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Thread: How do you spend time training?

  1. #1
    Join Date
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    How do you spend time training?

    Hi,

    What percentages do you think would reap the most benifits for training time?

    100% on chi sau
    or
    50% chi sau - 50% forms
    or
    25% chi sau - 50% forms - 25% sparing
    or
    50%drills - 10% forms - 40% chi sau

    Or somthing totally different??

    Im interested to see different ideas across the board. What do think is good?
    S.Teebas

  2. #2
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    We do everything exepted kickboxing. The proportions may vary depending on the needs of the moment.

  3. #3
    This question would generate many answers due to each person's respective training goals. I am now training a new WC fighting method to enhance my previous WC study, so I would have to spent more time in learning drills instead of forms, chi sau or sparring just to get used to the skills to be mastered in them.

    "The art of living deliberately is the art of examining this vast storehouse of beliefs, dropping the out-moded ones, consciously choosing those that serve your goals, and carefully crafting new ones in greatest alignment with your desires. - Richard Bishop "

    Regards,

  4. #4
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    Hi Old jong,

    What about fitness... Do you think thats important? - or is that classed as kickboxing?
    S.Teebas

  5. #5
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    Wink

    Hey S.Teebas.
    We work hard.Fitness comes with it.

  6. #6
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    LA ,
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    different ideas you say o.k.

    forms = for the first couple of years all the time now hardly every only when i have to teach some one .

    chi sau = initially before i had a clue i wouldchi sau almost the entire class and with all the people i could get my hands on now only short spurts when i'm trying to refine a cetain concept or understand a theory , i use it mostly to let younger students try and take it to me and i just work defense and control or redirection , why you ask , well if i turn it on it's over to quick and if i play with people of my skill or greater , you really can't work the control and senstivity part , there just to good so we would have to pound on each other and that gets no where fast .

    i still spend a lot of time on 'dummy and pole '' and the rest on reflex drills , or conceptual drills this is a better lab for me to refine my coordination and clairity of each action and hand and body combination

    sparring once a week outside of class '' this includes stick and knife , hands and feet ,ground or standing '' i don't waste my time on doing this with wing chun brothers this is only against and with other styles

    conditioning
    4 days a week wieghts[ full body hard core] , boxing ,kick boxing[ heavy bag ,focus mitts partner drills ] , spinning ,running, plyo's, sprints,and pilates /stretching
    to me conditioniong is paramount there is no excuse for being sloppy or short winded if you consider your self a real martial arts especially if your body is the tool which you use to express your art

    well thar was at least this week all subject to change based on my mood and energy
    If the truth hurts , then you will feel the pain

    Do not follow me, because if you do, you will lose both me and yourself....but if you follow yourself, you will find both me and yourself

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  7. #7
    as much chi sao as possible
    if u meet someone else who does wing chun u might as well make the most of it. drills are the only other thing you cant do alone.

    chi sao
    drills
    forms
    horse
    pole

    that order. cant afford a dummy.

    i'd go for 90% chi sao. but thats just me
    Ecce nunc patiemur philosphantem nobis asinum?

    what transcends the buddha and the law? Cakes.

    "Practice is better than Art, because your practice will suffice without art, while the art means nothing without practice." - Hanko Doebringer, 14th century

  8. #8
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    In Fut Sao Wing Chun Kuen we start with Hei-Gung and stretching. Then forms practice. Then breaking down forms and two man forms. Then practice drills ie, Lop Sao, Don Chi Sao, sometimes grappling and anti grappling. Then Chi Sao, many different variations. At times we do full body armore fighting. Sometimes we work with bag equipment or wooden dummy and weapons. We also do traditional conditioning training such as jar or pole work. Of course the class will vary. http://www.geocities.com/wingchunbuddhahand/index.html

  9. #9
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    Hi Sam. What do you mean by "jar" work?

    Regards,
    - Kathy Jo

  10. #10
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    Hi kj, we use sand and water filled jars for strength and grip work. Fook and Hing sao are utilized.

  11. #11
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    Thanks, Sam. Are you using something like Mason jars?

    Regards,
    - Kathy Jo

  12. #12
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    We use many different types of jars. Some with a small mouth for the outer finger spread (fingers in the mouth of the jar). Some with a larger mouth for external gripping. http://www.geocities.com/wingchunbud...DITIONING.html

  13. #13
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    Sam,

    I went to your website that the 2 people doing chi sau with iron rings on their arms is very interesting. Those excercises I have seen before in Hung Gar and Eagle Claw.

    However, what is the benefit of jumping onto a table?

    Just wondering.

  14. #14
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    On external gripping of the jar - wouldn't it be more beneficial to grip the outer rim of the lid itself instead of under it?

    on topic
    1) stretching and various exercises
    2) forms
    3) chi sau
    4) drills and applications
    Your journey ends at my feet.

    *It takes effort to learn to do something without*

  15. #15
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    On external gripping of the jar - wouldn't it be more beneficial to grip the outer rim of the lid itself instead of under it?
    Not if you drop the jar bacause of it, especially on your foot.

    I think the balance can and should shift depending on your current long- and short-term training goals. You have to come back to a balance all the same, and do a bit of everything. Trying to pin it down to an eternal formula is too simplistic.

    If you really want to get better, find your greatest weakness and work so hard on that that it ceases to be a weakness. Then you can see what your greatest weakness is then at that future time - it will be something different now - and work on that the same way. Continue. So you are always on the upward spiral

    If you don't do that, you'll only ever be as strong as that weakest link. Goodbye!
    "Once you reject experience, and begin looking for the mysterious, then you are caught!" - Krishnamurti
    "We are all one" - Genki Sudo
    "We are eternal, all this pain is an illusion" - Tool, Parabol/Parabola
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