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Or double knifehand block.
What is the reason behing the chamber hand at the sternum instead of at the hip like most chambers?
Or double knifehand block.
What is the reason behing the chamber hand at the sternum instead of at the hip like most chambers?
When the hands are chambered at the hips it is often to place the arms in a good position to generate the torque for the punch. However, torque isn't necesarily required for a knife-hand strike. I'm not a TKDer so does that make sense? Or am I all mixed up? LOL!
Here is my understanding of it:
It is a guarding hand. It guards the solar plexus.
First, the dynamics of the torquing motion are different from, say, the side block, and work on different physics and biomechanics. The supporting fist for a side block is at the waist to obey Newton's Law of action/reaction.
You know exile, I'm sure there's a nice Japanese karate school somewhere with your name on it.
Anyway, very difficult to describe in writing why a technique is done a certain way.
Tae Kwon Do being a dynamic action art, it's easier show why the hand placement is where it is. Even the Internet has its limitations.
I have always viewed it as a "point of origin" related movement. By that I mean, it starts from a point in space where it will be most effective. It does not have to be retracted to then move forward. You never, as someone else stated, remove it from the fight.
If you are in a confrontation, I doubt seriously the opponent is going to throw one technique and stop. The rear hand is in a position already to counter a second technique if thrown anywhere towards the upper body simply by turning it out (boxing one-two punch). I never saw it as being any different from apply blocks from a fighting stance. Both hands are up with one lead hand and the other a bit closer to the center line or solar plexus. We dont rechamber to the hip to initiate a block from a fighting stance. We throw it from where our hands are in space. I see this as being the same application.
Scottie
I agree—and that's a big part of why I think that the intent of the chambering is very different from the standard (but increasingly less standard) official story that the rechamber is a setup for the next punch, or assisting in proving momentum for the current punch, or anything else that takes it out of play in real-time combat. It's going to be far more useful in an actual fight when it's serving as an active part of a forcing or controlling tech, as per the description of its use in my previous post...
Okay, now the posts in this thread talk about what I think is the single most exciting area of TKD today, and I have great respect for all of these things.
However... let's remember one thing -- IF we go to break the wooden target (held up vertically), how will we punch this target, from what position? It will be from the chambered position, of course. So, what I mean is -- there MUST be some credence to the idea that you punch FROM THE CHAMBER -- that is a valid idea at least, when you wish to give the MAXIMUM energy to the target.
Now, I don't mean to say that this is the ONLY reason for the chamber here. I only say that it seems evident that this is NOT to be seen as "oh, that is just the old way of teaching this, and that is not true."
EDIT --> You see, the TRUTH is somewhere that encompasses BOTH of these ideas, not one or the other. That is my idea of this.
Try having a student grab both wrists from the front and then perform the knife hand block exactly. Let me know what happens.
Is Sonnal Makki the same as the Sudo Mahki in Tang Soo Do?