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I like to work on muscle memory so I react without having to think too much.
What do you believe to be the best part of your training so you can be street efeective?
How do you put this into your training on a daily basis so you can have that info. ready at any given moment?
Exile, do you practice any "free sparring/fighting" or do you focus primarily on full-contact boon hae drills?
Interesting! At my school we relied on both but put an emphasis on “free fighting”(not sport-competitive sparring). We believed that in the chaos a SD situation there are too many variables to account for, limiting the effectiveness of a predetermined response. We put a higher value on spontaneity and flexibility. Being able, on a subconscious level, to explode on our adversary with violence striking their vulnerable targets were ever they may be or how ever they may change. We envisioned a sphere encompassing our body and extending just short of our maximum reach. We trained to quickly hit any point within that sphere at random. When we sparred, two BBs (but not always, we also trained against multiple attackers) would stand in front of each other and then be told to “SI-JAk”. Their goal was to quickly incapacitate their opponent without taking damage. No one knew beforehand what techniques they would use or what techniques they would have to defend against. It was like a game of speed chess, see an opening and attack and keep attacking them until you opponent is finished. Training like this helped us develop good instincts regarding target acquisition and a very quick reaction time, as well as helping prepare us for the adrenaline dump and stress associated with a frantic attack.It's the latter, f2f (though not nearly as often as I'd like). I've never been interested in the kind of free sparring that goes along with sport-competitive versions of TKD; it's something I've ever wanted to do, and anyway, at this point it's a (much) younger person's game. But I've always wanted to understand and have the ability to carry out the self-defense side of the MAs, and kata and hyungs struck me from the very beginning as puzzles that could be solved, if the right methods of analysis were applied, even though early on I had no idea what those methods might be.
So when I started reading people like Abernethy and the other proponents of realistic bunkai and saw how these MA patterns were 100% self-defense, if `read' correctly, it all made complete,perfect sense...
What do you believe to be the best part of your training so you can be street efeective?
How do you put this into your training on a daily basis so you can have that info. ready at any given moment?