This matter sounds pretty simple, and in essence it is. Still, it's a bad idea to take this to its extreme. Let me give you an example. Hopefully you'll laugh at how off-base this mentality is, even if it seemed like a good idea at the time.
Early on in our group's existence, long before we earned the coveted position of being officially recognized, we got this notion that we'd get a lot out of our training if we really focused it. We also deemed that we'd be at the Lion System, and nothing else, for at least six or seven years, which we dutifully rounded off to eight. "Eight palms in the Lion System, eight years to train them," we reasoned, "so we might as well focus hard on one palm per year and get really good at it." This, it turns out, is a very "karate" mentality and a really bad way to go at learning baguazhang. Learn from us -- this is a bad idea, and you don't want to get that ridiculously strict about your "training to a theme" if you want success.
From my experience, there are a few competing factors that influence how to break up your training into effective themes:
- A gigantic list of material, some of which isn't entirely obvious but still important to drill;
- A heavy "grinding" nature to training, in the sense that modern video gamers use the term -- "boring" and repetitive activity;
- Seemingly overlapping material with subtle nuances of difference that are important, for example the basic strikes in the sweeping and hooking palms of the Lion System, requiring rather comprehensive training;
- Finite time and energy.
So what kinds of things make good themes? Well, honestly, what you want to learn or improve at. Here are some examples:
- A particular palm (striking method) or two within an animal system or compared across two (or more) animal systems (e.g. Lion and Phoenix chopping -- this made for a very interesting training session one night for our group, focusing especially on the swinging chopping strike in each system);
- A comparison of similar strikes (e.g. rising sweeping and opening hooking, both Lion) to find the overlapping force generation and subtle differences between them;
- A particular strategy (kind of form) as it is expressed over a few palms of a single animal system or over two (or more) systems;
- The movements of the waist and how each generates and adds to the force output of various strikes;
- Drilling stepping methods;
- Studying one form in depth: the form itself, the single-action techniques from the form, combinations of movements from the form (2, 3, 4 movements strung together, e.g.) or tied to a basic technique from the same palm, applications of the techniques and combinations from the form, etc.
To close up, when you're training to one of these themes, it's most useful to set realistic, attainable goals for the time frame you anticipate to train the theme, including a plan of action. If you're studying a particular palm, say chopping, for instance, you might make a weekly goal "to make an obvious improvement in power in chopping strikes" or "to make noticeable improvements in the connection between use of the waist and expression of power in chopping strikes." Goals and plans make it more real, and the themes keep you on the idea of aiming for a particular skill or aspect of development.
1 comment:
Thanks for the YSB training tips. fighting is hard so we train hard. i look at training from a health perspective. This training will make me a better fighter but will also give me better health and make one a better person because let's face it. YSB is a very humbling art. If all one ever did was the basic strikes, walking the circle holding a static position, and the standing isometric exercises, just doing this alone, IMO, would make one a very formidable fighter and we are not even yet scratching at the foundations of what YSB has to offer.
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