Zyaga Writing about whatever the hell I want, cuz it's the Interwebz!

Archive Results for ' teacher'


26Jan/096

Effective Teacher/Sifu/Sensei

Everyone tends to question whether certain Martial Arts are truly effective or not, but the biggest problem isn’t whether the Martial Art is effective or not. It is whether the Sensei, who will be teaching you, is effective or not. I’m simply going to use the word Sensei as the representation for teacher, Sifu, etc for the rest of this article.

It’s one of those things where it doesn’t matter if someone has or hasn’t told you about them, you simply know that they are a great and effective teacher. They may teach the same content as everyone else, but the way they teach it, the methods they choose to use to demonstrate things, etc all add to together in unison and it no longer matters what anyone else says about that person because you now have your own well opinionated outlook on that person and their teaching methods. It’s a wonderful thing when it happens. Too bad it doesn’t happen more often. However, I got lucky, and over this past weekend I got to have this experience again. I’m not going to mention a name, because I don’t know that persons views on having it listed, so I’ll stray away from that since it really shouldn’t matter anyway. All I will say is that the Sensei is a woman.

The class began like normal, with around 10-15 people having attended, where we would stretch our muscles and ligaments as to not injure them later on. But as class further progressed, I noticed when practicing various things, that she made the class feel quite at ease, at least for me. I no longer cared what the others were doing next to me, because I was fixed on doing the things she said to the best of my ability. I’ll admit, Aikido is a big change for me, so I’m definitely a beginner all over again in a lot of areas and to be honest, I love it.

Later on, we were divided into basically two groups: the more advanced and the newcomers. The class was a beginner class but many higher ranked students attend to work on the fundamentals( and have fun ;) ). When we got to the point where we were working in pairs, attempting to perform the technique she had just showed us, Sensei would come around and correct us. It wasn’t the fact that Sensei corrected us, it was the way she did it. Sensei made it very easy to understand and break down each movement into pieces. At one point, Sensei was demonstrating the move on me for my practice partner(nage) to see how he should put me(uke) down in a pin. The flow of her movements took me down effortlessly(on her part of course :P ). When Sensei got me into the pin, she was able to demonstrate the slight difference of not having your knees close enough to the uke’s shoulders and the result of that difference AKA me auto-flinching in response to the sudden torque generated. I may not have much Aikido experience, but I’ve had enough Martial Arts background training to notice when someone is effortlessly performing techniques.

Obviously, you can’t really describe all that well how, what, and why that Sensei is so great at teaching, because you just have to be there to experience it for yourself. But, for those who have had the chance to train with people that make you feel like this, you’ll understand what I mean. It’s not what they teach, it’s how they teach it.

19Nov/081

Natural Aggression

There is a wide controversy that continues still today as to whether aggression is a good feature for a Martial Art student to have. Some argue that aggression is bad because it allows it to get the better of you and so you start thinking with emotions, aka your mind gets “clouded”. Others argue back that aggression gets your blood pumping and allows those who are even normally docile to immediately jump in and start fighting back if a situation arises that calls for it. I can see both sides of the situation, but both of those sides have it wrong and both sides have it right. What they don’t seem to realize is that there are different types of aggression.

Marks over at MarksTraining wrote an article about aggression: Aggression in the Martial Arts. In his article he wrote:

Image brought to you by: http://www.flickr.com/photos/matteo-mazzoni/

Image brought to you by: http://www.flickr.com/photos/matteo-mazzoni/

Take the following example. A new student starts training and after a couple of lessons of learning basic techniques, his told he will start sparring. Really nervous as its his first time, he does not really try any techniques he has practiced, instead just stands there taking many controlled punches as his sparring partner decides to go light on him. This carries on for the next few lessons, but his sparring partner strikes him harder and harder in a bid to make him counter. Knowing that the beginner has to start throwing punches back, his teacher shouts, “hit him, hit him”. After a few more lessons of the same punishment, the beginner decides that enough is enough. However many times he gets hit, he makes up his mind that he shall also start hitting back, hard. His aggression increases immensely and as the weeks go by, he learns that he has to also strike back himself in order to save taking any punishment.

You may have been in this predicament or know someone who has. Someone who goes from being non aggressive to be becoming someone who does not take any abuse from anyone and uses aggression to overcome others.

Obviously for self defense situations, he would probably find that he shall be able to take care of himself but in the long run has the aggression he has built through training and sparring done more worse than good. Is today’s martial arts training producing bad people instead of good ones which is what the old masters intended?

I think in the situation he was talking about, yes, the way the teacher taught has caused the student to learn aggression in the wrong way.

The teacher is basically wearing the student down until he “snaps” and starts fighting back. That kind of aggression is angry aggression. The student should actually be learning natural aggression, as I like to call it.

In angry aggression mode, the student is caught up with emotions and thus that will actually decrease his skills and technique and not allow him to learn properly. In natural aggression mode, the student learns to be naturally aggressive and play rough, but at the same time he attaches no emotion to that aggressiveness. The same way when brothers or friends play rough, especially in sports, but each other is not really trying to hurt the other person. They attach no emotion to their aggression.

Each student will learn natural aggression differently, but one of the big playing factors is to quickly get him hitting back so that he feels comfortable in doing so. If you wait till he simply gets upset and starts swinging, he’ll learn the wrong type of aggression. After awhile, it can be a hard type of habit to break in a student. Because I’ve learned natural aggression I can safely say I can aggressively spar with anyone without attaching emotion to that aggression.

Aggression also spans off to more intricate areas such as “how much” aggression. For instance, I believe there is such a thing as relaxed aggression, but I’ll leave that for another article.