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Ask your instructor listening to other people's advice may not help in the slightest as every place does it different
It can be a useful way to practice the movements and tune them, without the interference of a partner who doesn't feed properly for the given technique. In other words, if they do it wrong in a kata, it can only be because they did it wrong, not because their partner's response should have led to a different technique.Is there any point learning the kata in this case?
What is kata without applications, after all?
That depends what you are trying to get from the kata.
Not all kata are designed to have a directly applicable or interpreted output (in terms of combative techniques/strategies). Some are practiced primarily to develop internal strength, balance and other fundamental attributes that can then be utilised in the wider curriculum of the school / system.
In this case, learning a kata for its movements sake - is more important than understanding the potential uses of the techniques / movement being performed.
What is the outcome of internal strength, balance, and other fundamentals? Proper technique and applications...
Before you do or learn the kata, do all of the potential armed and unarmed applications that are found
IMO, you learn and practice the solo kata first in order to inculcate the fundamentals.
Correct, but...
No.
IMO, you learn and practice the solo kata first in order to inculcate the fundamentals.
This is some bunkai for this kata.
So what is bunkai?
That depends on your understanding of function.Did kata develop themselves before or after the function was developed?
Not really. It depends upon whether it was developed before or after the function. It's a timeline question, not a question of understanding. Kata didn't spring up unbidden, and then we have to find their purpose (function). Some instructor created them for a specific purpose.That depends on your understanding of function.
Not really. It depends upon whether it was developed before or after the function. It's a timeline question, not a question of understanding. Kata didn't spring up unbidden, and then we have to find their purpose (function). Some instructor created them for a specific purpose.
The original viewpoint I was attempting to offer was that irrespective of how and when some kata came into existence, their usage (in terms of how they are applied within the greater curriculum of the style) have evolved over time - and vary according to style.
In Wado- ryu for example - the practice of solo kata like Naihanchi and Seishan is primarily intended to develop attributes of internal strength, form and balance - which are then applied to the techniques and stratagems within the paired kata of the system (Kihon Kumite, Kumite Gata, Idori etc. etc.)
This may be a bit of an unusual approach compared to Okinawan based karate systems, but it is fairly ubiquitous within koryu-bujutsu systems.