Okay stick to the thread.....?
Well Jim the thread is about dilution of the Arts.
I agree with you Jim, all styles have suffered this fate to some degree.
Jorvick offered up Tai-Chi as the classic example of an art that few people understand what the forms are about, lots of guys teaching movements but most of them don't have a clue as to their martial applications. Like he says you have to look long and hard before you discover someone with the answers. I believe most kata based systems suffer the same issue to a large degree. But if one were to hook up with someone like Sifu Chen in Edmonton you would be learning all of the applications, because he's another guy that knows.
Now what do you think Ray did when he learned forums and no one could tell him how to use them? Well he went and took at a little of this and a lot of that. Sounds like he started looking for answers else where, eventually he hooked up with a dude that new the applications and his forums now have purpose. One might say that Jorivck set out to assemble his ryu.
What has been lost in transmission from generation to generation?
Bill admits that Uechi may have lost its tegumi...Good on you Bill, I agree! I've been working on an article / DVD for the past year or two entitled..."Uechi-ryu a stand up grappling system." Actually the preliminary preview to Rick was a factor in my final certificate in the IUPA. (My teaching certificate) I’ve spent damn near three/four years doing nothing but Uechi and the clinch. Is the Sanchin guard and the wauke well suited to clinch work? Does Uechi kata have tons of techniques for the clinch range? Do ducks like water?
I don’t think Bill needs the peanut gallery heckling him about his statement. In his years in the art he has come to the conclusion that this may be an area where the system may have lost something. He doesn’t need to be insulted for expressing an opinion on the original question posed in this thread. Now Bills got over 30 years in this art…and it’s not recognized but I’m coming up on thirty myself….but what do we know? Well for starters fuk of a lot more than you guys …so how many months you guys train Uechi? …With a good teacher?
Pretty fuking arrogant…I wouldn’t presume to show up at the aki site or the chunner site and piss in their corn flakes. But then I’m not a master of all styles like some lads. I’m still trying to put my own ryu together and don’t have time to dictate how other folks train…but I’m happy to learn from what they have to offer. However. All is in Wing Chung doesn’t work for me Jim. BTW. Do you have a training group, a school. Do you still do WC or are you just an internet troll?
So if things have been lost why not seek to explore them. I for one am weary of the 2nd coming of Yip man trying to tell us what Uechi is and what to train and not to train. Apparently Jim can’t find any clips on this old oki art. Well it’s called oki sumo these days Jim. Just because you don’t find it doesn’t mean it’s not there.
Goju is full of throws and locks as is Uechi. I’m sick of guys who have not trained past white belt in this system telling everyone what Uechi is and what it is not. It’s as ridiculous as having someone who does not box explaining how to box.
Jorvick, your right…Nathan is a wee bit out of the box. goon on him! Marcus and I explore this concept of sanchin/wauke being push hands positional transfer, I explore the concept to my students. As does Rick.
The wauke, as Van points out can be a pre-emptive attack instead of a block as it is taught at a beginner’s level.
The guys in the IUPA call it a positional transfer. If you can use this transfer to create disparity between the upper body and the lower body positions the spine gets locked out and the opponent hits the dirt.
Jim, I think Bill mentions when a student is ready a teacher appears….I think the teacher is always there but if the student can’t get past the first month or two of training….they will never understand anything you offer them. If you don't know schit what can we tell tell youthat you will understand?
We have two guys here who have had a taste of Uechi and now have the answers. To bad they didn’t stick with the system long enough to learn something about it.
Ray …This will piss a few folks off…but I believe the principles of this system enable a practioner of this art to fight at all ranges, from stand up to the ground…but our nitch is the clinch. In fact tegumi and clinch fighting and Uechi are one in the same in my look at the world.
So what is tegumi…well it’s sumo now…but it was clinch fighting, locks, takedowns, and short striking art. You know…just like Uechi!!!
But as Bill says lots of it’s gone, some folks get it some don’t. Because the "All in WC dude" doesn’t know what it is …it doesn’t exist. What an open mind! Try goggle Jim!
http://www.seinenkai.com/art-sumo.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OLzlNHQLbU4
http://media.putfile.com/Tegumi-Practice
http://www.iainabernethy.com/articles/article_12.asp
http://totalkarate.blogspot.com/2007/04 ... arate.html