Johnlogic121
Orange Belt

Joined: 23 Jul 2007
Posts: 156
Styles: Montgomery Style Karate, Ninjutsu, Isshinryu, Judo, Mang Chaun Kung Fu, Kempo
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Posted: Wed Feb 27, 2008 11:56 pm Post subject: Punching Calisthenics |
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In the martial art of traditional Hung Gar, students used to take the first two years of their study only working on a simple punching drill. The same punching drill can be found in many styles of karate today: you essentially stand in a deep Horse stance and punch with one fist while retracting the opposite hand to the hip. The arms go out straight and the forearms twist before impact so that you develop the forearms with the rest of the muscles that thrust the fist out striaght like a spear. Hung Gar students used to do this for two hours a day, continuously, for two solid years before they learned any of the Hung Gar forms. The rigor of this discipline taught patience and character, and it also gave the students an outstanding physical development for punching ability - Hung Gar stylists back in the day were renowed for "one punch" knockouts. Later on, the arm calisthenics were taught along with the forms, so that the first two years weren't so boring! According to sources I have read, punching calisthenics are really the only way to develop the many punching muscles in exactly the right proportion for punching. You can build up pectorals by push ups and bench presses, but the many smaller muscles that guide a punch into position are only exerted fully when you punch. For this reason, punching calisthenics are indispensible to soldiers, police officers, and civlians because everybody wants their muscles to be developed in the right proportions to do the job. Good bench pressing helps, but refining the musclar development takes repetitive punching practice for each punch you use. Even just five minutes a day will help, as a fight normally doesn't consist of continuous punching, so you will develop good resistance to muscle fatigue in the arms by doing punching calisthenics. How many people do punching calisthenics regularly? You can also do fifty to one hundred kick per day with good results to your kicking ability. How many kicks do you do a day? One of my karate instructors recommended 1,000 techniques per day for proficiency, which you can do in less than an hour at a rate of 1 technique per 3 seconds. Does anybody else here do 1,000 techniques per day? _________________ First Grandmaster - Montgomery Style Karate; 12 year Practitioner - Bujinkan Style Ninjutsu; Isshinryu, Judo, Mang Chaun Kung Fu, Kempo |
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bushido_man96
KF Sensei


Joined: 31 Mar 2006
Posts: 13452
Location: Hays, KS
Styles: Taekwondo, Combat Hapkido, Aikido, and I research Medieval Combat
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Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 12:05 am Post subject: |
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I don't imagine I do 1000 techniques per workout. Each of our TKD classes opens with punching in the sitting stance, much like the Hung Gar practice. However, we don't do it for very long. _________________ Success is where preparation meets opportunity.
www.chiefswarpath.com |
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ying&yang
Purple Belt


Joined: 29 Jan 2008
Posts: 513
Location: melbourne
Styles: JKD , and 15 others
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Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 1:14 am Post subject: |
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Yes that sounds right , i would do easily more than a 1000 techniques per workout. _________________ I think that there is no 1 style , and that to truly become a great martial artist and person you must take information from where ever you can. |
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