拍拍手, just a short, simple slap happy vid from Mr He jinghan
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vl7uxV-EP_I
Bao wrote:He show how to slap an arm and where to make the opponent feel as much pain as possible.
Showing on the first student:
"Slap, slap hard."
"Here is were you slap"
"you should slap so it hurts"
Then the other student foolishly asks He about where to slap.
"Give me your arm, I'll show you."
"This hurts, right"?
The “Burning Hand,” was Mr. Long’s signature technique, and he was quite open about teaching it those who wanted to learn it. It was an “internal” specialty, different from “external” pushing power. More a slap than a hit, Mr. Long would sometimes place a phone book on your shoulder and give it one of those “slaps.”
You could feel two things coming through the phone book. The first was a push (the external component) that would set you back a foot or two. That was to be expected, but it wasn’t anything to worry about. It was the second thing that was nasty... a sharp, stinging sensation that penetrated your shoulder.
This second force seemed to follow the more external, first force. It seemed to lag behind. But the external force was then gone in an instant, while the stinging second force stayed -- and grew.
Now, I am not a gullible person, and it was going to take more than a trickle of this second force through a phone book to convince me that this slapping stuff was anything much. And so it was that Mr. Long deflected my punch with a slap…just a little too hard. And as a result, my arm locked out in front of me, as if frozen, while a searing pain moved through the flexor muscle compartment of my forearm. My jaw clenched shut as I could feel beads of sweat forming on my face. Mr. Long continued to yack away at the other students, unaware of my predicament. I was struggling to breath, actually. I couldn’t move, actually. But out of the corner of my eye, I could see the other students now looking at me with some concern.
viewtopic.php?f=3&t=26046&st=0&sk=t&sd=a&hilit=burning+plam
You could feel two things coming through the phone book. The first was a push (the external component) that would set you back a foot or two. That was to be expected, but it wasn’t anything to worry about. It was the second thing that was nasty... a sharp, stinging sensation that penetrated your shoulder.
This second force seemed to follow the more external, first force. It seemed to lag behind. But the external force was then gone in an instant, while the stinging second force stayed -- and grew.
Mmm... that is a strange phenomena, that there's a second wave that comes after the physical impact.
wiesiek wrote:aaa,
I get it ,
easy does it, like 1,2,3,
you just need 7 years of iron palm work out before try...
wiesiek wrote:aaa,
I get it ,
easy does it, like 1,2,3,
you just need 7 years of iron palm work out before try...
Ron Panunto wrote:If the practice deadens the nerves in parts of the body, then it would be contrary to Taijiquan sensitivity training (sticky hands).
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