called the "1 in 10 rule".
For every 10 kenshi who start kendo/kumdo, only 1 is left after a year." Sounds about right to me. Read somewhere that the ratio in other martial arts ( I think based on a study done in the US) was for every 300 people who start an art, only one makes it to first dan. I wonder what the ratio is for kendo? b |
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