Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 38

Thread: Is complex and advanced necessarily better

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    Earth
    Posts
    4,381

    Is complex and advanced necessarily better

    chusauli 04-12-2011 06:04 PM

    Hung Ga is a great training method and is a complex advanced art, but few have the ability to teach it as a fighting art, so it remains largely, a performance art for health or cultural relic.

    The torso methods, methods of issuing force, dissolving of force through the stance, closing in, sticking, controlling all require long term teaching and practice to develop a person.

    If a person pays attention to Lien Gung and mainly strengthens himself, concentrates on the Kiu Sao and how to enter and control, they will be better than average people in terms of power, and probably stronger than most martial artists.

    The danger in Hung Ga is locking into looks, performance, showmanship.
    This post from Robert is I think worthy of a new thread, and it not aimed specifically at hung gar OR Robert but rather the points he raises

    What exactly makes a style a complex and advanced art and what arts are we comparing it to that we feel are simple and straight forward, and is complex and advanced necessarily better?

    Another question I have is how can something be a great training method if in the next sentence we say few have the ability to teach it properly as a fighting style (I have heard the same said by people on the wing chun forum about their art) ? Isn’t the whole point of a great training method that it is easy to learn and produces good people and works for the majority of people learning it?

    My final question is if the torso methods, force issuing methods dissolving methods etc take that long to learn, how on earth did people survive long enough to actually keep the art alive? I have a hard time believing that when these arts were needed in order to help people actually survive in hostile time’s arts that took a long time to learn were that useful or survived

    To be honest when I read advanced, complex, difficult to learn and takes a long time I wonder if
    A) its worth learning and
    B) is this necessarily true or simply an excuse to hide bad teaching or an inferior art,

    any thoughts?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    NW Arkansas
    Posts
    1,392
    Most of the southern stuff is too complicated for me. When you start getting into all the bridges, animals, and stuff, it doesn't work for me.

    I have always found that the less i have to think while fighting the better. That's just me though.
    It is better to have less thunder in the mouth and more lightning in the hand. - Apache Proverb

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Ontario
    Posts
    22,250
    The simple answer is that it depends.
    It depends on what you are training for.
    It depends on what your goals are.
    It depends on how far you want to take any given MA.
    IT depends on what the advanced and complex is.

    Sometimes the advanced is something that can give you an edge because it is different, it presents a puzzle to the opponent that he has no solution or limited solutions for.
    Sometimes the advanced and complex is just a big freaking wast of time.
    Other times it is what makes the system 100% effective as opposed to just "good enough".
    Most will say that boxing is simple and basic but boxing can be very advanced and complex as well, it depends on what level you are and where you are taking it and IF you need it to be more than just "good enough".
    Psalms 144:1
    Praise be my Lord my Rock,
    He trains my hands for war, my fingers for battle !

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    West Virginia
    Posts
    1,436
    I think the question that needs to be asked is how effective can an individual person make it.

    Often in Kung Fu you have intricate techniques and details that teachers or practioners make more complicated than they really are. You strike with the fist (different postures), open hand, and elbow. You can break this variety down into Dragon's Knuckle, Crane's Head, Monkey Paw, Leopard Paw, Phoneix Eye, ect, ect., but in the end it is a strike with the forementioned part of the body. Ask yourself can you do this technique in sparring or fighting. Is it a technique better suited for striking from a distance or striking from clinch.

    These are the kinds of questions one needs to break down "advanced" techniques. Advanced to me means being able to pull off this technique in several scenirios, not just one. Jab, Cross, Hook, Uppercut are the strikes found in boxing, however the ability to strike with these four punches in a range of scenirios takes years of practice and experience. Kung Fu is no different.
    "The hero and the coward both feel the same thing, but the hero projects his fear onto his opponent while the coward runs. 'Fear'. It's the same thing, but it's what you do with it that matters". -Cus D'Amato

  5. #5
    advanced doesn't mean "complex"

    I can use the jab very simply

    I have a lot of "advanced" ways to use a jab

    Complex means having a lot of moving parts, and stages, none of which works in a real fight

    the use of angles, slipping, intercepting, countering, etc are all advanced and used all the time
    Chan Tai San Book at https://www.createspace.com/4891253

    Quote Originally Posted by taai gihk yahn View Post
    well, like LKFMDC - he's a genuine Kung Fu Hero™
    Quote Originally Posted by Taixuquan99 View Post
    As much as I get annoyed when it gets derailed by the array of strange angry people that hover around him like moths, his good posts are some of my favorites.
    Quote Originally Posted by Kellen Bassette View Post
    I think he goes into a cave to meditate and recharge his chi...and bite the heads off of bats, of course....

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Huntington, NY, USA website: TenTigers.com
    Posts
    7,718
    one of the things I like about Hung-Ga is that on its most basic level, crashing, slamming, element punches, grab and punch, it is easy to learn, and highly effective.
    Many people leave it at that, and are fine with it. Others enjoy the pursuit of the more subtle aspects and skillsets-which is fine too.
    "My Gung-Fu may not be Your Gung-Fu.
    Gwok-Si, Gwok-Faht"

    "I will not be part of the generation
    that killed Kung-Fu."

    ....step.

  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by TenTigers View Post
    a front snap kick =beginner
    front snap kick intercepting the opponent's intent and movement, shutting him down on the half-beat=advanced.
    Quote Originally Posted by lkfmdc View Post
    I can use the jab very simply
    I have a lot of "advanced" ways to use a jab
    as BP Chan used to say, it's not the "what", it's the "how"...

  8. #8
    Complex only if your learning format is missing parts.

    Complex only if there is alot of parts to be work on before learning forms.

    Simple to learn when you have all parts and then to learn forms.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Location
    Los Angeles, CA
    Posts
    1,355
    Complexity and Advanced is necessary, or else we will always be at the same low level.

    As for better? What is better? Basics are best. Advanced is basics applies in variation or set up in a hidden way.

    If it doesn't get preserved, we will have lost it, then have to re-engineer it in future generations.

    If we can't make it work for ourselves now, maybe we're not advanced enough to do it, or have not trained realistically enough in drilling it, or are too obvious trying to apply it.

    As for fighting, you can learn core essentials in a short period of time and mostly train that for fighting, spar under all circumstances and apply a few go-to tools. Then spend the rest of your life perfecting the allegedly complex.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Midgard
    Posts
    10,852
    Complexity can be an inhibitor in any endeavor if you cannot make sense and use of what you are doing in a 'natural' fashion. In training, working on complex strategies, or applications is ok, that's how we push our self many times. In actual application outside of a strictly learning and developing environment complex is something that does not come into play much after a fashion, it does, but only in the eye of the beholder. what i mean is that while it may seem complex to your or your opponent (the person not doing what ever it is that appears to be complex), what you are doing in your fight will be what comes out naturally due to your training. Perspectives change with experience. Everyone has 'advanced' material in their core set of tools. You may try for some advanced thing or other yet with a very basic enter and be shut down, or set that left right left jab cross hook with some fancy feet and weaving and floor your opponent.

    I think more important is being able to use what you train interchangeably.

    so to me, that answer is really yes and no at the same time.
    Last edited by Lucas; 04-13-2011 at 01:14 PM.
    For whoso comes amongst many shall one day find that no one man is by so far the mightiest of all.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Knoxville, TN
    Posts
    94
    It also depends on who you plan to fight. There's an old saying that says, "Don't fear the 1000 of kicks someone has practiced once, fear the 1 kick someone has practiced 1000 times." However, I disagree with this statement. If I know that someone will only throw a front snap kick off of their right leg when its behind them in a bow stance, I know that I can focus on defending against only hand techniques unless they are in a left forward bowstance. If I know how to defend against that one technique, I can defeat that person, if all other things are equal.

    The more complex a "style" of fighting is, i.e.: the more variety of maneuvers available to a fighter, the less predictable that fighter is. Being able to anticipate an opponent's likely steps makes up for deficits in speed and power.

    That being said, the more complex a style is, the longer it would take to become proficient in enough techniques to actually be able to apply them martially.

    The question becomes, as previously stated: why do you want to study MA? There also is an added question of WHEN do you want to hit the apex of your abilities. If you want to learn to fight quickly, learn a few moves (like a western kickboxer, or even western boxing). You can become proficient in the majority of the techniques more quickly. This is not to say that you can't get any better after a short period of time. You can still get better, but I'd say the returns would greatly diminish. If you want to become a great fighter, but have a long timeline for your goal, you could learn a more complex form.

    Personally, my system has multiple forms with multiple theories. We have a sparring form that is designed to teach a beginner basic self-defense techniques in a matter of a few months. You probably wont be winning against accomplished martial artists of similar abilities, but you will be better at fighting or self defense in a quicker period. After learning that basic set, we continue to learn multiple "complex" forms and styles, anything from tiger to crane to drunken.

    Personally, I aspire to master the drunken immortal system. Why? Because I find it interesting and challenging. I can see that it will be drastically inefficient to learn it for combat purposes. My body type, lack of flexibility, and other issues make it highly unlikely that I will be good at it for many years. However, I am not likely to get in a fight or need self defense. My goal is challenging my body to do things that I can't currently do. Its like climbing a mountain with the only justification being "it is there." I'm sure I could be a better fighter in less time, but for me Kung Fu is about a lifestyle. Its about devoting time to practice something just to see how well you can do it, if you continue to do it over and over for a looooooooong time. Why? Because when I started I couldn't do Kung Fu. Now I can (sorta). And I find that (that I can now do things that I couldn't before ) awesome.
    Sith Legal Kung Fu is unstoppable.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    MD
    Posts
    1,168
    IMO, fundamental education, and the teacher make an art complex.
    Fundamental education, in that a person has learned enough, not necessarily and not even primarily in martial arts, but in life experience, that they can make intelligent logical correlations of what is grounded in worldly reality and what is fluff, or at least more so than not. It can become more apparent after being in the TMA community for a while, meaning being aware of other schools/styles/training out there, and observing.

    The teacher, if they make it complex, it will be complex, especially if the student lacks fundamental education, or is gullible enough to become entrapped in the hocus pocus and all the Carradine-esque confucian like statements.

    When I first started training, I came upon VHS videos of Hai Deng doing a one finger handstand against a wall, and poking holes in sand bags. I saw "monks" licking glowing red hot iron shovels and showing visibly impressive feats of flexiblity, and what looked like the ability to resist damage from wooden and metal attacks. I read stories of Wang Ziping growing a tree, and as it grew, jumping over it daily until he could jump over a seven foot tall tree, and defeating russian a Russian strong man with his kung fu. I thought if I could learn the "secret" , I would be "the deadly".
    After a few months when I got into sparring at the school, both my Sifu and the chief sparring instructor let me know that there was no "d3adly". Just to keep training and improving.
    Down the line, I discovered there was plenty of fluff in what I was learning, probably even more so now than then. But there was also some really good solid "simple" things that were and are taught, and although fighting can be attributed a lot to the individual, it still says something about the system if a bunch of individuals succeed well under the same training. So either, the place just attracted already decent fighters, or the training/teaching/learning had something to do with it as well. I believe it was the latter.

    Although an already long post here, I'll continue to the next point.
    I still think it is plausible for there to be a great training method, but very few with the ability to teach it properly. For something to be considered great is really subjective, and can be independent of how well one or some can teach it. There is also the possibilty that something is at or not far from it's inception, so it could be logical that there wouldn't be many to teach it, and of those few, it is certainly reasonable that a minority may actually be able to teach it (communicate it) well.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Shell Beach, CA, USA
    Posts
    6,664
    Blog Entries
    16
    1 is better than 1,2, and 1,2 is better than 1,2,3. If you can use

    - double legs to take your opponent down in 1 step that will be the best.
    - single leg to get your opponent's leading leg, and then hook his back leg to take him down in 2 steps that will be the next best.

    Simple is alway better. You can kill twice as mang enemies within a certain amount of time.
    Last edited by YouKnowWho; 04-13-2011 at 07:38 PM.

  14. #14
    There's no quick or right answer, but your questions raise a larger problem with gung fu in general. In my estimation, many hard styles have become just as protracted as soft or internal styles. Historically, hard or external styles were the quickest road to self-defense. They didn't involve the lengthy study of body harmonization through slowed movement and breath work as found in internal styles; rather, they focused on physical conditioning (muscular and bone) and sparring. Brute force is quicker and easier to cultivate than redirecting and reapplying an opponent's energy.

    The focus today has shifted from martial application to martial art. Gung fu has tumbled down the dark green Fujian mountain slopes and along the way every dam style has picked up taolu after taolu after taolu (exercise sets or forms). Forms were once a minor tool masters used to pass down concepts and techniques of a lineage and to an extent, work on physical conditioning. Time was spent more on martial application through drilling of technique and sparring. Today forms are a major tool and for many teachers' have totally replaced martial application outside of static demonstration of possible application. There are the obvious reasons for this, and if this is what you're looking for then this type of 'complex' system is better or best suited to you. Granted, you will always be in a state of 'getting better' and 'taking away a lesson or two in your ever-lasting losses to those more athletic or more intent on learning martial application, but your teacher will be forever encouraging as you pay your way through the martial rainbow of never ending achievement.

    It's hard to find teachers that are good at both passing their art and training good fighters using a style's fighting concepts. My lineage of Bak Sing has synthesized our forms to mirror how we fight using our style at the various levels of progression. All our secrets are there in the most basic of forms we teach, but without the legend and understanding that comes through putting in the hard work, and self discovery with gentle leading, it will always remain basic and the secrets forever lost. There is methodology that needs to be followed to open the next stage, and every style differs (plug in 30+ forms here), but once a practitioner is able to read their style's legend and converse in their own style, the application is Gung Fu wide regardless of style. The difference only being in the belief structure of ones' martial art.

    We all walk a common road to a final destination that honestly shouldn't take longer than 2 years to attain with solid and consistent work/study. Just like with any physical activity, the answers are in the basics or foundation of skills we were all trained in. It may take another 10 years down that road to truly master all aspects, but in Today's society a teacher does not have 10 years with a student, nor should an adult student need 10 years with a teacher.

    nospam
    佛家

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    San Francisco
    Posts
    10,579
    Blog Entries
    6
    double spaces man! i have to go get me reading spectacles to read that novel you just wrote bruddah
    Hung Sing Boyz, we gottit on lock down
    when he's around quick to ground and pound a clown
    Bruh we thought you knew better
    when it comes to head huntin, ain't no one can do it better

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •