The Muay Thai "Grunt" - Benefits of Kicking & Screaming | Muay Thai Guy
http://www.muay-thai-guy.com/muay-thai-grunt.html
The Muay Thai "Grunt" - Benefits of Kicking & Screaming | Muay Thai Guy
http://www.muay-thai-guy.com/muay-thai-grunt.html
wiesiek wrote:I learned, that:
Fast exhale with the >HA<
BUT
HA doesn`t need to be audible , however you may yell if you like
Bao wrote:
Ha and Heng ("E" sounds like the vowel in "stir".)
C.J.W. wrote:IMO, the concept and practice of "kiai" (borrowing the Japanese term) are largely misunderstood. The vast majority of MAists/fighters who do it turn it into a silly shouting -- or, in this case, screaming -- contest.
In the traditional CMA styles that I've been exposed to, the sound you generate when releasing power is the result of compressing and condensing the breath into the dantian, which not only adds an extra burst of energy to your strikes, but also increases the body's ability to withstand punishment.
Ron Panunto wrote:Bao wrote:
Ha and Heng ("E" sounds like the vowel in "stir".)
You mean like "Hirng"?
Pavel Macek wrote:Please check out this article with Southenr Chinese martial arts perspective:
Use and Meaning of the Sounds, Shouts and Screams
http://practicalhungkyun.com/2013/07/hu ... d-screams/
I like working with the five different sounds of Hunggar. But it's a very different way of dealing with sounds and a different philosophy than from XYQ/BGZ/TJQ. Hunggar sounds works like power breathing, you'll get completely exhausted working with them. A great workout, but can be mentally and emotionally exhausting, draining.
Pavel Macek wrote:I like working with the five different sounds of Hunggar. But it's a very different way of dealing with sounds and a different philosophy than from XYQ/BGZ/TJQ. Hunggar sounds works like power breathing, you'll get completely exhausted working with them. A great workout, but can be mentally and emotionally exhausting, draining.
I respectfully disagree - actually, the opposite is true. If you get exhausted, you are doing it wrong. Most people do "Iron Thread" as a hard-only exercise, which is wrong. Please refer to this article: http://practicalhungkyun.com/2013/09/th ... as-thread/
Traditional Chinese maxim describes the core principles of the set in following words: “Hard as iron, soft as thread” (Gong Yu Tit, Yau Yu Sin). This is the reason why I prefer to translate Tit Sin Kyun a s „Iron Thread Set“ instead of „Iron Wire Set“.
Return to Xingyiquan - Baguazhang - Taijiquan
Users browsing this forum: wayne hansen and 34 guests