Gedan finishing technique for the four angle sequences. |
I was thinking about all of this while I was practicing Seiunchin. I like the movements of Seiunchin, but I thought that at least this kata was one that I felt fairly secure about, that I knew the bunkai. There are, after all, only five sequences in the kata (not counting repetitions). And it's fairly clear, I think, that the counterattacks (or receiving techniques, if you will) are all against either cross-hand grabs or two-handed pushes. Of course, if you don't see the sequences, then even this part won't make sense. But that's a whole other issue.
The beginning of the second of the north-south sequences. |
Anyway, I realized that I may have failed, after all these years, to notice something about the structure of the kata. If you understand the structure of a kata, it can explain a lot about the techniques themselves. The problem is that at least in some cases there may be a fair amount of guesswork, though just as in any scientific inquiry there are some things that indicate at the very least whether you're on the right track or not.
But what I noticed was that the sequences on the angles--since this part of the kata is constructed in an "X" pattern, the angle sequences move to the northeast, the northwest, the southwest, and the southeast, in that order--all end with a downward forearm strike to the back of the opponent's neck. (This is the technique that is sometimes referred to as a gedan barai or gedan uke.) There are four of these angles but only two different sequences since each is repeated on both the right and left sides. What is of interest here is that the downward forearm strike to the back of the neck is a finishing technique, just as it is in Seipai kata.
The beginning of the third of the north-south sequences. |
The other three sequences of the kata all occur on the north-south axis. The first of these, of course, is the opening sequence, which is partially repeated three times, with the "finishing" technique tacked onto the third repetition--the left hand wrapped around the opponent's chin and the vertical right elbow attack coming up into the back of the opponent's neck. (I've written about this in an article in the Journal of Asian Martial Arts, 2005, vol. 14, no. 2.)
The second of the north-south sequences is the high-low technique done in shiko dachi and shown on both the right and left sides. The second of these, with the right arm up and the left arm down, shows a right hand grab of the opponent's right arm and a left, low nukite attack to the opponent's ribs. This technique seems to finish with a right forearm attack and downward elbow (and one should emphasize seems).
The technique that ends the second north-south sequence but seems less than satisfying as a finish technique. |
But structure is everything. The structure or pattern of a kata is often the key to understanding the techniques--in this case, the sequences of the kata. I had always felt that the "finishing" techniques in the first two
north-south sequences, while good, seemed less conclusive, less lethal, than many of the finishing techniques in the other classical kata or even in the third of these sequences, and this was what I was thinking a few weeks ago while I practiced Seiunchin. And then I realized that the two patterns of the kata--the "X" pattern of the angle sequences and the north-south line of the other three sequences--might show two different finishing techniques, but only two. The first one is the use of the downward forearm strike. The second is the knee kick to the head in cat stance. The supposition is that the "yama uke" and knee kick in cat stance--the last technique of the kata--is the finishing technique for all three of the north-south sequences, only it's just shown once, tacked onto the third sequence. This structure--of showing the finishing technique tacked onto the final repetition--is typical of the classical kata. It also makes the end of each sequence more lethal, finishing the sequence with a more decisive blow, if you will. And it fits. That is, it's easy to move into this final technique from the end of either of the first two north-south sequences.
The technique that may, in fact, be the finish technique for each of the north-south sequences. |
I found this realization, though admittedly only an educated guess on my part, to be exciting, even if I had been wrong in how I had been thinking about Seiunchin all these years. Live and learn. I still don't know, however, whether it was the discovery that I found interesting or the realization that the structure of the kata was more complex than I originally thought, that whoever created this kata had been so clever at hiding something and yet keeping it right out there in plain view at the same time. It was all so fascinating. And, of course, it also reminds me that there is always so much more to learn.
hi Giles, I continue to read your blog as usual, and as usual I found myself asking questions..
ReplyDeletewhat you are saying is that the last tecniques of each kata, may be used as final finishing of each sequences? Or are they only related to the north-south sequences? I'm am waiting for your book being released, you know! Keep posting and enjoy hard training! Andrea
Hi Andrea, Hope you are well and warmer than we are here. I was only speaking about Seiunchin. The last technique of the kata as the finishing technique only for the three north-south sequences. The X-pattern or angle sequences use the "gedan uke/barai" as a finishing technique.
DeleteMy brother just returned from a two week vacation in Tuscany! Wish I was there. All the best to everyone, Giles
Hi Andrea,
ReplyDeleteAs I'm sitting in an airport with not much to do and Giles hasn't responded yet, let me see if I can add some clarity.
With, perhaps, the exception of Suparinpei, all the kata are thematic. They show variations on how to deal with a common mode of engagement. As such they have a structure (geometry) that needs to be discerned to understand the kata. In this case - Seiunchin - that is two superimposed patterns, an "X" with an "I" through the vertex. The problem here is that the propensity for physical dmamge to the opponent shown in the four "X" endings is only shown in one, the last, of the "I" sequence endings. The resolution is that the maximally-damaging ending shown once and last in the "I" sequences can be applied (because it fits well movement-wise) to the other "I" sequences. This brings a common level of damage to the opponent for all of the sequences of the kata. A geometrically sound construction if you will.
This construction of the final movement in a series being the most damaging to the opponent and intended to be applied to the previous sequences is seen in some of the other kata, but not all. It can be viewed as a level of response to the seriousness of the threat. You can disengage from the opponent early if the threat does not warant lethality. And that is shown to you in the construction of the kata.
Hope that this helps,
Bill
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ReplyDeletevery nice. thank you for this article. I saw this explained in youtube too. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OkK1ZvVXlEo
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