Showing posts with label internna martial arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label internna martial arts. Show all posts

Monday, 10 December 2012

Missing out on Realism.


Recently I watched an interesting video airing on Chinese television at the moment which follows a couple of young MMA and Wing Chun guys travelling around to various masters in China to experience and ultimately test various martial arts.

This episode related to the home of Xing Yi Quan and XinYi. There was some good interesting information in the program and some interesting demonstrations of application of forces etc on opponents, some nice forms and training methods and some good body work on show. But with that in mind look at this video of the exchanges.


When these ‘masters’ of Xing yi came to ‘spar’ with the presenters they found themselves completely unable to apply their method, principle and general combat goal. Why?? Let’s make no mistake, these are good level masters in respected Xing Yi traditions.

The answer is fairly simple really and something that many in martial traditions do not like to admit.

Their training has an absence of realism.

What do i mean by this? Well in my opinion training can be broken down into a 3 areas.
1) BodyworkThis means we are building the body specifically for the combat work it will undertake. This means functional cardiovascular fitness, power, co-ordination, strength and mental capacity. No matter what style or approach to combat you need these basic qualities.
2)Application of force principlesThis is where we work on ‘applications’ of the frame or body to test power and co-ordination against a moving opponent.
3) Testing of combat capacityHere we work on free, unpredictable combative work. This can be sparing, free pushing hands, Situation work, and multiple opponent drills, whatever is not fixed in place.

It is in that 3rd part of training that we test our ‘Unconscious Competence’. That is our ability to do things well without thinking of doing things well. This is the stage that a lot of people miss out on and is the only way to realistically test how our training is affecting our combative capability.

This is worth thinking about if training IMA’s etc. These guys are at the source, the root and home of Xing Yi and couldn’t perform past the basic level of an amateur sport fighter ... Does your training give you an understanding of your ‘Unconscious Competence’??

Monday, 13 August 2012

What are internal arts

Hi all,

thought i would put together a short video clip of some of the foremost Internal Martial Artists in the world as an overview for people who don't have context for how some Internal Artists train.

This is meant as a tribute to the featured adepts and in no way am i affiliated to them.


Hope you enjoy guys.

Best regards
Chris

Thursday, 28 June 2012

Defining Internal Martial Arts = The search for efficiency.

A question often asked of someone who says they do ‘internal martial arts’ is ‘what are internal martial arts’.

This is a classic and ongoing debate on message boards and between martial artists of varying backgrounds and styles. Here are some of the main definitions that we come across:
  • Internal martial arts are those arts founded inside china (Taoist) rather than derived from India via shaolin (Buddhist)
  • Internal Martial arts focus on the development and use of ‘Chi’.>
  • Internal Martial Arts are soft, external Martial Arts are hard.
  • Internal Martial Arts are specifically, Tai Chi, Xing Yi & Ba gua as defined by Early artists from these styles.
  • Internal Martial Arts use connective tissue rather than muscle.

Personally however i do not think that any of these classic and much discussed definitions really define what i have found Internal Martial Arts to be. My definition would be this:


Internal Martial Arts are practices to find efficiency.

For me IMAs go beyond tradition, they are not a system, not a set of preconceived notions that can be put in a box and labelled as this art or that. They are the individuals search for efficiency. So why still call them internal? Well the reason is simple, the struggle to find efficiency is largely introspective. You are constantly looking inside yourself to find the optimum. It becomes more the ‘you’ inside than the label others put on what you do.

This is the best definition of IMAs that i can come up with because the best Martial Artists that i have met live in this manner. Every one of them were researchers of efficiency, none of them were rigid in their notion of what something ‘should be’, none of them were married to their tradition to the expense of their freedom to explore any and all other combat or health practices they wished. But it always came back to THEIR journey ... not the ones who came before.

So, with this in mind lets look at a couple of things that I look to achieve in my IMA practice.


Efficiency of body

The way you move in combat or in any physical action is central to the ideas of the IMA’s. The aim here is to be as efficient as possible for the given task with no excess tension, no forces that oppose the goal and no wasted effort.

To do this we must be able to recognise ‘inefficiency’ in what we do. This is largely a very difficult task indeed!!

Is it enough to get someone fighting full speed and let the efficiency come out on its own? For some people yes i think it is, if they have a very good body map. But for most people,  feeling where they are inefficient in a certain movement requires that we slow the movement down from full speed training to ‘zoom in’ on it.

I have recently read some very interesting articles, books and blogs on the process of learning (see the bottom of the post for recommended reading!) In brief we can say that in order to maximise our ability to recognise inefficiency we need to slow a movement or practice right down and really get inside it. That process amounts to these two things...

1) The Weber Fechner Law
Definition:
describes the relationship between the physical magnitudes of stimuli and the perceived intensity of the stimuli. Fechner's law states that subjective sensation is proportional to the logarithm of the stimulus intensity.
In plain English what does this mean for our practice? This Law states that if we move with a high rate speed and muscular effort we decrease dramatically our ability to perceive our efficiency in that movement. The slower we go the more able we are to perceive the efficiency of the movement.

2) ‘Deep Practice’
What does this mean? Basically it means ...’How we learn’ and relates to the process of Myelination in the brain. This process is key to how we learn new things and retain or become better at other things. Myelin can be thought of as the insulation around a wire, The more insulation the less signal is lost. Our ability to increase the Myelin around a certain neural pathway is directly related to ‘how’ we learn.  For the martial artist this is achieved through what is called ‘deep practice’.

" Deep practice, "struggling in certain targeted ways -- operating at the edges of your ability, where you make mistakes -- makes you smarter. Or to put it a slightly different way, experiences where you're forced to slow down, make errors, and correct them...end up making you swift and graceful without you realising it."

If we apply these two ideas correctly then we can begin to maximise our body’s learning efficiency.

The internal traditions already had these two ideas down, the very slow or static training is specifically designed to both zoom in on muscular and structural inefficiency as well as create an environment for ‘targeted struggle’.

Not just fast... not just slow ... but training both!

One thing often missing in some IMA training is the very fast or full speed training. We must also practice at full speed to understand how the body needs to move, then draw that back to the slow movement practice to maximise its efficiency and get inside the movement.

Tai chi is an example of this fast/slow training being lost to the focus on slow training. Traditionally the forms and fighting combinations were performed at real speed, slow speed, mediums speed, with jumps, agile footwork, static footwork etc ... a myriad of ways. 

A great example of how this lack of speed training has effected modern tai chi is how many Tai chi people will stand bolt upright throughout their form, but when they speed up they lead with the head and incline in the direction of travel or force expression ... they do this naturally but do not feed this back into their practice. When you look at older taiji guys you see they knew about this and the lean in their forms reflected the functional requirement.



If we are training for combat then we have to understand that speed, rythm, timing and confusion are fundamental aspect ... you cant just practice slow ... but by the same token you cant just practice fast if you want to obtain the ultimate goal of IMAs ... efficiency.

The body structures.

As you slow down fast movements you will recognise excess tension in the musculature and misalignments that can explain ongoing injuries or soreness whenever your going full speed. What you also notice is that as you work these problems out in a focused way you begin to use a different type of body method.
What the IMA traditions do have in abundance is exercises striving to sort out muscular and structural problems as their primary goal, but more than that, exercise that build the lines of tissue and alignments needed at full speed.

As a real life example of the need to train these tissues, I knew someone who was training full speed doing a slapping motion with his palm and broke a tendon in his wrist. The movement was natural but the conditioning of the structures in use was not there.

This is a really important point.  It is all well and good to train at full speed to bring out combat efficiency, but without the body to back it up the risk of damage is much higher and for most ... almost inevitable.

So one of the primary goals of IMA training is to build the body that is capable. The body that can be tuned to any skill without fear of injury. The body that can produce huge forces without creating tendonitis or elbow and knee problems.

Anyone that has trained Muay Thai, Judo, MMA or any of a number of arts will attest to the ongoing niggly little problems with the shoulder, wrist, elbows, knees etc. This is largely down to lack of conditioning of the correct structures ... They might have big muscles but their connective tissue is weak. When i trained these arts i had tennis elbow often, had tendonitis in my knee and had hip flexor problems ... nothing major but these little niggles were the result of the training methodology. Most injuries occur in the connective tissue and not the muscle. So why do they happen?

1) too much force to the elastic aspect of the tissue to cope with
2) force produced along a misaligned joint
3) reactive damage from impact.

The structures we aim to train are those that connect the body together, the ones that tie and wrap the joints, the structures that link muscle groups. If these are conditioned then we can move full speed without fear of injury. This is the IMA body.

Here is some interesting information on the role of connective tissue as it relates to understanding proprioception and kinesthesia.


Finding #3:The fascial system is far more innervated than muscle, so proprioception and kinesthesia are primarily fascial, not muscular.

This is a hard concept for many fitness professionals to get their heads around, but it is a fact: there are 10 times as many sensory receptors in your fascial tissues as there are in your muscles (Stillwell 1957). The muscles have spindles that measure length change (and over time, rate of length change) in the muscles. Even these spindles can be seen as fascial receptors, but let’s be kind and give them to the muscles (Van der Wal 2009). For each spindle, there are about 10 receptors in the surrounding fascia—in the surface epimysium, the tendon and attachment fascia, the nearby ligaments and the superficial layers. These receptors include the Golgi tendon organs that measure load (by measuring the stretch in the fibers), paciniform endings to measure pressure, Ruffini endings to inform the central nervous system of shear forces in the soft tissues, and ubiquitous small interstitial nerve endings that can report on all these plus, apparently, pain (Stecco et al. 2009; Taguchi et al. 2009).


So when you say you are feeling your muscles move, this is a bit of a misnomer. You are “listening” to your fascial tissues much more than to your muscles. Here are three interesting findings that go along with this basic eye-opener: Ligaments are mostly arranged in series with the muscles, not in parallel (Van der Wal 2009). This means that when you tense a muscle, the ligaments are automatically tensed to stabilize the joint, no matter what its position.


Our idea that the ligaments do not function until the joint is at its full extension or torsion is now outmoded; for example, ligaments function all through a preacher curl, not just at the ends of the movement. Nerve endings arrange themselves according to the forces that commonly apply in that location in that individual, not according to a genetic plan, and definitely not according to the anatomical division we call a muscle. There is no representation of a “deltoid” inside your movement brain. That’s just a concept over in your cortex, not in your biological organization. Apparently, sensors in and near the skin are more active in detecting and regulating movement than the joint ligament receptors (Yahia, Pigeon & DesRosiers 1993).

Understanding the body training

To the outside observer standing arms outstretched will not relate to combat. But then neither would watching someone in a Gym doing a deadlift or someone on a hill doing sprints. However they are all combat applicable to some degree.

Context is important. If you want to work on connective tissue there are certain ways that can help you to achieve this. The internal arts use slow movement for targeted muscular release, dynamic positional holds, specific twist methods and stretches from finger to toes ...  Modern sports science uses methods like the ‘static partial bench press’ etc. The outcome of such training is that when you return to combat specific training the body is more connected and capable.

Of course all these plus points make sense from a health perspective as well. When we are correctly aligned our torso is open, the internal organs are not compressed or confined and our joints are able to function with all round support and re-enforcement.

Next up ....Efficiency in Combat, cross training, the search and experience mentality.... Stay Tuned!

Recommended reading:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Talent-Code-Greatness-born/dp/0099519852
also ref Myelination props go to Chris McKinley for sharing this information and getting me interested.
http://www.bettermovement.org/2010/why-practice-slow-movement/#comment-20539
http://www.ideafit.com/fitness-library/fascial-fitness

Wednesday, 25 April 2012

Internal Training Exercises


Here are some of the basic internal training methods I have developed and been working on. I am not so good at them yet but they may be useful for some of you out there looking for internal training

The devil is in the detail with all these of course and over the coming months i will take each of these 5 exercises and put a detailed description of what they are and how they should be trained online.

1. Body cross
2. Body row
3. Pushing mud
4. Slapping water
5. Horizontal coil


Slow training for increased awareness


Awareness is one of the key points of IMA training, be that situational awareness, awareness of our body state or awareness of the moment in combative encounter. How can we really train to enhance our awareness in a free fighting / sparring setting?

Here is an interesting idea for increasing combative competency  through increased awareness.

Higher Speed >lower awareness of force and lines
Lower Speed < higher awareness of force and lines.

This principle of slowing the real fight down to increase our awareness of the nuances’ of the movement encounter may seem somewhat strange to some of the MMA or Sport fighting guys out there but lets examine what slowing the encounter down during training helps us with.
  1. Increased ability of the mind to calculate angular change and movement
  2.  More opportunity to become ‘in tune’ with the attacker
  3.  Longer opportunity to pattern the attacker or break/change rythms.
  4.  Awareness of the moment becomes more prolonged

The overriding difficulty with slow mo training is our ability to control ourselves. It is very easy to get excited and change speed. When you see a gap you shoot a fist through it 4 times as fast as the partner was moving!

It is ok, even good, to be quicker than your partner but you will never be 4 or 5 times as quick at real speeds so we need to keep our excitement in check.

Training at slow speeds should be a mutual ‘game’ of stratergy and awareness of the moment. If we work slowly with this idea of ‘play’ then the problem of ‘winning’ can disappear.

Try some slow sparring and see how you get on, after 20 – 30 minutes speed up to full speed and see whats changed. Your overall awareness and movement skill should have increased dramatically.

Monday, 30 January 2012

The frame from the ground up Part 2


Ok now we have set up the basic position of the body we can start to go into detail about how we can begin to tie the frame together and start to build a useful and dynamic structure.

Beyond the basic position of the body we also need to begin to work on the structures that connect the body together.  Here we are not talking about building muscles individually, but building the lines of muscle/connective tissue/fascia that connect distant points of the body, for instance the hands and feet or the top of the head and the Perineum.

So onwards with part 2 on building the body frame.

Drawing up the Legs.
The legs are an interesting area of the body to begin to work with, especially as we mean here,  as it is not the most natural structural method we are used to. However i can very easily show you what we mean by drawing up the legs.

1.       Stand feet shoulder width apart Knees bend slightly and aligned with the big toe
2.       Very gently start to pull the feet together on the floor, like your gripping something between your feet.
3.       You should begin to feel the upper inside area of the leg engage as you begin to pull in.
4.       Focus on the resulting direction of power, it should feel as though your pulling up into the area of the perineum and the direction your body wants to go in is up.

This is the drawing up power that we talk about when describing ‘drawing up with the legs’. However there are several points which are of importance when we consider this power.

-          Do not allow the power to put lateral pressure on the knees. This is very important as it can lead to knee injury. The knees should be unaffected by the force travelling up from the earth along the insides of the legs.
-          Do not overdo it. This force should be felt and should be demanding to maintain, but NOT painful! I have seen a few people overdo this training and injure themselves. If your building this part of the frame correctly you will feel it the next day initially but it will not cause any damage to your body.

-          Create this force once the rest of the initial points are set. If you start to action this force when your upper body is misaligned or your not set up correctly you will most likely not start to work the wrong line of tissue.

Arms and Legs like Drills.
Visualise a screw being drilled into some hardwood. This is what i mean when i say drilling the legs and arms. It is a very useful practice to begin to work with especially as one of the core components of IMAs is the idea of Spiral force or power.

I will start with the idea of Drilling the legs as this is the most important to get right. Here we are not looking to see any external movement or rotation in the legs. The spiral power is held inside as the muscle and tissues ‘wrap’ around the frame created by the skeletal structure. Due to the way the legs are constantly under load it is important for work on this idea very softly, with deep concentration and awareness and without tension. If you feel any points of tension as you drill the legs you will need to adjust your posture or force to release the points of pain or tension you feel.  The direction of the spiral can actually change or reverse based on what direction you want to receive or project force in, but for basic training i would suggest that you focus your intent on the leg rotating as if the toes are turning inward and the heels are turning outward. Again, i stress do not allow any external expression of the spiral to show.

The arms are slightly different in that they are not anchored at both ends. This means that the joints are not under load and are more protected when spiralling. In the arms we want to produce counter rotation rather than singular spiralling. You can think of this like a double helix wrapping around both sides of the arms simultaneously.

To start with you can hold your arms out in front palms facing down, now without letting the hand rotate, use the shoulder to rotate the orientation of the elbow joint. This is a good initial basic exercise but can take a little time to become good at. One very useful idea with this is the ability to touch and without changing the touch completely change your line.

Intent driven structure setting

In terms of building useful structure, one of the most vital tools is your ability to feel the body state and use the mind to make micro adjustments to force and lines. I call this intent driven structure setting and at its most fundamental level it applies to the ability to listen to the body and its reaction to load. We need a very deep and clear attention on the body to be able to feel for the main culprits of changing or misaligning the posture.

1)      Points of tension caused by misalignment
2)      Points of tension caused by breath hold
3)      Points of pressure caused by internal collapsing

When you set up your posture, become used to turning your attention inwards focusing on the physical structure of the body. This process of Recognization is the first step. From here we need to resolve the tension with small deliberate changes, either to our breath cycle or to the physical position of our limbs, bones and muscle.

The next step in intent  driven structure setting is to actually use your intent to produce force in the structure. This involves using the mind to affect how the structure maintains its position. When we do this we are trying not to move at all externally.

One good exercise to feel what we mean by this is to set up your structure, Then focus all of your intent from the centre pushing out to the skin of every surface. Everything inside is pushing out strongly, the joints want to inflate opening the arms, the body wants to rise up, the stomach wants to expand, but you hold them all in place. Then relax and repeat. This should be a Physical process, the body should react to the minds intent, it is not visualisation of expansion which is something different all together.

Not this should not affect the breath at all and should not cause any pressure in the body or head. We are using the mind to create the expansion in the body, not Tension!

Other intent driven internal changes can be:
-          Leading to the horizon
-          Condensing to the centre of the bones
-          Coiling the tissues
-          Power to the fingertips
-          Melting into the earth
-          Becoming light

Part 3 will discuss some more points on structure setting and how to build the body for work.

Happy training.

Wednesday, 12 October 2011

Ukemi - intermediate level rolling

This video follows on from my last one which highlighted ground rolling for spine health.


Now the aim is to increase softness and ground awareness and also start to move between standing and ground into rolls.


Monday, 26 September 2011

Push ups for connection & joints

The push up is one of the classic basic exercises of most training regemes, and for good reason. It is a very effective upper body workout, has a myriad of variations and a large number of benefits.


In our class we use press-ups as a means of building arm to body connection, how to apply force through the arms correctly and how to use certain mechanics to develop or transmit force.


The basic push up is probably well know to everyone. The main areas being worked are the chest and arm muscles. We are looking to begin to combine a few different ideas in the push-ups we train that are slightly different to the normal push up method.


1) Slow speed for joints
We use very slow repetition speeds to help the joint structures naturally and safely work with the weight of the body.  The General idea in IMAs is that the tendons, ligaments and Fascia store energy and the Muscles use energy. This is not to say that we dont want to use muscles, in my opinion, we definitely do! Simply that we use them in a different way. When  we train slow you will feel over time that joints become ‘wrapped’ and protected, you will notice that your tendons feel much more solid when in use and much softer when not.


2) Training to Fatigue
We are not training to build big muscles here. However, we do need to train to a point of fatigue where the other supporting structures can begin to be utilised to support the frame. This is a bitter training but very fruitful if you stick with it.


3) Breath
It goes without saying that we need to breath ;), however when under load the mind often has a habit of disrupting the breathing cycle. Breath and oxygen are vital for the energising of the tendons and ligaments however so we need to breath in a manner that gives the body exactly what it requires. There are many methods of breathing with the push up motion and some to release fatigue and tension when things get tough. I will discuss these another time.


4) Work your way up
Dont start out your training with a 10 minute push up! You need to begin very slowly with a deep focus on the mechanics of the movement. It is important that you understand fully what your trying to do and why. Then you can begin to play with the push ups and invent your own movements spontaneously.


Push ups or ‘Arch ups’?
One of the things that we have been working on is the idea of forming a bridge or arch between each hand to support the upper body. This is very similar to the idea of Dang Jin or Crotch Arch in the Chinese MAs. Think of it as a sort of horse stance for the arms. This has a couple of implications for the movement.


1) The body is supported through a connection of various structures without joints between them. The power is unbroken between the hands
2) When ‘pushing’ the formation of the arch by pulling inward with the arms recruits a larger amount of structures and results in less effort to create the up force. This is clearly felt when the methods done correctly.


Here is a short video of the basic method in the arms and a few very simple variations on the push up.


Friday, 23 September 2011

Through the Back


Several Chinese Martial Arts work with through the back power or a connection through the back. It is indeed a very useful connection for transferring power between the side lines of the body or from one hand to the other. In Japanese arts this partially covered in the Hitoemi Principle or the ‘one line’ idea. 

What does it mean and why is it used?
‘Through the back’ means transfer of power from one side of the body into the other, more specifically from one arm into the other. A very simple exercise to highlight what we mean:
  1. Loop a belt around a pole or tree
  2. Stand with feet parallel and shoulder width
  3. Hold each end of the loop in each hand
  4. Pull with one hand
  5. The body will rotate around its axis and the opposite side to the pull will go forward
  6. Remove the rope and try to create the same response to the one hand pulling back

This is a very clear demonstration of through the back power in action.

The uses of through the back power are many and varied but I will list a few ideas of how it is useful in a combative context
  • Receiving with one side while simultaneously projecting with the other.
    For instance, I block a strike coming in with my left arm, the force of that strike immediately travels through the back into the right arm which shoots forward to strike.
  • Power in the back hand
    This is useful to hide the source of power from your opponent. When using the back hand to send power to the front you are able to keep the ‘intent’ or weight of force out of the striking side of the body. This is used Extensively in Xing yi and the ‘changing’ strikes it can result in are extremely hard to stop.
  • Short Range striking
    Through the back power also enables very short range striking with a large volume of power. Your closest weapon, that is even in touch with the opponent does not need to load before striking as the power comes from the opposite side of the body.
  • Twisting throws
    When close in you can pull back on one shoulder sending the other forward when combined with stepping to create a powerful twisting throw.

The area of ‘the back’ that is mainly in use when working through the back.



The Primary muscle groups that the force will transfer through are the deeper back muscles relating to the scapular area of the back. These are the:
  • Infraspinatus
  • Rhomboideus Major
  • Teres Minor / Major
  • Deltoids
  • lower trapezius.

Understanding the central line
One of the first ideas to understand is that when talking about transferring power between the sides of the body we have to recognise a central line that this force moves around. This is simply the central channel of the body, the spine is the obvious body part that can be thought of as a central channel or point. It is a little more complicated than that but for the purposes of beginning to feel power switching sides the spine is a good starting point.

You can feel that this central channel turned as power transfers across it , this turning is useful (when combined with work with the Kwa etc) to begin the process of ‘winding’ the tissues around the body. This winding helps to load the next strike and fuel your body movement.

In Summary
Through the back power is a primary driver for many arts method of power generation. The ability to switch sides, transfer force between the hands and send force back to the opponent is an extremely useful skill that some teachers have perfected to a very high level. I hope to film a few exercises to help you develop a feel for ‘through the back power’ in the very near future so stay in touch and it should be up fairly soon.


Wednesday, 14 September 2011

Cardio training for IMAs



I want to share some of my ideas on Cardio training for combat, specifically relevant to those training in Internal arts, as I think this is a wholly neglected aspect of body work by IMA practitioners.

Firstly i would like to say that the idea of Cardio training in the Internal arts is certainly nothing new! There are numerous examples of famous Internal Martial Artists consistently training cardio vascular fitness alongside their other basic training ... a few primary examples:

  • Ueshiba Morehei of aikido running to training areas during his younger years.
  • Wang Lai Sheng of Ziranmen Running in the hills every morning, even into old age.
  • Sun Lu Tang – running up a nearby hill with his students and often beating them up and back, even into old age.
The list goes on and on so i think we can safely say that Cardio training is not detrimental to the development of internal skill or other IMA training methods. 
Why develop your cardio strength?

The reason is really very simple ... The fitter you are the more ‘battle ready’ you will be. For example, if you work in the security industry as a bouncer and have to have 3 or 4 serious encounters a night, you need to be able to sustain your physical, and just as importantly mental, capacity throughout your period of work.

The saying, ‘healthy body healthy mind’ relates very clearly to a good level of fitness. When the body finds everyday tasks like walking a small distance or shifting things around easy and without effort your mind will be under less general stress.

In relation to combat more specifically, cardiovascular health allows us to be functional for longer, but just as importantly can in some people, help to limit the effect of adrenaline dumps and shock based fatigue.

Functional Fitness

Functional fitness is a term coined by many health professionals to describe a fitness programme that is useful to the goal of the individual. For us as IMAists we need to aim to follow a programme of fitness that will not only build a good base level of cardiovascular capacity but also one that will not build up excessive tension in our frame, muscles or mind.

With this primary idea in mind here are some general training principles to ad heir too.



1) Build up slowly!
Take it from someone who knows how it feels to suffer from ‘overtraining’, you need to start any cardio fitness program slowly and progressively. There is no point in getting out in the hills and running 10K right out of the gate. All you will do is damage your joints, overstress your immune system and seriously ruin your ability to improve your cardio vascular fitness. So take it slow, especially to start with.
2) Listen to your body ... but not too much!
You have to listen to what the body is telling you in any physical training, but its important not to be ruled by those nagging voices telling you to stop 200mtrs from your goal. Always push past this and treat it as mental or mind training, much like meditation. What you should be aware of is how your structure and frame are handling the work, if you have any build ups of excess tension or pain, then slow down, or stop and release that area. 
3) Cool down and warm up properly
To warm up a gentle run is all you need, but, to make it relevant to your internal training, work on your breath co-ordination and tension control as you warm yourself up. Likewise after the exercise, cool down with deep attention of your breathing, body tension and frame state.
4) Dont just stop!
Just as it is important not to undertake heavy training without building up to it, it is also very important not to just stop training without properly slowing down. By this i mean , if you are running 10k 3 times a week and want to take a break, you will need to spend the next couple of weeks reducing your distances to allow your body to acclimatise to the difference. If you simply stop there will be a lot of excess energy buzzing around your body and it will lead to illness and immune system problems.

There are plenty of running, swimming, circuit blogs out there with very detailed methods and training for how to build cardio fitness so I will not go into detail about the hows or provide training plans in this post but you can see some videos i like below.

Here are some more basic things to bear in mind with your cardio training that may help to relate to your IMA training.

Catch the leading force

Especially when running , you can work on catching the leading force. This means that you project your intent to the horizon and follow that line. Like your being pulled to the distance rather than running too it. This is a very interesting training with great depth and can really help to produce sharp focus and forward intent.

Be aware of time dilation

It is very easy to recognise time dilation when doing cardio training, you will sometimes wonder where the 45 minutes went, other times you will feel like that last minute lasted an hour. Become used to recognising how the mind focuses in on specifics or opens out freely. This awareness of time dilation is extremely useful in combat arts ... It allows your work to become much smoother and perfectly timed.

Recognising  tension

This is not just related to body tension, but also directly relates to breathing and mind work. Tension is often created by mental stress, which is exactly what Cardio training can create if the work is hard. Learn to release mental stress through breath work and conscious relaxation, even under heavy training.

Here are some good videos of what i would call functional cardio training from various experts in the field.







If you are training IMAs dont shy away from cardiovascular training, when done correctly it fires up the immune system and give fuel to the engine that drives your IMA body!

Wednesday, 17 August 2011

De-fanging the snake

Sounds pretty esoteric but I think this phrase often used in Chinese Martial Arts paints a good picture of what I would like to discuss in this post.

Essentially what we are talking about is damaging or destroying the opponents weapons or his desire to use those weapons. When i talk about weapons here i am talking about their body weapons, eg. Punch, palm, elbow, shoulder, headbutt, kicks, knees etc.

Its a pretty big subject so i aim to give a brief overview of what I think about the subject and also a couple of examples of methods that can be looked into and tried out.

AIMS & GOALS.

‘To remove the opponents desire or ability to use their primary weapons against you’

There are several ways to achieve this goal. Some can be used against semi aggressive attackers or people you do not wish to seriously damage, some can be used to mechanically destroy the opponents ability to use the weapon. Lets look at the options for achieving this goal.

1. Shock the system

Here we are aiming to shock the attacker into rethinking their choice to attack. This is one of the most useful primary methods than you can begin to work with as it is not a destruction but a much more light method. It can be used to strip away an aggressive persons intent and is linked directly to the opponents thought processes.

Often Termed ‘shocking the guard’ as it is commonly used to attack the opponents guard in some way, this method is all about ‘sharp pain’ and ‘shaking the centre’. The damage may not be great but we need the opponent to feel as though they have been shocked with electricity when you attack their guard. Once you have shocked their guard you need to leave room for the opponent to think ... this is where people often get the method wrong. It is in that thinking space that you follow up should come if that’s what your trying to achieve with your shock. Shocking the guard is very much like physically asking a question, as they think about the answer ... whack!

Of course you can also ask .. ‘are you sure you want to continue?’ ... if your shock is good enough they will more often than not say ‘no thanks!’.

2. Split the muscles.

This is a combination of shocking and partially mechanically disabling. The aim here is to target the muscles that connect to the body weapons and that are utilised in their deployment. For example you may Target the Bicep just above the elbow joint.

When we say split the muscle this is really what we mean! Usually you will use a single knuckle or the knuckle ridge to achieve the sort of penetrating force we require to achieve this. We want to hit with enough force that we actually damage the muscle tissue and cause a great amount of pain in a localised area. We also want this damage to partially inhibit the ability to use the limb.

There are a few very nice methods that can be used to split or damage the muscles, my teachers have shown me some of them to great effect!

3. Separate the tendons & Ligaments.

Next we move to real incapacitation of the attacking limb. Here we are talking about destroying the supporting structures of the joints in the main often without breaking the bones themselves. I know from personal experience that a separated, split or disconnected ligament or tendon can be much worse in the long term than a bone break.

These methods are normally applied in joint manipulations but can equally be applied when a joint is turned and then struck. This is a particularly violent way of incapacitation and is much more likely to separate the ligaments or tendons than a joint manipulation.

When applying joint manipulations in this instance there needs to be a strong, shocking or explosive force behind the method. You often see ‘wrist twists’ or joint ‘locks’ in JuJutsu, Shoalin Chinna etc but we are talking about something different here.

For example, if you get a wrist twist, the aim is to turn the hand around without affecting the rest of the opponents structure. Rather than the more classical, twist the wrist to take them down, type of force. This level of force requires a very strong pulse from the whole to achieve the method.

There are certain styles that will also specialise in gripping certain tendons and ripping them from the bone, although this is not a speciality of what I train I am reliably informed that these people can disable your arm very quickly.

4. Shatter the bones.

Finally there is the practice of shattering the bones, or as is said in The Chin na of Xing Yi ‘Turning their bones to dust’.

Here the aim is to actually break the bones in and around the joints or to break bones that will hinder limb motion. For instance, to disable the arm, you may strike the collar bone to smash it to pieces.

These methods can be linked very closely with separating the tendons as certainly if your breaking a joint you will often break or stretch the tendons and ligament of that joint. But mainly we are focusing on again, applying a very powerful full body movement against a single weak point on the opponents weapon structures.

Typical methods used are:

  • Locking in place and striking through.
  • Striking through (trust kick to the knee is a good example)
  • Locking and crushing the joint.
  • Striking associated targets (Collar bone etc)

Summary

These methods are very useful provided you are able to apply them in a live environment. I know fighters who can apply elbow strikes to the face of an incoming fist at full speed, this obviously takes time to achieve, but is very valuable.

Most of these methods, especially ones that involve locking or breaking should not be sought after but should be utilised when the time arises.

Many of these methods are psychological in nature, an opponent had the desire to attack you, you strike their limb with such force that the decide to re-evaluate that decision.