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Forms vs reality?
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Originally posted by kwai chang pain View PostWhat about people who place 1st in forms competition all the time and can't fight worth a sh*t? Is that a coincidence or is it just a way to "empower" people who suck at fighting??
I used to train with a guy like that and I felt like he was always trying to "correct" my forms....and yet he sucked at fighting.
There are arts like Tai Chi, Qi Gong and Wushu which aren't really fighting arts, but people still include them in the martial art world.
What would annoyt me is if someone claimed that they could take an opponent down because they have done forms for twenty years etc.
As we have said previously - forms are just another part of training. Certain arts may emphasise formwork more. Some arts may emphasise fighting more. Some arts might emphasise fitness more
As long as the person gets something out of it, it's fine
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Premiere Member
- Sep 2005
- 505
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[" And although we may do our best to avoid trouble, sometimes trouble insists on finding us. When that happens......when the time for talk is over, warriors act. They flip the switch and act decisively - ruthlessly if necessary - to preserve and defend the things that they hold dear."
Michael D. Janiich Why being a warrior starts with accepting the limitations of peace.
Forms taught me to hit with incredible power. Take away the form and the power in my punch is still there. This is because the punch is done with proper form and weight transfer.
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Originally posted by jubaji View Post...........................
Not this again....
Qi Gong is NOT an art. Qi Gong is a concept.
Wushu is not an art. Wushu means martial arts. Wushu in modern day sense means performance martial arts. Either way, wushu itself is not an art.
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Originally posted by kwai chang pain View PostWhat about people who place 1st in forms competition all the time and can't fight worth a sh*t? Is that a coincidence or is it just a way to "empower" people who suck at fighting??
I used to train with a guy like that and I felt like he was always trying to "correct" my forms....and yet he sucked at fighting.
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Originally posted by Mephariel View PostTai Chi is an art.
Qi Gong is NOT an art. Qi Gong is a concept.
Wushu is not an art. Wushu means martial arts. Wushu in modern day sense means performance martial arts. Either way, wushu itself is not an art.
I was talking in the broader sense - I said that these styles/ideas/concepts, are still categorised under the martial arts. If you go to any Yellow Pages Qi Gong is listed under martial arts. If you read Martial Arts Illustrated Qi Gong and wushu are included. I don't care about what they are designed for - many wushu practitioners (Jet Li) claim that they can use it for fighting.
It is like non-contact karate - because there is no contact you could technically call it a performing martial art. Yet it would still fall under the remit of the martial arts world.
It is like the whole Buddhism thing - people argue over whether Buddhism is a philosophy or a religion. Yet most of the time when people talk about 'world religion' it is still included
Hope this clarifies
And as for Jubajii - you have a frustrating habit of writing silly on line answers to posts that don't exactly help. You either write sensible answers, or don't bother posting
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Originally posted by jublowme View PostAnd video games taught me how to fly a fighter jet!
That'll be the day.
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Originally posted by pUke View PostImagine a fluffer like you knowing anything outside of being on your knees .. taking the load of whichever moderator you're blowing at the time to keep from being permanently banned.
That'll be the day.
Here we see pUke's repeating skills in action as he tries to drag the same lame joke all over the forum.
We also see his sad frustration over the fact that his life-long dream of being a moderator has never been fulfilled.
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Back to the question at hand, I think that forms have 3 main purposes:
1. To condition the body to perform certain movements, which are unnatural (practice makes perfect)
2. Condition the body alignment, stance etc. for generation of power
3. To act as a means of remembering / training a technique when on your own. Every form I have ever trained has martial applications, and if you do not have a training partner / 24 hour club then forms are the way to train technique - just as shadow boxing and bag work is for boxers.
Styles which only have forms do not make good fighters, but do not put all qigong / tai chi styles / schools in the same category, as many teachers of internal arts do teach the applications, fighting forms and sticking hands, all of which teach you how to fight with it.
Cheers,
Jon.
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