Is there a secret behind the success of everyone who develops true abilities in martial arts?
Can you build a single attitude and see your performance improved almost immediately?
Fortunately, the answer is yes, not only is the key to success, but you may already know what it is. So why do I write this article, if you already know this embarrassing attitude? Just because, like many things, there is a huge difference between understanding something and functionalizing it. In this article, I want to explain this secret, but more importantly, I also want to provide some insights on how to apply it.
The secret is the contact with the material. Have the nature and content of the event. This is where many people encounter difficulties without realizing it, because many martial arts training environments provide a fairly shallow participation model. Of course, some people go beyond the training they can accept, but those people are often those who will get better anyway. As a coach, I don't have to worry about those people. I still want to help them reach their potential as effectively as possible, but I know that even if they are abandoned on a desert island and have no resources, they will still get better. I am more concerned about the opportunities of ordinary martial artists, and their training environment may seriously underestimate the educational methods.
Since this is an article, not a novel, I will not introduce to readers the many ways in which the training environment does not encourage specific participation. Instead, I only ask one question:
How many applications have you learned about the skills you have mastered today?
To illustrate my problem, I will give an example. I recently worked with one of my coaching clients at the Muay Thai Neck Clinic. Currently, these skills are experiencing a recovery in MMA, probably due to the destructive use of UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva on the neck clinic. In the past ten years, I have used these skills as an important part of my personal martial arts game, not only because of their general efficiency, but also because they are very suitable for my body and fighting style. In fact, I will say that they are the core of my game. No matter what I do in my training, I spend some time each day to further develop my understanding of this set of skills. Now that I have studied these skills in depth, you may think that I have exhausted the potential of technological change.
It's a long way off.
In fact, in explaining some of the concepts and principles to my clients, I proposed several new ways to improve my own use of the neck clinic - these ideas have been integrated into my game. This experience is not common. No matter how small the insight or subtitle, I learn something new in this area every time I train. These minor improvements can be combined synergistically to create effective overall overall improvements.
Now, forget about neck fastening or any other specific skill area and focus on the concept of participation. No matter what you are doing, it doesn't matter how much depth and exquisiteness you are willing to achieve. Like any other art creation [after all, we call it martial arts], insight sometimes seems to happen effortlessly, almost through magic, while at other times you have to concentrate and fight against the material and tear away the insight. force. However, it happened, and it is important that it is possible. However, this is correct if you are using the material.
In other works, I commented on the limitations of technology-based martial arts training methods, which are especially common in classical martial arts. One of my main criticisms of this approach is that it almost completely eliminates the potential for deeper and more complex engagement with technical materials. If imitation is the purpose of your training, you train just to copy some ideal forms, then you from
Yes from
Contact with materials, but in the shallowest possible. In contrast, the conceptual approach to training provides the greatest potential for participation, as well as the potential for growth and growth.
Orignal From: Martial arts - the real key to success
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