wiesiek wrote:something what in your opinion is important/interesting in learning/practicing process.
Sorry, if
sense of my words, was hidden into the form.
Ok. Understood. Thanks for clarifying.
As a student, I always questioned everything from day one, primarily because so many of the martial arts teachers I initially had contact with either claimed to possess skills that they never demonstrated or they demonstrated skills which they never taught their students how to replicate. In either case, the teachers always maintained their superior status and students perpetually contributed to the teacher's rice bowl income without ever receiving what they thought they were paying for.
Later, my primary long-term teachers actually showed me what to practice and how to practice in order to replicate their demonstrated skills, but with the constant reminder that nobody can practice for you. Real kungfu, they said, can only be learned in your own body through the daily experience of your own training, along with regular validation of personal progress via comparative pressure testing with practice partners. It can't be truly acquired through reading, watching films and videos, or by engaging others in any amount of hypothetical intellectual discourse.
As such, my teachers encouraged me to never take their word for anything, but rather to simply practice what they taught, as instructed, and thereby validate the training material and training methods through my own experience. This system has continued to produce excellent personal results moving forward over time. Just do it!