What you accomplish with this celebration is:
- Embarrass your training partner...not a nice thing to do to a friend.
- Escalate the fight as the opponent now would like to have his/her own celebration.
- Potentially hinder the training of your opponent as well as yourself because your opponent becomes overcautious to avoid another embarrassment.
- As an experienced student, make yourself look silly...come on, act like you have done it before!!!! Yes, I am giving the OK to celebrate a bit if you have never landed a strike in sparring in the past.
- Show that you assume that you are so powerful that your strike would actually end the fight...what are the chances that your jab to the chest would actually knock the person out?
A few other pointers for eager sparring participants. If you successfully land a technique, make sure to keep your guard up and continue the fight...stay in the habit of being on guard. No premature celebrations that assume that the fight is over. Respect your opponent...martial arts has no place for those that enjoy hurting someone. Aim to learn...don't worry about how many times you hit or got hit, worry about improving your precision and proficiency.
2 comments:
Elevate the chess not the hit. Students should strive for multiple hits and counters. Looking for 1 hit misses the point. Maybe the one hit principle works for other martial arts, but the fact is, for Kung Fu it doesn’t end there. It ends when praxis ends. Mastery is striking/countering in continuous flow. AFTER that, question endurance & power and work to hit harder and endure bigger hits, but work the flow FIRST.
Exactly!!! Less worrying about one strike during the fight and more working on ensuring continuation throughout the fight.
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