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| Wing Chun A very popular Kung Fu style based on centerline attacks and deflecting techniques. Wing Chun is one of the most practiced forms of Kung Fu popularized by Bruce Lee. Most important is the concept of not using force against force, which allows a weak fighter to overcome stronger opponents. |
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#1
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External Hand Tranining
Do you punch Wall Bags filled with Beans,Sand,Gravel or steel shots? ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Do you drop down force on Striking Bags filled with Beans,Sand,Gravel or steel shots? ![]() ![]() ![]() Do you thrust your hands and fingers into Buckets of Beans Sand,Rice,Beans, Steel Shots? ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Another Wing Chun School I ran across on net had Pictures of this very thing down below the pics are self explantory I think ![]() ![]()
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Yoshiyahu For This Useful Post: | ||
Nabakatsu (01-16-2009) | ||
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#2
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Re: External Hand Tranining
Not wing chun but Sanda hits trees and I believe Hung Ga does as well. Xingyi in some cases hits a wooden pole and does I believe Bagua
But one must be careful when training this way and I do not recommend doing it without a teacher.
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* If you spend too much time thinking about a thing, you'll never get it done. - Bruce Lee * Perceiving what is right, and not doing it, argues lack of courage. - Confucius |
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#3
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Re: External Hand Tranining
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We did Saam sing drills in which we paired up and hit our bridge arms against those of our partner, we did wall bag training for our punches and kicks and we did a form of "iron palm" training involving dropping our hands in various downward strikes onto bags on stands, much like those shown in the pictures. This was accompanied by relaxation and breathing exercises and the use of Dit Dat Jow to reduce bruising. At the time I was not up to the level of practicing the dummy form so I cannot comment on how it was incorporated at that school. I later trained with Leung Ting, who dismissed the saam-sing drills and "iron palm training" as unnecessary and not integral to Wing Tsun. In fact he believed they taught bad habits and distracted from more essential training. He advocated strengthening your hands and arms by simply practicing Wing Tsun techniques diligently, and by punching and kicking the three sectional wall bag. The bags could be filled with rice. beans or sand, but never steel shot, and he felt that jow was fine, but not necessary if you trained regularly and progressed gradually in your training. The emphasis was on developing a relaxed, springy type of power and anything that over-emphisized "hardening" your body was to be avoided. My current WT instructor and his organization are independent of GM Leung, but basically he follows this same approach. It is evident if you ever watch the best WT practioners do the dummy form: Powerful, but soft and not noisy. The dummy body movement reveals the power, not the clacking of the wooden arms. Personally, I have a long journey ahead before I can exhibit such skill. |
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#4
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Re: External Hand Tranining
All we did at our school was knuckle toughening via fist push ups/hold ups and wall punching. I once talked to my instructor about Biu strikes and he said that there is no need to toughen them Bruce Lee style neither is it necesery to "cock" you middle finger back as BL that becouse the Biu Tze form trains your finger and muscles involved in the Biu strike in such a way that after years of practice it would be strong enough for throat armpit strikes without the fear of injury. Hes teacher was sopposed to be able to go threw a water melon with his fingers.
My personal views on this are that any kind of Iron training could only help a martial artis if one has the time to practice it. I don't see any downsides. As for me personaly I don't realy feel the need to go train Iron fingers and then go on a killing spree or something I'm not sure about BT being all you need to develop strong fingers but I can tell you that since I started BT my fingers have strengthend considerably. I know that when I first started I would probably break my fingers on a throat if I went for real! But slowly I'm starting to get confident in my finger straingth. And I never did any kind of finger toughening techniques as you mention.
__________________
The perfect way is only difficult for those who pick and choose. Do not like, do not dislike; all will then be clear. Make a hairbreadth difference and heaven and earth are set apart; if you want the truth to stand clear before you, never be for or against. The struggle between "for" and "against" is the mind's worst disease. Bruce Lee, Tao of Jeet Kune Do |
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#5
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Re: External Hand Tranining
We have a wall bag and an Iron Palm bag. I use the wall bag from time to time, but my hands are pretty tough as is from manual labor work and 14 years on the auto assembly line. I still do some knuckle push ups too periodicaly, but nothing hardcore....I just don't see the need. I've only fractured a hand bone once in the past in a fight and have busted a nose (or three) and made a few jaws desire soft foods with my hands as they are. My line of work causes carpal tunnel (a right of passage on the auto assembly line!
) and arthritis is a birthright, so it is just not a viable or beneficial practice for me aside maintainance. I guess those in proffessional or non-laborous lines of work could benefit though.
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#6
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Re: External Hand Tranining
Do you think there is a benefit to the traditional Hardening of hands and arms...Also my Sihing practices the dummy two ways. Soft with redirection working around the dummy. An also with uprooting power.
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#7
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Re: External Hand Tranining
Oh for you I would suggest try thursting your fingers in a bucket of rice. Get the rice all on your hands. Squeeze it and then do it again for like ten times a day. Also get some of those chinese balls you twirl in your hand and do that periodically through out the day on both hands for like ten minuntes. An I advise doing some Chi kung and applying dit da jow to your hands before and after work as well as streching your hands...This may help a bit...
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#8
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Re: External Hand Tranining
What would be the benefit of having iron fingers???
I mean why would it be benifical to have that sort of Kung at your disposal. My idea would be a classic what if sitituation. Such as this. What if you live in a state or your an age where it is illegal for you to carry a fire arm. Your life is endanger and you have a gun pointed at your head. Are someone is entering your home an you have to defend your family an you have no time to run to bed room grab the gun and put the bullets in an they have knife or gun. Quote:
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#9
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Re: External Hand Tranining
Greetings.
We train Iron Fist, Iron Palm, Iron Body and such. I think Iron Fingers have to be trained with care, since several training methods might desensitize the fingers and can cause trauma to the finger joints. Also, for me, they have limited use compared to the time it takes to train them. Grip strength is another thing which I do think has more importance and use. I would rather use the time of Iron Fingers to train grip strength. Thus I stopped training it a while ago. I agree that I won't be going in an Iron Finger Kung Fu slicing and dicing spree anytime soon! ![]() Biu Jee is more of an alignment mechanism for the arm, and can be used as a block, startle reflex induction tactic, neurological disruption tactic, PNF disruption tactic, etc. I wouldn't use or train it to poke eyes out for practical and legal reasons. Juan M. Mercado |
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#10
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Re: External Hand Tranining
I wonder how this effects the Jing well points on the fingers.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acupuncture_points |
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#11
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Re: External Hand Tranining
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To eye strike if I would I would probably rather use the Biu strike from the begining of Chum Kiu that is vertical. It seems to fit better in the eye.But I like the JKD/Paul Vunak(check the guy out! ) approach better! You just throv out the biu strike in a flinging kind of action. Very relaxed and it's more of a scratch then a push/strike kind of motion. But it is enough to stop the fight and is relatively humane as you only scrath the surface of the eye and you don't realy blind the guy.But to answer your question: for the What If questions iron fingers are pretty useful. I would just rather use them on the throat. Or a ginger fist to the armpit sounds cool to! Also as I have mentioned, as I was explained, the Biu can be developed to a pretty strong structure threw correct alignment and proper lingerment training in Biu Tze-like those right/left and up/down motions. So to paraphrase, as I was thought, there is no real need to go threw the whole Iron training thing. And as others have pointed out it is not neceserely an attacking tool. Also Biu strikes in the form, I feel, train you in another kind of explosive relaxed force that could be aplied to punches too!P.S. I have just remembered... For those of you who want to blind people( ) a thing to consider would also be the phoenix eye fist which is one of it's main uses. And also, look at the ginger fist for a good substitute for a Biu strike! It does what you can do with the Biu better mostly. Plus it's a stronger structure that doesn't need that much conditioning that you mention. The only down side I see right now when I write this is the shorter range than the Biu strike offers.
__________________
The perfect way is only difficult for those who pick and choose. Do not like, do not dislike; all will then be clear. Make a hairbreadth difference and heaven and earth are set apart; if you want the truth to stand clear before you, never be for or against. The struggle between "for" and "against" is the mind's worst disease. Bruce Lee, Tao of Jeet Kune Do Last edited by Eru Ilúvatar; 01-20-2009 at 11:24 AM. |
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#12
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*Outside of blinding or eye strikes. Building your fingers up to point where you can with stand striking the forehead with out jammed fingers. You strike below eye. The pressure points below the eye. The sides of neck. Also what about throat strikes and strikes to certain soft parts of the body.
Jing-well points represent the place where the qi "bubbles" up. These points are always the first points on the yang channels or last points on the yin channels and with exception of Kid-1 YongQuan all points are located on the tips of fingers and toes. The Nan Jing and Nei Jing described jing-well points as indicated for "fullness below the heart" (feeling of fullness in the epigastric or hypochondrium regions) and disorders of the zang organs (yang organs). Jing-river points are where the qi "flows" down the channel. Jing-river points are indicated for cough and dyspnoea, chills and fever, diseases manifesting as changes in voice, and for diseases of the sinews and bones. Quote:
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#13
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Re: External Hand Tranining
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#14
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Re: External Hand Tranining
I have heard people say that it effects your eyes training iron fingers...The only way I can see it effects your eyes is that you is that you rub your eyes with out washing of the Dit Da Jow.
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#15
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Re: External Hand Tranining
The Qi at the well point is shallow but does connect with the other transporting-shu points. But I guess it is not as bad as say the He points.
In reflexology two toes are dedicated to the eyes and two to the ears. http://www.comfortchannel.com/images...gy_Chart_B.gif Hand reflex showing the points for the eyes. http://www.kymassagers.com/images/handreflexlology.jpg Chinese reflexology depending on the school does have some different points because my teacher being an acupunturist gave me a copy of the points. |
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