upnorthkyosa said:When it comes to TSD, studying the arts that formed the root of our hyung, CAN and DOES help you do the form better with more power. Once you understand what you are actually doing with the moves, sometimes the entire character of the move changes. The entire emphasis suddenly shifts to something else.
I don't learn hyung as a series of motions but as a series of techniques. Each technique has a specific purpose, and my instructor takes special care to inform us what each move does in the form. From the beginning, we learn to think of hyung as fight sequences and to picture our opponents so that we know where to block/attack. It's not like hyung are just out there, patterns of motion.
If you know the technique and what it does, you know what you're doing in the form.
I don't see that you guys are actually saying anything that suggests you fundamentally disagree with each other. Everyone recognizes, or should recognize, that hyungs represent technique sets, chains of movement sequences where each sequence in the chain embodies one or more effective combat scenarios. The issue is just how to get access to those scenarios, the optimal application of each sequence for combat purposes. What Master Penfil was saying, and UpNKy underscoring, is that in carrying out the bunkai that will yield these best-standard applications, it makes a good deal of sense to seek out the imput of those who practice the martial arts from whose kata TSD inherited these hyungs. There is widespread agreement amongst MA historians that the bunkai associated with these originally Okinawan kata were not taught in their full breadth or depth to the expatriate Okinawan karateka who brought karate to Japan, so that the kwan founders themselves never learned in full depth the combat applications that masters like Matsumura, Itosu, Azato and Chofu Kyan knew and taught (selectively). If that's the case, you have two choices if you want to go beyond the limits of TSD's founders' own understanding: you work out the bunkai and oyo yourself, or you get as much information as you can on the combat apps built into to the Okinawan-based hyungs from those who are in the closest line of knowledge transmission from the masters who created the kata which became KMA's earliest hyungs.
No one's saying these are mutually exclusive choices. Certainly there's plenty of room for grappling with bunkai analysis and the associated oyo, using well-tested principles for decoding the techniques in the hyungs pioneered by karateka such as Iain Abernethy, Rick Clark and Bill Burgar. But I can't see how you can fault getting information from master practitioners of the `source art' for these hyungs—among whom a higher degree of knowledge of the original applications probaby resides than anywhere else in the world.