The expectation isn't in the unconscious mind either, Van.Van Canna wrote:
Bill postedBill, let’s not start dancing in circles again. The ‘expectation’ is not of the conscious mind…I thought you knew that.Bill Glasheen wrote:
Everyone's entitled to their opinion. And fencing people have their own shtick. But not for once have I expected my street opponent(s) (of doom) to pose and attack as (s)he might in some exercise.
No warrior lives his/her entire existence with the idea that every action just might imprint something bad that would cause him/her to do the wrong thing when facing a lethal threat. For example... I'm going to choose to love my fellow man and see the good in all people around me. But when a blade or a firearm is pointed my way, BOTH my conscious and my unconscious brain know that this is something very different.
And yet... all those years of loving my fellow man just might prevent that lethal threat from facing me in the first place.
I don't buy the obsession with imprinting, Van. Uechi yakusoku kumite are - to me - valuable tools that can be used to achieve a certain number of well-defined objectives. And I don't ever worry about what they don't accomplish. I've got other tools to do that.
To wit...
I have answered this question three times, Van. I just answered it above.Van Canna wrote:
Again, the question that gets ducked over and over is why did Rabesa write this in his book.Art Rabesa wrote:
Although your pre-arranged drills are great for certain things… I prefer something different to develop timing and readiness. I call it “You move…I move” _It not only encompass your ‘reading’ but timing as well.
As I see it, you're taking a passage from his book out of context to make a point. What Art said is self explanatory. He prefers a hammer to put a nail in a board and a saw to cut it in half. He prefers not to use a hammer to cut a board in half and a saw to drive a nail in it. That doesn't make either tool defective, does it?
The yakusoku kumites are useful tools that help us accomplish certain things. And there's no point making a big deal about what they don't accomplish. We've got all the tools we need to do whatever we want with our style. It's up to us to execute.
- Bill