I'll watch for that in class. I'm currently in doubt about how much pressure the sliding front foot should have. One nice thing about yoshinkan is that there really is an indepth reason for everything, unlike Karate, which I did for 20 years, fanatically. I studied under 3 prominent and famous Japanese Karate people starting in the early 60s when they were in their prime, but eventually became convinced it was an arbitrary bully art as I also watched them be unable to do it anymore with age.
I'll watch for that in class. I'm currently in doubt about how much pressure the sliding front foot should have. One nice thing about yoshinkan is that there really is an indepth reason for everything, unlike Karate, which I did for 20 years, fanatically. I studied under 3 prominent and famous Japanese Karate people starting in the early 60s when they were in their prime, but eventually became convinced it was an arbitrary bully art as I also watched them be unable to do it anymore with age.
Thanks for posting. I can now refer to this for home practice.
Thank you for the post.
Thanks ❤
This is such a good video which shows you the techniques several times from several angles. Helps me practice at home. Many thanks!
So this is what Bruce Lee was referring to when he talked about, "the mechanical man."
😊
What is the purpose of the slight movement of their front foot at the start of Tai no henko ichi?
What is Yoshinkan Aikido? Is it a style of Aikido?
Look at the sokumen irimi nage. Tai no henko ichi is the same move that you use in the sokumen. The only difference is you have no partner here :)
How does it differ from normal Aikido?
nomadicsx かたてもちしほうなげ
nomadicsx yoshinkan is normal aikido.
Aikido motion is kendo motion