Extend your energy into their fascia - Qin Na Explained

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июл 2024
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Комментарии • 75

  • @THEMARTIALMAN
    @THEMARTIALMAN  2 года назад +11

    LAST CALL: Registration is ending soon for the next 𝐏𝐫𝐚𝐧𝐚 𝐃𝐲𝐧𝐚𝐦𝐢𝐜𝐬 𝐌𝐚𝐬𝐭𝐞𝐫 𝐏𝐫𝐨𝐠𝐫𝐚𝐦 scheduled from January - June 2022 with 𝐌𝐚𝐬𝐭𝐞𝐫 𝐇𝐮𝐚𝐢 𝐇𝐬𝐢𝐚𝐧𝐠 𝐖𝐚𝐧𝐠 to guide those interested in step-by-step instruction both martially and spiritually. This 6-month mentoring program is geared towards those who are serious about mastering the internal arts. Both theory and practice will be expounded and demonstrated in detail, free from tradition and lineage. In addition, for those who have been practicing an art such as Tai Chi or Aikido for many years yet fail to demonstrate internal skill spontaneously, the Prana Dynamics Master Program is the opportunity to fine-tune your understanding and master your inner energy.
    Click this link to find out more about the course: themartialman.com/courses/prana-dynamics-master-program

    • @shannmisteri7093
      @shannmisteri7093 2 года назад +1

      The person has to be close enough for you to grab them for that, if I'm close enough you grab me you're close enough for me to attack you, it looks simple in a demonstration but in actual combat it's not so simple.

    • @nternalPractice
      @nternalPractice 2 года назад +1

      @@shannmisteri7093 Not the point. The “touch” and “sensitivity” that is required takes years of training and to simply instruct that one should be “light” (at the point of contact) gives the false impression that you have just been taught something.

    • @trevorohara4070
      @trevorohara4070 2 года назад +2

      It is to take possession in the instant direct the opponent . If The technic is well rehearsed try to relax and not over think feel pressure and act in the moment.

  • @messengerofiexist2139
    @messengerofiexist2139 2 года назад +24

    Thank you for finding teachers capable of expressing the internal aspects of their respective arts.

  • @ClydeDerrick
    @ClydeDerrick Год назад +3

    maybe the best explanation of using chin na I've seen. thanks

  • @georgecostanza2695
    @georgecostanza2695 2 года назад +4

    Interesting. I can’t discount the possibility there’s something happening that can’t be communicated through video; but on the other hand, it’s so incredible I can’t truly believe without feeling it myself.

    • @malmess2164
      @malmess2164 10 месяцев назад

      C'est la meilleure attitude qu'on puisse avoir, observé sur soi avant de porter un jugement positif ou négatif

  • @anotherboredperson
    @anotherboredperson 2 месяца назад

    "I can take control of his fear" This is a very important distinction to understand because its important to how, why and when it works.
    I had a training partner who was very autistic who a great deal of this would not work on him. He would not comply to the pain signals when torqued the way other people would. He claimed he was "double jointed", but all over.
    This did not protect him- he was very easy to injure because he did not have reflexive tension that would cause him to twist up this way.
    More than once, I gave him multiple sprains, and simply had to quit doing this with him. His body simply didnt react in a way that would protect him from the damage these motions would do.
    People can be in certain mind states that allow them to ignore these signals and chin Na will not work as expected. You might very well injure them without actually causing them to coil up.

    • @lilithfairness7268
      @lilithfairness7268 24 дня назад

      this is a very valuable comment to add here. I have dealt with this issue in a few students. I would add that just as they refer to autism as a spectrum now, there is a spectrum to how different neurodivergent people react and don't react to this. It is good to have knowledge and understand what you said. It can help make many peoples training safer and more productive. Likewise, if someone is teaching, it is good for their other students to know about this. It is tragic when a student hurts another student through no fault of their own, and even worse when they blame and shame themselves for it. I would like to add my thanks for the video that brought us here. Master Wang's work is excellent and valuable and I appreciate having these videos.

  • @trevorohara4070
    @trevorohara4070 2 года назад +4

    As always the most fantastic informative ancient innovative feeling the students pain 🙏 reminding me of tecki needan.

  • @bajuszpal172
    @bajuszpal172 Год назад

    Yes Sir, Mind over strength. Thank you, Best regards, paul, 67, retired istructor of Karate.

  • @rayankrystar3742
    @rayankrystar3742 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for the present.

  • @alexblue6991
    @alexblue6991 2 года назад +3

    It's always good to be relaxed when fighting

  • @gunnerhiro394
    @gunnerhiro394 2 года назад +11

    A lock is a lock is a lock - whether finger, wrist, arm, leg, foot, neck, etc... - same principle - don't make it complicated.

  • @bajuszpal172
    @bajuszpal172 Год назад +1

    Dear Sir, excellent introduction into Chin-Na. What I appreciate is pointing out the importance of releasing our muscles that loosens the grip and applying a twisting motion mostly, as I have seen, mostly to the side. And this is what I miss in your comments regarding the principle of applying twist, namely the directions and the distances beginning from wrist through elbow, shoulder and spine locks. Beginners will appreciate it when deciding which lock to apply. Best regards, Paul, 67, rertired instructor of Karate.

  • @wakeupthebear
    @wakeupthebear 2 года назад +2

    Very good explanation.

  • @artsmartiaux8992
    @artsmartiaux8992 2 года назад +1

    Merci maitre

  • @tc47101
    @tc47101 2 года назад

    Good

  • @bbaptie
    @bbaptie 2 года назад +5

    Thank you 🙏 most instructive

  • @carlosdlonga6507
    @carlosdlonga6507 2 года назад +5

    Truly appreciated Master.. Im still learning to control my own body positioning and energy flow properly.. Nihao.. PS: Nice clips one of my favourite channels.. greetings Martial mate

  • @pantheonastrology9020
    @pantheonastrology9020 2 года назад

    wow

  • @vinbin4343
    @vinbin4343 Год назад +1

    This looks like a less flashy version of akido

  • @Ghost12561
    @Ghost12561 25 дней назад

    But how could you can get hold of that palm in a real fight? - I think that is the main question.

  • @OWR_Mission
    @OWR_Mission Год назад

    Howard goes hard on these demos 😬

  • @user-kp3hd9wr4w
    @user-kp3hd9wr4w Год назад

    I think tamotsu miyahira sensei's explanation is more makes sense and better

  • @JimmySlacksack
    @JimmySlacksack 2 года назад +8

    i always worry he's going to tear a ligament on that poor lad

    • @kwantumd
      @kwantumd 2 года назад +2

      He always goes hard for demos for some reason, maybe the ego.

    • @alungriffiths8611
      @alungriffiths8611 Год назад

      @@kwantumd if he had ego he would not be able to make it look so powerful and easy at the same time

  • @jerommelewis
    @jerommelewis Год назад +1

    A lot like Aikido teaches this

  • @perrypelican9476
    @perrypelican9476 2 года назад +6

    You are very skilled but you must stop saying ok so often. I think you know that and are trying. I would love to learn from you, but I am in Canada and 70 years old. Is it too,late for me to start now? The one thing I really don't like is that you hurt people much more than necessary to demonstrate. But you are definitely very skilled and knowledgeable.

    • @paulmucha4833
      @paulmucha4833 2 года назад +3

      Hi Perry, I am in Canada (Toronto) and just a bit younger than you and a participant in Howard's program. I would say that it is never to late to start and you may find many benefits from his guidance. One of the important keys is to have a practice partner to help validate one's progress.

    • @symbolsarenotreality4595
      @symbolsarenotreality4595 2 года назад +2

      ok

  • @SheikhAlladeen
    @SheikhAlladeen Год назад

    Explained ?

  • @Dino-HTP-67200
    @Dino-HTP-67200 2 года назад +1

    do you allow me to share your work ???

  • @fisharefriends598
    @fisharefriends598 2 года назад +2

    Ant say much about the teacher, but that was a top notch student. Didn’t scream out once in pain. They were some real painful joint locks
    As a practical martial art, it’s same as Akido. Not very practical. But useful if you have the grip of a gorilla

    • @terencelau143
      @terencelau143 2 года назад

      Aikido techniques came from Kung full.

  • @zionrealtors7517
    @zionrealtors7517 Год назад

    Just about all martial arts teach joint locks

  • @conorfiggs234
    @conorfiggs234 Год назад +1

    “Energy energy energy” it’s called technique.

    • @anotherboredperson
      @anotherboredperson 2 месяца назад

      its a linguistic quirk. It pays to understand what they're trying to communicate- its a useful mental shorthand

  • @SoldierAndrew
    @SoldierAndrew 2 года назад +7

    The MartialMan, you will find Daito Ryu to be most eye opening should you train in Japan or in Russia in Daito Ryu.
    It's an invisible art, much like many internal arts that rely upon tendon strength, relaxed muscles and biomechanical leverage.

    • @saberserpent1134
      @saberserpent1134 2 года назад +3

      I think what really makes Daito-ryu unique is how it was adapted for military and law enforcement. Using non-lethal joint-locks and shime-waza to nuetralize opponents without causing them permanent physical damage is a pretty impressive skill-set, imo.

    • @somerocketleagueguy
      @somerocketleagueguy 2 года назад

      I am not MartialMan but I may take a look into that

    • @Gieszkanne
      @Gieszkanne 2 года назад

      @@saberserpent1134 What you mean is just Jiu Jitsu.

    • @Gieszkanne
      @Gieszkanne 2 года назад +1

      Andrew
      What you mean the level of Aiki-no-jitsu is not with all Daito Ryu branches. Some are just external.

  • @TAROTAI
    @TAROTAI Год назад

    OK? OK? No it's not OK!

  • @tiborzkarate1
    @tiborzkarate1 Год назад +1

    This is brutal force joint manipulation, anybody can do this with basic knowledge as Aikido technique.

  • @ZymixProductions
    @ZymixProductions Год назад +2

    This Master can defeat a group of Elite UFC fighters all at the same time just by using Qin No power 🔥
    They don't want that smoke

  • @parsifal40
    @parsifal40 11 месяцев назад +1

    The great art of Bullshido

  • @nternalPractice
    @nternalPractice 2 года назад +9

    Ha Ha! It‘s hilarious that truly profound principles can be “given away” for free (to millions of people on the internet) because almost everyone thinks being “light” means going limp. They could watch this video, and practice it a million times, and still get absolutely NOTHING.

  • @joyalways1179
    @joyalways1179 Год назад

    This is just locks…huh?

  • @daviddawes2862
    @daviddawes2862 2 года назад +11

    Wow! He sure is good at hurting non resisting opponents.

    • @40JoCharles
      @40JoCharles 2 года назад +12

      It’s not about hurting, it’s about controlling or neutralising your opponent. If the opponent is resisting they just go down faster. 😂

    • @daviddawes2862
      @daviddawes2862 2 года назад +2

      @@40JoCharles Nice theory. Too bad that little creep isn't willing to show us how fast he can take somebody down. There might be a reason.

    • @Classicmoviesetc
      @Classicmoviesetc 2 года назад +4

      @@40JoCharles Exactly! Also, if opponent resist the exponent will change to another technique according how the opponent resist. This situation training not sparring(so-called resisting). Partner feed the practitioner to help learner of a techinque to learn it for a particular situation. NOT SPARRING!

    • @gongfutaijimy
      @gongfutaijimy 2 года назад +2

      Qin na is really more useful for controlling untrained opponents when used in the way of the video. It's a very useful skill for de-escalation and control in real life. It also trains you to identify structural weakness in even trained opponents, although it won't be directly applicable.
      A resisting opponent won't even let you grab them like this. It's occasionally useful against trained, resisting opponents if they don't know what is coming, but most of the time they will be ready and won't let themselves be that vulnerable, and that's fine, since it's not the point.
      Not everything is for 1v1 MMA fights.

    • @daviddawes2862
      @daviddawes2862 2 года назад

      @Tai Chi Tube Open your eyes and look a little closer. This kid was a little tougher and didn't complain. But the fact is the little creep who pretends to be a Sifu has yet to demonstrate his skills on a resisting opponent.

  • @JonseyWales
    @JonseyWales 2 года назад +6

    Pseudo science babble.

    • @happylobsterpatatas
      @happylobsterpatatas Год назад +2

      As long as it works, it is science. Maybe words are not the same, but knowledge and hard work is all that matter in Kung fu.

    • @paulosilveira4326
      @paulosilveira4326 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@happylobsterpatatasArt not science...
      Science is a method of producing knowledge through replicable and peer-reproducible methods with the same results...
      Today I observe two groups using the term science where it is not a science...
      Pseudoscience, using the credibility of science for marketing
      Racismo, like Scientific wrestler, Here in the supremacist sense...Where equivalent arts practiced by other people are categorized as arts, but the same techniques when fall In the hands of white Europeans, they magically become something superior, SCIENCE...There's even a book from 1924, Scientific wrestler and art of Ju-jutsu... There are other old books prior to Nazism, which also They use the term ART and science in the same way, Science when it is white and European and art when it is other people, most of the time THE SAME TECHNIQUES, It's a scientific application in the hands of white Europeans...and an art in the hands of the original people who created the Technique... Surprisingly Over the past few years, the term scientific wrestler has emerged from the darkness, And this supremacist culture too...
      But in the case of the comment, it's just pseudoscience...

  • @mikeloconti4896
    @mikeloconti4896 2 года назад +6

    a big crock of horse manure

    • @dustinashley1065
      @dustinashley1065 Год назад +1

      Even horse manure is energy if you go deep enough. Your way of thinking, however, is shallow and void of any substance. But it's okay, the rice filler in a dish is just as important t as the sauce and meat in its own way. Good luck with your journey, sir

  • @markf9871
    @markf9871 2 года назад +5

    Smells like Bullshido..

    • @dustinashley1065
      @dustinashley1065 Год назад +2

      SMH. These types of skills go way over the head of someone that can't raise their way of thinking. It's okay, not everyone should know certain things and should just stick to the wushu kung-fu that the common person practices.

    • @markf9871
      @markf9871 Год назад

      @@dustinashley1065 still pretty smelly..