Wing chun forms completely suck with respect to teaching useful practical fighting footwork.
Discuss!
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Wing chun forms completely suck with respect to teaching useful practical fighting footwork.
Discuss!
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Siu Baat Gwa
Fut Sao Wing Chun Kuen teaches effective direct (entering, intercepting) and evasive footworks in all the forms including Siu Lin Tao. We also have a footworks form, āSiu Baat Gwaā which teaches inner and outer circle concepts.http://futsaoyongchunkuen.com/
I guess we are not including the dummy form?
Anyway, hereās my POV. Wing Chun hand motions as seen in SNT, CK, and BJ, are simple units of movement-- precise and relaxed, but otherwise dead building blocks that are brought to life by a practitioner through an understanding of theory, chi sao practice, and san da practice. While these simple movements are limited in number, they can be combined in limitless combination and used flexibly in application. This, as opposed to many other styles where one goes through forms fighting an imaginary opponent and developing specific techniques.
Footwork is similar. The first form roots you to the ground and links your upper and lower body; the second form teaches you how to take that basic, stable stance and apply it in motion. And with the combination of these basic units of turning and stepping, you can come up with all kinds of combinations of footwork.
Now add the dummy form and you end up with all kinds of interesting footworkā¦
Aelward⦠game on!![]()
(No, weāre not including the dummy form as most schools I know teach it after the other three.)
OK, taken that itās building blocks and itās up to the student to make it come alive through chi sao and san da⦠but⦠also a lot of fighters, and MAists say that basics are important, and they also say footwork is one of the most important aspects of MA etcā¦
in that case,
OK, keep it clean⦠![]()
Signed,
The Devilās Advocate.
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Oh and Sam, thanks for the link⦠it sounds interesting: too bad the video section is still under construction.
Well, Iām too much of a newbie to truly know the answers - but hereās my stab at 'em.
I think the answer to this Q, in my opinion, is that while the forms teach us concepts, basic movements, points of reference etc, they are never isolated. Drills go hand in hand with the forms, and it is here that footwork comes into play.
Maybe itās once again a question of how Yip Man streamlined the forms. In some other lineages I have seen the forms were longer and included a more varied use of footwork.
Dunno
With the turns in CK combined with the steps, you could use these motions to move in all directions.
To promote balance? Perhaps also to emphasis that whatever you do itās double handed. When doing Dan Chi Sau with movement, for example, the retracted hand at your side should always be adjusting.
We start, at my Kwoon, doing Poon Sau stationary as a means to work on the roll, keep structure, use and develop stance etc⦠but as soon as possible introduce movement, steps, turns etc. Stationary Chi Sau makes no sense to me personally. For developing Poon Sau, sure⦠but for Chi Sau proper⦠naw. Iām looking to work off a moving partner.
Good question. When working off random attacks I find myself using the simple stepping motions from the Knife Form to fill space. (I have been shown stepping motions, but not the Knife Form itself).
Stop asking difficult questions!!
An interesting question, however. In my first lesson I was shown and stumbled through, YCKYM, Bik Ma, Huen Bo, Chor Ma, Punching, Tan Sau. And then did some partner drills using them. I think in my second lesson I was shown the first few movements of SNT.
Didnāt someone once say every step is a potential kick?
Do you mean why do we not stand on the ball of our feet? Rooting primarily, IMHO.
We look to move forward whenever possible, but I have worked drills that involve stepping at a 45 degree angle forward AND back. Why not in the forms? Blame Yip Man⦠always messin with the d@rn forms, he just couldnāt leave em alone!
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iāll bite ![]()
Originally posted by Mat
in that case,
you have to learn how to stand before you learn how to walk. standing correctly isnāt as easy as weād like it to be and can take longer than we want to wait.
There are the three (or 7) most important steps in chum kiu:
if you look at it this way; there arenāt many other leg motions that can be performed with wing chun structure other than those found in chum kiu
as with any motion found in any WC form, itās not directly an application or a technique. its a body mechanic. once you can properly move your body you can strap whatever hand tools you want on top of that power generation and do many many things. again, things take time. you canāt immediately be shown how to throw a super-strong punch on day two, when you donāt know how to stand, let alone move. either way, if you look at it as a body mechanic instead of a technique, it is there from day two.
again, you have to learn to stand before you can learn to walk. stationary chi sau teaches you how to stand and absorb force while standing. WC follows a logical progression, taking things slowly gives you an opportunity to really examine what itās trying to teach you. Rushing straight into sparring without having solidified the basics will lead one to think wing chun is useless, or tan/fook/bong are useless, or the steps are useless, because they canāt pull them off. This is from lack of practice, not any lack in wing chun: Does it make sense that as soon as a motion is shown you should be able to use it perfectly? chances are you need to work at it and figure it out.
offline? iām not sure what you mean. a little clarification is in order
If you look at huen bo as a body mechanic as opposed to a technique or application to be used as found, itās in half the steps of the wooden dummy.
advancing stepping kick? what do you mean? wouldnāt shift -> kick -> double bong sau be an advancing stepping kick? what about shift -> kick -> bong + wu sau?
what about shifting the foot back and going into cat stance? this is not flat footed. as to the rest, a flat foot gives much better balance and root.
see above about shifting the foot back.
moral:
Nice summary, TjD.
In TWC, footwork starts (in forms anyway) starting with the Advanced SLT. Our CK form teaches us much more ā such as half steps, full steps, cross-steps, t-stance, and shifting. BL continues it. MYJ teaches us the remainder.
Maybe TWC is the exception to this question.
Keep in mind that footwork is trained outside the forms as well. I learned all the footwork before my second form.
Mat-
Footwork and its principles are in EVERY wing chun form and the jong and the weapons. On line, sidestepping, turning, circling,
changing, chasing, cutting in,cutting off, evading, closingāits all there.All in due course- developmentally laid out- one by one-in the progression of the forms..
If anyone(generic universal) hasnt learned them- pointless to blame the subject
or style(wing chun).Best to find someone who knows and learn from them.
joy chaudhuri
joy
Troll!..
All the steps necessary are in the forms*.We only have to extract them and use them.
The Jong,Kwan, Bui Gee,Bot Jam Do,Chum Kiu are full of themā¦But are all based on YGKYM.
All are also worthless without proper structure or body unity in orfer to ābaseā a Wing Chun Motion.
Originally posted by Mat
[B](No, weāre not including the dummy form as most schools I know teach it after the other three.)ā¦
in that case,
While Iāve seen the MYJ taught earlier than BJ, assuming knowledge of just the 3 formsā¦
From your questions, you obviously have a grasp of the issues at hand, what do you think?
Originally posted by teazer
While Iāve seen the MYJ taught earlier than BJ, assuming knowledge of just the 3 formsā¦
i learned the entire MYJ form before learning BJ! however usually my sifu teaches the first two sections of MYJ before BJ, then the rest afterwards⦠depends on the student really.
or it mighta been that i bought a jong that summer and he liked how i was progressing ![]()
TWC footwork
Look here for TWC forms
http://www.wingchunkwoon.com/empty.asp#top
look at the bottom of this page for TWC footwork patterns.
http://www.wingchunkwoon.com/form.asp
Look here for Wooden Dummy Sections 1-4 and Application
http://www.wingchunkwoon.com/woodchi.asp
Phil-
Thanks again for the link to the generously shared info. on your
well done site. Congrats.
Joy C.
Sifu Redmondās site rocks.
Re: iāll bite ![]()
Originally posted by TjD
you have to learn how to stand before you learn how to walk. standing correctly isnāt as easy as weād like it to be and can take longer than we want to wait.
I donāt think thatās an excuse for an MA with supposedly quick to learn basics to fighting ability. OK standing is as basic as it gets, but footwork must be very close behind for a practical fighting art.
There are the three (or 7) most important steps in chum kiuā¦
Yep, true. Practising CK very slowly and/or precisely (as of course you should) will help you to understand these steps⦠But the mechanics with fast full contact with another person basically change these steps into at the most: two! One straight forward, and one straight backward (albeit into a cat stance). The differences in fighting are too subtle to be worth concentrating on to the exclusion of say, getting more practise in on something usually more applicable like the beautiful feeler that is huen bo, the fast following steps of pin ma, or practising a cat stance with someone (eg, IMO a cat stance is absolutely useless if used as a direct backward step, and also it is pretty useless to practise its delicate dynamics without another person testing you).
[b]The steps with bong and wu are actually two steps: moving a leg outwards sideways, then pulling a leg inward sideways
The steps with the double bong are two steps as well: moving a leg outwards fowards, then pulling a leg inward forwards
if you look at it this way; there arenāt many other leg motions that can be performed with wing chun structure other than those found in chum kiu
Again: huen bo - a basic mainstay of many MAs and very effective if trained a lot in a variety of sits⦠not only in the third of a long-time learned set of three forms. And, I know some WC lines donāt have it, but pin ma is pretty useful too.
as with any motion found in any WC form, itās not directly an application or a technique. its a body mechanic. once you can properly move your body you can strap whatever hand tools you want on top of that power generation and do many many things
Yep itās a body mechanic. But itās fallacious and a waste of training time to practise a body mechanic that frankly is completely different to the mechanic you will be using⦠in fact itās training something else entirely!!!So, training a double bong sao, which I donāt believe I have ever used in the kwoon or out, is actually training a body mechanic you donāt use, so how are you going to strap on another hand tool?!
again, you have to learn to stand before you can learn to walk. stationary chi sau teaches you how to stand and absorb force while standing.
Yep, completely agree, bad trolling on my part Iām afraid!
WC follows a logical progression, taking things slowly gives you an opportunity to really examine what itās trying to teach you.
If we are assuming that we are not dealing with people who are completely unfamiliar with the basic anatomy and physiology of the human body I would say it is too much examination and not enough practice! I like to think that most people are not so physically incompetant as to need so long on their own without any resistanceā¦
offline? iām not sure what you mean. a little clarification is in order
As in not on a direct front-centre to front-centre line. Stepping off to work the angles, 45, 30, however few degrees necessaryā¦
If you look at huen bo as a body mechanic as opposed to a technique or application to be used as found, itās in half the steps of the wooden dummy.
Of course itās a body mechanic! That doesnāt answer my question! And I was theorising about slt, ck and bj, not the dummy, as the dummy is usually the last to be taught of the four unarmed forms, and after a long time⦠so it still doesnāt answer why most of us do not learn huen bo from the startā¦
advancing stepping kick? what do you mean? wouldnāt shift -> kick -> double bong sau be an advancing stepping kick? what about shift -> kick -> bong + wu sau?
No, they do not advance. Most of the versions of ck Iāve seen and the two Iāve been taught have a turn and kick, and donāt actually advance with a step. OK, so everybody says, ābut the principle is there to turn any step into a kickā, but thatās like saying āthe principles are there for all of us to be able to do the splitsā: doesnāt mean we can without practice!
what about shifting the foot back and going into cat stance? this is not flat footed. as to the rest, a flat foot gives much better balance and root.
Cat stance is not flat footed. It is also useless unless you practise it with somebody moving against you.
A flat foot does not give you better balance or root: it makes you much much easier to throw, knock over, trip, and it makes you much slower.
see above about shifting the foot back.
Hmmm, straight back step, root, floating front foot: youāre either going on your ass or you gonna root well enough for him to punch you and just leave your boots standing where the rest of your body wasā¦!
Yet in chi sao, or most āself defenceā apps Iāve done in WC when you get pushed back you go off line and/or come straight/tangentially forward again⦠but if you use ckās step back, you have sacrificed your forward returning mobility for a root which will get you flattened.
[b]moral:
My valid points to this trolling are:
1)You have practice moving footwork from day one to compliment your understanding of the root form slt.
2)You should practise stationary and moving footwork with a partner as and whenever possible.
3)You should do it all slowly, then practise again quicker and lighter.
4)You should do huen bo from the start. It is the life of WC footwork.
5)You should still spend the vast proportion of your chi sao as a beginner stationary.
I am trolling but great answer, and I would appreciate anyone elseās input, or your comebackā¦
Cheers Bnb, no time to answer yours too Iām afraidā¦
Peace all,
Mat,
The thinking personās troll/eight-year beginner.
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Mat-trolling indeed!!!![]()
Fasle- Wing Chun can be learned in a short amount of time.
False- the double bong sao is not useful.
Many motions have specific developments in mind- same goes for the double bong sao.
Originally posted by yuanfen
[B]Mat-trolling indeed!!!
I donāt think thatās an excuse for an MA with supposedly quick to learn basics to fighting ability.
Which is specific in avoiding saying anything about learning the whole of the WC system well in a short amount of time. Itās a road. Itās life. I did say and I do believe that the basics of WC (as assimiliable in a relatively short time by a relatively able person) can be applied to a fight situation within a short time.
And that is precisely one of the reasons why I think WC footwork should be more comprehensively taught earlier than most curricula. Most people unfortunately seem to learn WC as a primarily static art.
2. False- the double bong sao is not useful.
Many motions have specific developments in mind- same goes for the double bong sao.
By itās inclusion at that stage of CK, it is given over-prominence: I stand by what I said; its body mechanics are not useful for many fighting abilities, or even for practical generation of energy into the opponent.
Iām not saying I disagree with the wisdom of the forefathers⦠I have no way of knowing what their emphases were directly, except through kuen kit etc!:eek: I am saying I disagree with the emphasis it is given over for example, ahem letās say, footwork drills, by many teachers I have come across.
Re: Re: iāll bite ![]()
Originally posted by Mat
I donāt think thatās an excuse for an MA with supposedly quick to learn basics to fighting ability. OK standing is as basic as it gets, but footwork must be very close behind for a practical fighting art.
[/b]Yep, true. Practising CK very slowly and/or precisely (as of course you should) will help you to understand these steps⦠But the mechanics with fast full contact with another person basically change these steps into at the most: two! One straight forward, and one straight backward (albeit into a cat stance). The differences in fighting are too subtle to be worth concentrating on to the exclusion of say, getting more practise in on something usually more applicable like the beautiful feeler that is huen bo, the fast following steps of pin ma, or practising a cat stance with someone (eg, IMO a cat stance is absolutely useless if used as a direct backward step, and also it is pretty useless to practise its delicate dynamics without another person testing you).
[/b]Sorry mate, this inward outward sideward awkward but has completely thrown meā¦! I know itās tricky but can you try that explanation again?
Again: huen bo - a basic mainstay of many MAs and very effective if trained a lot in a variety of sits⦠not only in the third of a long-time learned set of three forms. And, I know some WC lines donāt have it, but pin ma is pretty useful too.
[/b]Yep itās a body mechanic. But itās fallacious and a waste of training time to practise a body mechanic that frankly is completely different to the mechanic you will be using⦠in fact itās training something else entirely!!!
So, training a double bong sao, which I donāt believe I have ever used in the kwoon or out, is actually training a body mechanic you donāt use, so how are you going to strap on another hand tool?!
Yep, completely agree, bad trolling on my part Iām afraid!:DIf we are assuming that we are not dealing with people who are completely unfamiliar with the basic anatomy and physiology of the human body I would say it is too much examination and not enough practice! I like to think that most people are not so physically incompetant as to need so long on their own without any resistanceā¦As in not on a direct front-centre to front-centre line. Stepping off to work the angles, 45, 30, however few degrees necessaryā¦
[/b]Of course itās a body mechanic! That doesnāt answer my question! And I was theorising about slt, ck and bj, not the dummy, as the dummy is usually the last to be taught of the four unarmed forms, and after a long time⦠so it still doesnāt answer why most of us do not learn huen bo from the startā¦No, they do not advance. Most of the versions of ck Iāve seen and the two Iāve been taught have a turn and kick, and donāt actually advance with a step. OK, so everybody says, ābut the principle is there to turn any step into a kickā, but thatās like saying āthe principles are there for all of us to be able to do the splitsā: doesnāt mean we can without practice!
[/b]Cat stance is not flat footed. It is also useless unless you practise it with somebody moving against you.
A flat foot does not give you better balance or root: it makes you much much easier to throw, knock over, trip, and it makes you much slower.[/b]Hmmm, straight back step, root, floating front foot: youāre either going on your ass or you gonna root well enough for him to punch you and just leave your boots standing where the rest of your body wasā¦!![]()
Yet in chi sao, or most āself defenceā apps Iāve done in WC when you get pushed back you go off line and/or come straight/tangentially forward again⦠but if you use ckās step back, you have sacrificed your forward returning mobility for a root which will get you flattened.
I donāt. As OJ rightly pointed out, I was trolling!
The other topics were mostly lineage crap.
My valid points to this trolling are:
1)You have practice moving footwork from day one to compliment your understanding of the root form slt.
2)You should practise stationary and moving footwork with a partner as and whenever possible.
3)You should do it all slowly, then practise again quicker and lighter.
4)You should do huen bo from the start. It is the life of WC footwork.
5)You should still spend the vast proportion of your chi sao as a beginner stationary.
I am trolling but great answer, and I would appreciate anyone elseās input, or your comebackā¦
Cheers Bnb, no time to answer yours too Iām afraidā¦
Peace all,
Mat,
The thinking personās troll/eight-year beginner.
[/B]
heheh yeah i can see the trolling. as to the trolling responses the only thing i can say is ālet me show yaā ![]()
as to your valid points i agree with most of them, except for the huen bo thing. iād say the first step/kick in the knife form is the life of WC footwork. depends if you like a line or a circle i guess.