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I had heard that breaking a board is roughly the equivilant to breaking a collar bone or a rib. I don't know how accurate that is but we use board breaking for focus. Mainly, learning how to strike through your target rather than stopping at the surface.
and that has to correlate with improved fighting effectiveness.
The guy advocating breaks in the previous thread was saying that if you don't break, and don't have access to fancy machinery of the sort that sport training labs have, you really don't have any way to measure how much force your strike is delivering, or whether or not your ability to generate and deliver force is improving.
I don't agree with that person. I think he is asserting something that is not proven. Fighting effectiveness is about tactics, not techniques. Yes, it involves techniques, but it is always about tactical advantage. I don't think breaking improves tactical advantage. Additionally, lifting weights in the gym is not necessarily going to improve one's power. A good example, is the little chinese kung fu master than can deliver a devistating blow (unless of course that is a myth?).
That may be true to some extent. However, IMO delivering force isn't all about muscles. It is about structural alignment, stored energy in the body as the ligaments, tendons, and bones are twisted and unleashed delivering a very powerful force that muscles alone cannot deliver. So even if one has all that equipment, the results they see may not be derived from the source they think.
Bigshadow, what you say is true, but it really isn't incompatible with what the chap I mentioned was saying. His idea would be (if I'm remembering correctly) that for a given level of tactical skill, the more power you can deliver from a strike---regardless of how that's generated---the more effective you'll be as a fighter because your strikes will be more damaging. But unless you have some way of quantifying the energy you can deliver, you won't have an external measure to use as a guage of your progress in striking ability. My weight-lifiting analogy wasn't about where the power of a strike comes from---a lot of things come into that besides raw strength, that's for sure---but just as a parallel kind of case: lifting barbells of increasing weight is a way of quantifying strength gains, even though hoisting barbells may not be directly comparable to the problem of lifting wet barrels, just as boards are a way of quantifying power delivery, even though the body is probably a lot tougher and more resiliant (in a lot of places, anyway) than a pine board or stack of boards.
It seems to me that you could in fact use board breaking as a way of monitoring problems with you power generation technique. Say you can't break more than two boards with a knife hand strike, even after months of training... this probably means you're doing something technically wrong, assuming that you have the necessary strength. It's a kind of warning to you that you need work on something about your striking that you're not aware of. If you just practice for power by striking a bag, say, you probably won't be aware that you're `stuck', technically.
I see what you are saying, I misunderstood the intent. Although, I still think it is unnecessary. But that is just my take on it.![]()
Bruce Lee said it best board does not hit back so why is it so popular?
"Boards do not hit back"
An apple does not bite back, but I still eat them.
(Bruce Lee didn't know everything!)
If a baseball player wants to improve his home run hitting abilities, he could have a pitching machine lob balls while he sees if he can knock them out of the park. The ball does not hit back, and the pitching machine is not the same as a live pitcher, but if he can not get the ball past 2nd base, there is a problem.
Many deer hunters will target practice before going hunting each year to improve their aim. A deer does not always stand perfectly still like a target, but if you can't hit a stationary target, you probably will have trouble with hitting a live deer. If you are using a ten pound bow with target arrows while hunting, you probably won't kill the deer even if you hit it.
Testing the strength, power, and accuracy of your tools is useful in any physical activity, and that is what board breaking is for. Will it guarantee a victory - - no, but if you lack the skills to break boards, you probably lack the skills to damage your opponent, even if you have good tactical strategy. For some students, their percentage of successful breaking is a hit and miss ratio. Your self defense accuracy will be the same. The more you practice, the more consistent you will become with hitting your target with accuracy and power each and every strike.
CM D.J. Eisenhart
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Last Fearner
Ouch! I've done that. I had four of them and the wise*** holding them slipped a wet one in as #3. Jerk.I think it is a fair measure of someones power as long as the boards have not been tampered with at all. It is a good confidence builder but not something I encourage a lot of. I was breaking a patio block a couple times in the last few weeks and the block won (it was wet and I didn't notice) man does that hurt. Its very impressive to see when things get broke in demos as long as they do break and haven't been tampered with.