My opinion is that if someone doesn't see the value in a type of training, it can make it a lot harder to train. Let's take myself as an example, and use forms. Forms are an integral part of many martial arts. But 9-year-old me didn't really see the point in them. I remember a rant I went on at that age about forms, that they're silly and they don't teach you real fighting. That they typically have a block and a punch here and a block and a punch there, and that most people don't go down in one punch. I thought forms were ridiculous, they were silly, and that by spending a lot of time on forms, we were getting a false idea of what would work.
I was worried that the forms were either teaching us bad tactics, or that the forms were luring us into a false sense of security that our moves could take someone out in one punch. That if we got into a real fight and tried to use our forms, that we would fail, because we'd throw one punch and then have our confidence shattered when that punch fails to end the fight.
Some of these words and phrases are probably added in by 30-year-old me, but all of those concepts were in my mind at 9 years old.
Well I quit TKD when I was 11 and came back at 25. 25-year-old me loved forms. I still had some trouble with understanding their purpose, and even to this day I question what a form should be and whether or not our forms live up to those expectations. I still have plenty of criticism for the forms I learn at my school. But I do enjoy doing forms now.
There are a few things that helped me see this:
- I'm better at forms than I am sparring, so there's that
- My master's curriculum includes one-punch drills (which my old school did not) which has allowed me to see how the style of the forms can translate to the combat style of the art
- I was able to look at higher level forms, which feature more than "a block and a punch".
- I was better able to connect what is going on with the form to what is going on with the techniques themselves, and see what the forms were teaching me
Now, this isn't 100%. There are some things in our forms that don't show up anywhere else, and there are things absent from our forms that are in our curriculum elsewhere. Plenty of motions still feel abstract to me, and even those that make sense to me are a little bit different than we would regularly do. For example, instead of picking up the heel and dropping the knee and hip on a reverse punch like we would do in a drill, in the form you switch from back stance to front stance, align the hips, and keep your heel on the ground. So I still have some criticism and issues with the form (many of which may be my issue, and not an issue with the form). But the point is, I now see their value and I now enjoy them.
And that's the key.
I see their value, and I enjoy them. If you're a Kung Fu fighter, and you see the value in the training style, and you enjoy those training methods, then Kung Fu training is going to work well for you. If you're not sure about them, but you trust them because you have faith in the Kung Fu master that is teaching them, then it will probably work as well. But if you're dismissive of those training methods as "outdated" "hokey" "silly" "impractical", or whatever other adjective you can throw at them, then those methods are not going to work.
It is here that I think that the Western way has an advantage, at least in the West. My very limited understanding of Eastern culture is that if I say I'm the Master, then my students will respect me as the master even if they don't understand my methods. They will trust and have faith in my methods, because they see my skill, and I've told them these methods led to my skill. This is because my understanding of Asian culture is that respect for your elders is a key component in their culture. They are fairly conservative in this regard, and there is a clear hierarchy of authority, where people of that culture show respect and deference to their parents and elders, to those in power, or to those with specialized skills.
In the West, which has a much more progressive mindset, the idea is generally to challenge authority (as in, question teachers and push for change), to break societal norms, to be creative, and to innovate. Everyone thinks they're the smartest person, and everyone has their own ideas about how things work and how they should work. As you can tell from my story above, and probably by most of the posts I make on this site, I'm definitely in this category.
The West also values efficiency. Our time is considered our most valuable resource. Instant gratification is key. We want things now. And because it can take several years for the system to be proven to work, we can't trust it.
So Westerners may not see the point in forms, which makes it harder to train. If you don't find them fun, and you don't think they're useful, why "waste time" by practicing them, when you could practice something else that will have a more direct impact on your martial skills?
There's also the mindset that if your system works, that means that other systems do not work. Someone who knows more about philosophy or logic can probably tell me which fallacy that is, but the idea is that if I can learn to fight with Taekwondo, then all other martial arts suck, because Taekwondo doesn't.
When you put all of this together, you see that the Western way works. It is a more efficient way to learn the foundational techniques, there's less time spent on not-fighting, and it takes a no-nonsense approach. So it's easier to buy in, and once you've bought into the Western style, it's easier to reject the Eastern style.
Last, I feel that it is hard for someone to prove that the Western style is inferior, because there are so many factors at play.
Before I write a psychology book here, let me sum up:
- It is easier to train a system you believe in than one you think is hokey
- Westerners tend to question things instead of trusting the expert, and believe themselves smarter than the expert
- It is hard to prove that the Western style DOESN'T work or even that it isn't as good as the Eastern style