Taste of Death wrote:My thoughts on one part moves, all parts move.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36iPPYN059k
Doc Stier wrote:From both a nei-tan perspective and a martial art perspective, I am far more interested in and more concerned about these various inner movements than I am about the external shapes and movements of forms, drills, applications, fighting strategies and tactics, etc.
Doc Stier wrote:Get the inside components right, and the outside components will naturally fall into place.
Taste of Death wrote:My thoughts on one part moves, all parts move.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36iPPYN059k
Bao wrote:Thanks for sharing. The only thing though is that I wouldn't automatically count in the knees together with the rest of the moment. The knee is a hinge, it must always need to move straight in a track. If the spiraling, rotating movements of the body is translated into the knees, then you will have problems and slowly damage the knees. .
marvin8 wrote:Taste of Death wrote:My thoughts on one part moves, all parts move.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36iPPYN059k
Some inaccuracies in your video:
1. Whole body power can be sequential (kinetic linking). For example, dantian/waist leads the shoulder/hand. It does not mean one is using only "arm power."
CMA, MMA, boxing, etc., use both types of whole body power generation depending on distance, hand (lead or rear) and type of punch (e.g., jab, hook, uppercut, etc). Throwing using sequential, whole body power is found to generate the most power in sports and setting world records (e.g., football, baseball, javelin throw, etc).
GrahamB wrote:Without the friction of your foot against the ground, you would not move forward. That is "pushing off".
Physics.
Taste of Death wrote:marvin8 wrote:Taste of Death wrote:My thoughts on one part moves, all parts move.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36iPPYN059k
Some inaccuracies in your video:
1. Whole body power can be sequential (kinetic linking). For example, dantian/waist leads the shoulder/hand. It does not mean one is using only "arm power."
CMA, MMA, boxing, etc., use both types of whole body power generation depending on distance, hand (lead or rear) and type of punch (e.g., jab, hook, uppercut, etc). Throwing using sequential, whole body power is found to generate the most power in sports and setting world records (e.g., football, baseball, javelin throw, etc).
Yes, but kinetic linking is not "one part moves, all parts move." And in yiquan we don't push off the back foot. Everything is contained in the body.
marvin8 wrote:Yes it is per others and Sifu Mizner starting at 2:54, "… The most common two (triggers) would be the yao (waist) region as one or the foot as the other, which means that part initiates. It is the pebble in the pond. The waves propagate through the fluid body to create change in your body, yin-yang differentials, and generate the powers. One part moves, all parts move."
LaoDan wrote:
If one favors the “wave” approach to explaining TJQ, then perhaps they would like his explanation, but he does not give sufficient information to convince me to view TJQ through that perspective. I prefer to view TJQ through the perspective of a “properly inflated rubber ball” analogy. When one part of a ball moves, then all parts of the ball move. I agree that there is no pebble, unless there is a better explanation somewhere else to explain this perspective.
The wave medium is not the wave and it doesn't make the wave; it merely carries or transports the wave from its source to other locations.
Doc Stier wrote:I would say that 'mind' is the pond, and thoughts are the 'pebbles'.
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