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Thread: hand dependancy

  1. #1
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    hand dependancy

    I fractured my wrist a couple of months ago, but I've continued to train with limited use of my left hand. My SiFu pointed out awhile ago that if you were to get injured during a fight and you lost the use of a hand or leg you would still have to fight, but be intelligent enough to improvise.

    One of my SiHings was visiting recently and hurt his arm pretty badly during training and with just one arm continued to train, defend himself very well and managed to put a hurting on everyone.

    My question is has anyone ever had to fight without the use of an arm or leg. And since it is assumed that most Wing Chun uses alot of hands - how effective would you be without them? Would you be able to defend yourself with only your legs? (running away does'nt count) How dependant are Wing Chun practitioners on the usage of hands?
    Your journey ends at my feet.

    *It takes effort to learn to do something without*

  2. #2
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    I've trained (not fought) with lots of injuries. Good thing ... I'm injured in some sense or other a great deal of the time (from life and inherent vulnerabilities, not Wing Chun). Examples: rotator cuff injury, shoulder bursitis, epicondolitis (tennis elbow), recovery from foot/toe surgery, continuous knee flare-ups (arthritis), flared up carpal tunnel, sacroiliac issues, etc.. I'm an orthopedic anomaly.

    I've another knee surgery coming up this year; I don't plan to be entirely out of training more than a week or two, if even that much, though the healing time will be longer. There is always something I can work on, and everything needs work. Instead of saying "I can't work on [this or that]" I try to ask myself "What can I work on?"

    "Compromising" and, as you say, "improvising" to accommodate injuries as they heal, has at times provided me great opportunities to focus on certain elements of my training that might otherwise not get so much attention. Healing my injuries and dealing with my limitations has also taught me a lot of useful things relevant to Wing Chun, not to mention life.

    If I were to sit around licking my wounds to the sounds of sit-coms or reality-TV, I might not learn as much. It helps to be a glass-half-full kinda person, and "investing in loss."

    Keeping it in context, my ceaseless injuries and issues are nothing. This past weekend I spent some time with a Wing Chun practitioner who happens to be a paraplegic. I'm reasonably certain she could kick my butt if she set her mind to it, and my two legs still work somewhat.

    Regards,
    - Kathy Jo

  3. #3
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    P.S. I do believe that "training" with injuries has at least some correlation to "fighting" with injuries. In both cases you make use of (and/or hone) whatever it is you have available.

    In the case of "fighting" (i.e., "real" fighting, not "play" or "sport" fighting) there may actually be more capacity to work with, thanks to the pain management benefits of things like adrenaline, endorphines, acute mental focus, etc.. I remember walking on a broken ankle ... and without as much as limp too ... but only for awhile!! Things like that certainly don't aid healing, but they can help one endure emergencies.

    Just some thoughts.

    Regards,
    - kj

  4. #4
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    one hand controls two

    There is a WC saying, "one hand controls two". This means that your one hand controls the opponent's two hands. This leaves your other hand free to attack. In your case, you have limited use of one hand, so this could be a good opportunity to practice this principle. Try controlling your opponent with one hand; if you can.
    Last edited by Wingman; 03-20-2003 at 09:56 PM.
    Defend where there is no attack; attack where there is no defense.

    Attack is the secret of defense; defense is the planning of an attack.

  5. #5
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    kj - I've also had my share of injuries in the past year or so. I even took a little break last year from training (drove me crazy) due to a rotator cuff injury (second time). It really sucks to not be able to train as hard as you're used to because of injuries. I guess it's just a part of getting old.

    I've been wrapping my wrist with this 10 foot roll of thai boxers wrist wrap that another student got for me and it definitely helps. I certainly must agree that this is giving me an opportunity to brush up on alot of basics things that don't require too much contact. Injuries suck!

    What I'd like to do now in regards to training would be to limit the use of the injured arm and see how I can fend for myself one handed. Like I've said before, I've seen one of my SiHing's do it and it is a totally different ballgame. He smoked everyone in our fighting drill. And yet another scenario could be fighting without the use of your hands at all.

    wingman - it sound pretty simple in theory does'nt it?
    Your journey ends at my feet.

    *It takes effort to learn to do something without*

  6. #6
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    Originally posted by mun hung
    What I'd like to do now in regards to training would be to limit the use of the injured arm and see how I can fend for myself one handed. Like I've said before, I've seen one of my SiHing's do it and it is a totally different ballgame. He smoked everyone in our fighting drill. And yet another scenario could be fighting without the use of your hands at all.
    At the risk of sounding motherly, the one-handed and no-handed experiments might be better suited to a time when you are healed. The stars may have been in alignment for your friend not to injure himself worse than he was, despite being victor of the day. It would be a terrible shame to trade one injury for a worse one, or even a permanent one, when circumstances are not dire. But then I tend to weigh things like this.

    Regards,
    - Kathy Jo

  7. #7
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    One thing . . .

    kj writes:

    In the case of "fighting" (i.e., "real" fighting, not "play" or "sport" fighting) . . . .kj

    I hear folks trying to make this distinction from time to time, and it is always made, not surprisingly, by folks that don't fight (see below). Folks that do fight and train to fight, regardless of style or lineage, simply don't think that way: they *know* better. If you have any doubt, don't take my word for it but go ask a "fighter" like a Gracie. For some reason I can't fathom, some people seem to think that their lack of skill in "play" or "sport" fighting (like NHBs) can somehow translate into skill when they are actually assaulted ("real fighting"). Typically they argue that while they won't be able to use most of their skills they can muster some "deadly" (translation: never tested or practiced against real resistance) technique, like a biiu jee to the eyes, that will save them. But fighting is fighting. If you can't stop someone with a punch in a NHB, you're not going to stop someone on the "street" with it; if your tan sao doesn't work in a NHB, it won't work on the "street". Experience has consistently shown us that he only way to gain fighting skills is by fighting (we learn to box by boxing, not by hitting focus mitts), folks that avoid "play" or "sport" fighting simply will never develop fighting skills, including for when it is "real". TN

    BTW, as an aside -- I had thought that Bruce Lee came up with the "learning to swim on dry land" analogy, but have discovered (via Duncan Leung) that it was Yip Man who originally used it and Bruce adopted it. TN

    Terence

  8. #8
    actually,terrybaby,youre wrong.i larned judo.judo as most
    people know is the sport off- shoot of jiu jitsu.ive used judo
    in two fights,and it worked decently for me.where i trained
    it was sport/competition based.but by simply applying
    those "moves",and being used to the roughnes,it helped.

    also my local gracie barra told me they "train with restraint".
    so my experience was not how i learned [ie to fight like terrybaby
    said] but what i learned.im guessing matlock here will suitably
    "respond".


    russ.

  9. #9
    I blew out an ankle a few years back which kept me on crutches for a month, and hobbled for a few months thereafter. It also led to additional injuries as I tried, foolishly, to compensate, including calf pulls, and ultimately an atypical tearing of the planta-facia ligament in my foot which forever changed the way I stand and forced me to relearn much of my horse work. (I was on the tail end of that during the Rochester Friendship Seminar).

    However, I didn't learn from that, and have continued to train with blown elbows, and currently with the other ankle severely damaged from an underestimated heel-hook. I like training too much to stop, but I'm an idiot. Training isn't fighting. It's not life or death. It's grueling, on going, and an incredible drain on even a healthy body.

    Hypocritically, then, I say your body is the most precious thing you own. Machismo and bravado can quickly reduce the time you have with it. Serious injury is no joke. No matter how much you enjoy training, just imagine never being able to train again because you were too stupid to rest and tend to your injuries, to heal and come back healthy.

    My 2c.

  10. #10
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    kj - yes, mother!

    rene - alright, dad!

    Can I get the keys to the Lada?
    Your journey ends at my feet.

    *It takes effort to learn to do something without*

  11. #11
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    fau kiu

    If you can't stop someone with a punch in a NHB, you're not going to stop someone on the "street" with it; if your tan sao doesn't work in a NHB, it won't work on the "street". --TN

    The knowledge level of your apponent my have to be taken into consideration here your average street punk may not know how to sink his enegies enough to get through even a poorly placed tan sao. So a persons current level of training can be considered healthy and improving where it might be possible that a person could be able to defeat a street punk but not a knowledgable NHB trained fighter at a certain point in his or her training and yet they are still effective and training towards the knowledge and skill of an NHB fighter.
    Tony Jacobs

    ng doh luk mun fa kin kwan

    "...Therefore the truly great man dwells on what is real
    and not what is on the surface,
    On the fruit and not the flower.
    Therefore accept the one and reject the other. "

    World Hung Fa Yi Wing Chun Kung Fu Association
    Southern Shaolin Kung Fu Global Discussion Forum

  12. #12
    I was reading some comments from John "The Train" Hackleman (sp?) who trains, among others, Chuck Liddel, perhaps the most effective striker in MMA. Hackleman had a very successful kickboxing career, but started out in NHB in Hawaii at the age of 16 or so (lied about his age). Hawaii was a real melting pot of MA and the NHB tournaments had Chinese, Japanese, and eclectic MA, as well as street fighters. He said the easiest to destroy were the Chinese MA fighters, then the Japanese. The hardest, according to him, were the street fighters. NEVER underestimate a street fighter.

    Once again, I say Wing Chun Kuen is NOT fighting. It is a progressive methodology to improve fighting ability. A bad fighter who doesn't use it to improve will remain a bad fighter, just as a good fighter who does may become a great one. (Any master chef will tell you just how important the base ingredients are).

    (BTW- You can enjoy cooking even without being a chef or having the best ingredients - I do! Just as you can enjoy training WCK without having any desire or interest in fighting. Life's too short).

    Mun Hung - KJ is in charge of Ladda priviledges!
    Last edited by reneritchie; 03-21-2003 at 11:05 AM.

  13. #13
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    Originally posted by reneritchie
    Once again, I say Wing Chun Kuen is NOT fighting. It is a progressive methodology to improve fighting ability.
    I must strongly agree.

    Mun Hung - KJ is in charge of Ladda priviledges!
    If I only knew what a Ladda was .... LOL.

    Regards,
    - kj

  14. #14
    If I only knew what a Ladda was .... LOL.
    Bad Russian car, used by many taxi drivers in Guangzhou. We devolved into discussing them on another thread.

  15. #15
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    kj - so I guess that means no. WAAAAHHH!!!

    I should've changed my thread to "How well do think you would be able to defend yourself with just one arm if you had to?"
    Your journey ends at my feet.

    *It takes effort to learn to do something without*

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