Friday, February 08, 2019

Inside Outside


Getting started in martial arts is a great accomplishment.  Just by coming to class a few times per week you are ahead of the game.  As the saying goes "even a white belt is higher than sitting on the couch".  Going from intent to action is the first step in changing your life and becoming the person you want to be.

Especially in martial arts, which is all about goal setting and goal achievement, the first steps make such a big difference not just physically but mentally.  We feel better when we do things we know are helping us be better.  Investing in ourselves just feels good, doesn't it?

At the beginning we may have a few aches and pains as we start using new muscles in new ways.
It's natural to get a bit confused by new ways of moving, new terminology, new training tools.  All of this is part of the journey.  Over time, these become as natural to us as our own names.

In class, we move fast.  A 2-hour lesson can cover a lot of material including sticks, empty hand, knife defense, boxing, kickboxing and more.  It can be hard to remember everything we did.  It's OK.  We try to illustrate our principles and concepts through the various drills, but even with an 8-hour class it wouldn't be enough time to master them all.

Why?

Simple.
YOU ARE SUPPOSED TO PRACTICE OUTSIDE OF CLASS.

As instructors we try to show you what you need to learn.  In class we try to give you enough practice to help get the basic ideas embedded.  This is so you can remember enough to train outside of class and have a good idea of what to work on.  In our classes we show the various principles and mechanics of what we do including footwork, posture, distance, body mechanics, focus, targeting and how to chain techniques together in logical and efficient sequences.  After that, what matters most is repetition, plain and simple.  The more you train the better you get.

so, what are the key takeaways?

COME TO CLASS AS MUCH AS YOU CAN
We will keep introducing new stuff and showing you how to train it.  If you are not there you will not know.  If you are sick/injured, try to come anyway even if you can't train physically.  Take notes, pictures and video.  If that is impossible, ask someone else (or one of the instructors) what we did.

TRAIN AT HOME
More is better, but even 10-15 minutes a day is enough to see big gains in a few months' time.  Meet other students outside of class to review, drill and practice.  Video yourself and watch what you do.  Stretch after the bath or shower.  Pick up your sticks for a quick twirl while you watch the news.

As for me, I'm training constantly.  I'm always thinking about techniques and combinations when I am on the train or walking around.  Honestly, I dream about Kali. :-)
You need not go to my extreme (but it's OK if you do - I understand).

The years teach much the days never know.

Keep training.

No comments: