johnwang wrote:In order to make anything truly belong to you, you have to take it apart, understand it, put it back together any way that you want to.
kenneth fish wrote:The right approach. In knife fighting the one who gets the knife in first is the one who survives.
I-mon wrote:What I like most about the good Silat that I've seen, is that it uses the same whole-body power/six harmonies movement through all ranges and all positions, still using beautiful coordination and rotation around the central axis while standing, squatting, having one or both hands on the ground wherever it's useful to do so, half-kneeling, sitting, and lying down. I'd love to learn some one day.
Doc Stier wrote:I-mon wrote:What I like most about the good Silat that I've seen, is that it uses the same whole-body power/six harmonies movement through all ranges and all positions, still using beautiful coordination and rotation around the central axis while standing, squatting, having one or both hands on the ground wherever it's useful to do so, half-kneeling, sitting, and lying down. I'd love to learn some one day.
With all due respect for the various styles of Silat, the comments above equally describe a high skill level in any traditional Chinese IMA style as well.
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