Hi Bruce.
Originally posted by glad2bhere
4.) We now have GM Lim who reports a direct lineage from Choi and has a cadre of practitioners to support him as well, but he is not above borrowing from Japanese traditions to "improve-on" his own material.
Choi, Yong-Sul borrowed the whole thing!
Many of Choi's students (such as Suh, Bok-Sub, Ji Han-Jae, Lim, Hyun-Su, Rim Jong-Bae, etc.) have said that Choi, Yong Sul knew nothing about martial arts before being in Japan and it was there he learned a Japanese martial art, whether or not it was DRAJJ.
Originally posted by glad2bhere
When it comes to telling people how to pay fealty to their seniors, the Koreans seem to have written the book, letter and verse. But when it comes to "honoring" their place in the system or safe-guarding the integrity of the traditions, then the book goes out the window.
I have been told that one of Choi, Yong-SulÂ’s major goals was to have Hapkido unified. Unfortunately, everyone has their own way of doing it. Some are aggressive in their ways such as the KHF while others, like GM Lim, just teaches what was passed down to him and builds relationships.
Originally posted by glad2bhere
What I am here to tell you is that I don't need someone to show me how to execute a technique against great resistance...
But wouldn't it be nice to grow and learn how to make our existing techniques even more efficient so as we get older and our strength decreases we can still apply our techniques with great efficiency?
I remember reading on the Dojang Digest about the benefits and downfalls of getting older in the martial arts. “Fight smarter, not harder” was something I took out of that thread. This is something that I personally have found with GM Lim’s teachings. In the past, I was using too much strength and had to depend on my partner knowing what I was going to do to them to make it effective or they would be broken. This hasn’t been the case since learning Jung Ki Hapkido. The principles that I have learned have made my techniques so much stronger while at the same time exerting ¼ of the strength that was needed previously and it no longer matters if the opponent knows what’s coming or not. I knew hundreds of techniques, but it really is the principles that make a “good technique” into a “
great technique.” If you want to work hard and grow, which I am sure you do, I would recommend you go to the seminar. No matter where someone is in their Hapkido training, there will be something to benefit from going.
Originally posted by glad2bhere
The chances of my having to use my skills in a true life and death encounter are slim and none and even if the opportunity comes up my skills are sufficient to get the job done without doing time for manslaughter.
With what I just said above about the principles, let me add that they also up your options as far as levels of force. The “off balancing” that I have learned is one of the things that allows me to apply a technique on a resistant opponent (as in the case of a real attack) to take down and restrain without the added level of force that comes from striking. Coming from years of dealing with “toxically enhanced dumb-dumbs,” let me say that some people have to be hit especially hard to have any affect if any. The off balancing principles in Jung Ki Hapkido apply to anybody who was meant to have two arms, two legs and a head on top (or up their behinds) no matter what is surging through their systems.
Originally posted by glad2bhere
What I do need is someone who is invested in 1,000 years of martial science to spill his guts about those traditions so that we can pass things on accurately to the next generation when the time comes. Otherwise, what I am hearing people report might as easily be said about any competent gym instructor. Now is GM Lim going to teach Korean tradition or is this going to be just one more Korean giving his particular take on what he thinks Korean traditions are "supposed to be".
He will teach you what he learned from Choi, Yong-Sul. So what is the difference from Choi, Yong-Sul teaching Korean traditions of Hapkido or GM Lim, besides one generation? What Choi learned and what GM Lim teaches came from a Japanese art. So it really depends on your definition of “Korean traditions.”
If you want to learn some excellent technique from a good man who has spent many years with the founder of Hapkido, Choi, Yong-Sul, then you will enjoy it immensely. If you want something that is strictly Korean, then you have your work cut out for you, no matter where you go in Hapkido.
Take care Bruce. :asian: