Why change your body weight in an instant?

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  • Опубликовано: 9 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @SorenPrime
    @SorenPrime Месяц назад +6531

    This is called deadweighting hard to perfect even harder to execute while defending yourself

    • @bleuthaidesigns2887
      @bleuthaidesigns2887 Месяц назад +96

      @@SorenPrime precisely why you practice

    • @SorenPrime
      @SorenPrime Месяц назад

      @bleuthaidesigns2887 you misunderstand it's easy to practice in a controlled setting but to apply it in a moment of chaos you're not going limp tossing yourself at your opposition that is tantamount to suic*de

    • @kishorhegde7218
      @kishorhegde7218 Месяц назад +130

      Yes..our body stiffens instinctively while fighting.It takes years of practice to overcome instincts.

    • @jordanrock3494
      @jordanrock3494 Месяц назад +64

      If you learn how to breathe properly while taking strikes and have a training partner that you can train with daily, you can develop the technique pretty quickly. Just have one partner strike the other in as many ways possible, stationary and moving mixed in with light sparing, and you'll develop the ability in no time.

    • @jordanrock3494
      @jordanrock3494 Месяц назад +29

      Though it will take you decades to master and discover the depths of yourself, that's why now is always the best time to start if you already haven't.

  • @bleuthaidesigns2887
    @bleuthaidesigns2887 Месяц назад +3317

    You’re not changing your ‘weight’ … you’re changing your ‘center of gravity’ 😊 - very powerful stuff 😊

    • @wipoute
      @wipoute Месяц назад +137

      The way he explained the physics is wrong. Your Center of gravity stays the same in both cases. It's just that when you relax your muscles, they can't transfer the load from your weight to the ground, which makes your body want to collapse.
      When you land on someone without the help of your own muscles, they have to hold your entire weight because you yourself are not doing it.

    • @kristopherferrell3364
      @kristopherferrell3364 Месяц назад +36

      It just looks like he's farther back when he falls the " heavy " way.

    • @sonamdorje5843
      @sonamdorje5843 Месяц назад +5

      ​@@wipouteless words more practice

    • @sudeepreaves4476
      @sudeepreaves4476 Месяц назад +1

      ​U are right....

    • @PushDown99
      @PushDown99 Месяц назад

      ​@@sonamdorje5843ur dumb u cant understand 😂

  • @cybertelugu
    @cybertelugu Месяц назад +6406

    Karate master ❌ physics teacher ✅

    • @HaveANiceDayLol.
      @HaveANiceDayLol. Месяц назад +141

      Japanese Isaac Newton can throw hands for sure 👊

    • @user-cg2xf7tx4o
      @user-cg2xf7tx4o Месяц назад +34

      貴方は何言ってるんですか?格闘家は理論から固めてめていくのが定石ですよ?

    • @karan8354
      @karan8354 Месяц назад +8

      😂😂 ​@@HaveANiceDayLol.

    • @dion.one1
      @dion.one1 Месяц назад +13

      Both ✅️

    • @wipoute
      @wipoute Месяц назад +50

      The way he explained the physics is wrong. Your Center of gravity stays the same in both cases. It's just that when you relax your muscles, they can't transfer the load from your weight to the ground, which makes your body want to collapse.
      When you land on someone without the help of your own muscles, they have to hold your entire weight because you yourself are not doing it.

  • @rgoodsan
    @rgoodsan Месяц назад +1870

    This is why really good boxers learn to be relaxed and don’t stay stiff when throwing a punch.

    • @Ochay682
      @Ochay682 Месяц назад +39

      You're too stiff, loosen up. Is basically what he is saying

    • @abdelhakyac7285
      @abdelhakyac7285 Месяц назад +13

      Nope, thats for economising energy.....

    • @Jordanthecool7
      @Jordanthecool7 Месяц назад +23

      I train in Judo and they teach the same thing, to stay loose and relax . Don’t panic and spaz when going for grips .

    • @marcb8874
      @marcb8874 Месяц назад +2

      @@Jordanthecool7 j'ai connu des professeurs qu'on n'arrive pas a bouger et pourtant pas très lourd , on voit aussi cet force avec l'aïkido avec 5 personnes qui poussent et l'autre ne bouge pas comme si cloué au sol , ce dont je ne suis pas capable en judo

    • @binjiling
      @binjiling Месяц назад +2

      @@marcb8874 ça demande une position très forte avec les jambes gainées, tout le contraire de la souplesse pour le coup, haut du corps souple bas du corps gainé c'est le secret de la stabilité, à bien sûr adapter pour défendre

  • @Shinbikai-Shuto-Society
    @Shinbikai-Shuto-Society Месяц назад +800

    Excellent demonstration of the power coming from “dropping” into the tandien- thanks for the visual depiction👍🏼👊🏼🙏🏼

    • @vigneshwaran7437
      @vigneshwaran7437 Месяц назад +1

      You didn't understood 😂

    • @Yui-Mizuno-YMY
      @Yui-Mizuno-YMY Месяц назад +1

      tanden

    • @Shinbikai-Shuto-Society
      @Shinbikai-Shuto-Society Месяц назад

      @@vigneshwaran7437 👍🏼🙏🏼

    • @Ytube-mods-r-nazis
      @Ytube-mods-r-nazis Месяц назад +1

      @@Shinbikai-Shuto-Society excellent demonstration of taking a half step back. Ever held up a bed or anything real tall and walked backwards while 1 end is on the ground? It gets heavier the farther back you walk. Same idea here. Trick.

  • @mr.darben7998
    @mr.darben7998 Месяц назад +203

    Love her laughter.
    Instructor like him is hard to find, billion to one.
    I have had over 10 different instructors, I had one that was a magnet just like this instructor. Learn a lot more.

    • @PeezyElijah-sq9xr
      @PeezyElijah-sq9xr Месяц назад +1

      I have a Muay Thai Coach who Is KOOL. Diffinately One and billian😂😂😂🤦🏽‍♂️🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾 I Love him maaan he has no Idea how Much he Blessed me Just by being around us... His Energy. He Does Believe In GOD... And when he comes in, he's Doing the worm and doing the robot and All smiley It's like he high on the Kush😂😂😂😎 and sometimes hmmm maybe he was, But that's Never here nor there😂😂😂🙏🏾 The Point Is he blessed us. And Everything was Purely Intentional. He teaches us how to break dance sometimes also

    • @PeezyElijah-sq9xr
      @PeezyElijah-sq9xr Месяц назад

      It helps us to Loosin up and It helps us to Do leg sweeps little did I know even tho he told us A million times haha I didn't actually fully Know until I DID IT. So now because I know how to do that Break dance move on the floe now I know how to do a leg sweep

    • @PeezyElijah-sq9xr
      @PeezyElijah-sq9xr Месяц назад

      It takes confidence

    • @L3monsta
      @L3monsta Месяц назад +2

      The math here ain't mathing. Your sample data shows that they're more like 1 in 10

    • @ChiGivenTalent
      @ChiGivenTalent Месяц назад

      ​@L3monsta my thought as well 😂

  • @jenlewren
    @jenlewren Месяц назад +1389

    Nothing is more difficult to move than a limp toddler.... remember that

    • @Daun0007
      @Daun0007 Месяц назад +83

      How bout a limp adult?

    • @feelthenight7639
      @feelthenight7639 Месяц назад +30

      @@Daun0007I was about to say that 😂

    • @jestfullgremblim8002
      @jestfullgremblim8002 Месяц назад +28

      How about a corpse?

    • @yadayada1411
      @yadayada1411 Месяц назад

      @@jestfullgremblim8002 basically forever limp

    • @bozzskaggs112
      @bozzskaggs112 Месяц назад +11

      I know difficult. Try getting a cat with claws out of the carrier without gloves while at the vet's office.

  • @seansyguy
    @seansyguy Месяц назад +456

    That punch in the end almost broke the sound barrier

    • @Nicolai88
      @Nicolai88 Месяц назад +3

      impresie!

    • @hmm6415
      @hmm6415 Месяц назад

      Just like your lie 😂

    • @tahaabbady8799
      @tahaabbady8799 Месяц назад +6

      K-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-k-Katsumi Orochi refefence?!?!?! B-baki reference!!?!?!?!

    • @amoldivo
      @amoldivo Месяц назад +4

      It's normal if you wear those type of clothing...

    • @francododorico2301
      @francododorico2301 Месяц назад

      @SilatLalli
      Yes... But not every person makes that sound. It needs a sharp technique. I know that after 18 years of JKA Karate trainning.

  • @Jan-sb2ql
    @Jan-sb2ql Месяц назад +370

    When I was a small child, decades ago, I could make my body 'heavy' or light when my father was carrying me on his neck. So now I have to put this knowledge into a strike. Never too late to learn.😄👍

    • @CoFFee-uw5sv
      @CoFFee-uw5sv Месяц назад +1

      I remember doing something similar

    • @amoldivo
      @amoldivo Месяц назад +1

      Yes, except that I did this to my brother lol
      And not on his neck 😅 I just asked him to lift me up with his hands

    • @mitchellhayman381
      @mitchellhayman381 Месяц назад

      ​@@CoFFee-uw5svno you don't. I'm amazed how people could be so stupid. I feel sorry for you guys. Explore some other alternatives, because your 'memory' of supernatural powers is delusion. A very childish and stupid delusion, that obviously never happened.

  • @daryback7103
    @daryback7103 Месяц назад +10

    I like this sensei. He is teaching a most primordial law on martial arts body management in a very practical and eye catching way: core shifting.
    It's not just deadweighting, you can even shift it "up" as he pointed 2 times in the video. Deadweighting goes directly down, which is good for countering lifting and similar techniques.
    This is more refined, because you USE that law to your advantage. You can see that just from his toes and ankle he puts some force to put that deadweight in the direction of the other person, which amplifies a bit that force and directs it more diagonaly making it harder to sustain.

  • @mrstar9
    @mrstar9 Месяц назад +41

    Force vector changes when you relax your body thus the gal had to use upwards muscle strenght while her arms are stretched out which made the guy's mass heavier against a rather weak muscle (anterior deltoid).
    During the first demonstration, the guy's tensed muscles directs the force vector horizontally towards the gal. Because the vector is through the arm, there is no disadvantage of the stretched arm and the muscle group involved is way stronger, same muscles which makes you do push ups (pecs, triceps, serratus etc)

    • @danwachler5480
      @danwachler5480 Месяц назад +4

      Also you can see that his body, when demonstrating tensed, is fully hinging forward at the ball of his feet, whereas when he’s relaxing he’s hinging at the ankles first. Those 4-5 inches increase the downward force vector due to gravity you pointed out, while also having increased horizontal momentum. Seems tiny, but very noticeable!

    • @breakingthemasks
      @breakingthemasks Месяц назад +1

      This!
      Thank you for actually explaining the physics here.
      While I enjoy the mystic explanation in a fun way, the real physics is way more powerful to understand.

    • @AlvarHugosson
      @AlvarHugosson Месяц назад

      @@danwachler5480 Also the inch or so he moves back has an impact.

  • @erlaf2833
    @erlaf2833 Месяц назад +16

    This is from the very basics, everyone should know.
    But the way he explained it simply, quickly and clearly, in seconds,
    also with breathing. Very cool!

    • @mitchellhayman381
      @mitchellhayman381 Месяц назад

      Lol. Youre full of bullshit while having no idea. This man is talking bullshit. Everything he said is wrong.

  • @epistarter1136
    @epistarter1136 Месяц назад +191

    Probably won't ever use this in real life but its cool to see just how much centre of gravity impacts the weight you can apply

    • @k.l7524
      @k.l7524 Месяц назад +15

      This technique is used in different Applications

    • @chrisreyes6990
      @chrisreyes6990 Месяц назад +3

      He just said at the last part use that for punching. Always one

    • @Seiko-h5j
      @Seiko-h5j Месяц назад +4

      It's practical actually, When throwing a punch!! You'll get more power..👊🏻

    • @SBHighlander_74
      @SBHighlander_74 Месяц назад +5

      The point is if you Punch Kick just Relax your Muscle, Relax your Mind.
      the more you Relax the more you Control your Body and it can easy generate Power Strike!

    • @Jordanthecool7
      @Jordanthecool7 Месяц назад +8

      The literal act of falling onto the other person may not be useful, but the concept as a whole, and the usefulness of gravity is definitely good to learn for real life applications , and not just for fighting either.

  • @АльбионФармер
    @АльбионФармер Месяц назад +17

    This inconceivable feeling of excitement which is obtained through observing something simple that can increase your combat power.

  • @fafflerproductions
    @fafflerproductions Месяц назад +4

    This isn't because of center of mass, this is because when you tense up, you assist the person in holding you up. When you don't tense up, you're limp and force applied on you by those 2 hands is extremely uneven and more difficult to hold.
    Think of it like stopping a 100 pound boulder from moving vs a 100 pound water balloon. One carries momentum past the points of contact with your body

  • @saxyrep1
    @saxyrep1 Месяц назад +51

    His knowledge is mindblowing. True master!😮

    • @Ytube-mods-r-nazis
      @Ytube-mods-r-nazis Месяц назад +1

      @@saxyrep1 he took a half step back. More momentum and more weight falling on catcher. Ever held up something tall like a bed or plywood then walked backwards? It gets heavier as you go back. Same idea here. Trick.

  • @aristateles1549
    @aristateles1549 Месяц назад +29

    So that's why when someone is fainting then collapses, the damage can be fatal.

    • @xXOmoiUchihaXx
      @xXOmoiUchihaXx Месяц назад +1

      😣😣

    • @TeruIkuta
      @TeruIkuta 27 дней назад

      And it's harder to carry someone in unconscious state than normal.

  • @gragrim
    @gragrim Месяц назад +4

    Whats even better when lowering your gravity is bending your knees, pivot, and turn your shoulders in a rapid motion as you punch.. tyson demonstrates this extremely well..

  • @smr630
    @smr630 Месяц назад +19

    That’s why in any combat sport (boxing, kickboxing, MMA, etc.) when striking, your body should generally be as relaxed as possible until the moment of impact. This not only preserves energy but it also helps you hit harder, move faster, and react faster to incoming attacks

    • @aseksamr1818
      @aseksamr1818 Месяц назад +1

      A bit like a whip, all the energy circulates and accumulates fluidly until the very concentrated final impact.

    • @carlpanzram7081
      @carlpanzram7081 Месяц назад +5

      That has nothing to do with this.
      The reason you are supposed to be relaxed when striking is in order so you do not accidentally work against the direction you want to accelerate in. If you tense up, both the protagonist and antagonist muscles of the movement flex, it is counter productive.
      The thing the person above is demonstrating is a cheap trick, not related to being relaxed at all. They take a step backwards before they drop to demonstrate their "lower center of gravity" (this makes zero sense by the way). By stepping back, the angle of the movement of their body around the axis of their feet is more downward, which makes resisting their fall more difficult. They lay more weight onto their subject, that is all.
      You can test this against a wall.
      Step to a wall and fall forward, stop yourself from falling by bracing your hands against the wall.
      Now take a step backwards and do it again. Suddenly, even tho you weigh the same, it is 2x as difficult. Simple physics.
      I thought Asians regard math and physics highly?

  • @nyhyl
    @nyhyl Месяц назад +5

    That's basically what internal martial arts are all about, methods like this. Good demonstration!

  • @spiritualtaurus7942
    @spiritualtaurus7942 Месяц назад +7

    Her laugh at the realisation.❤️😂🤣😂🤣🇬🇧

  • @fornlike
    @fornlike Месяц назад

    The reaction of the woman is so irresistible and this master seems very great. Thanks a lot for this share.

  • @rotten2209
    @rotten2209 Месяц назад +21

    Same basic principle of kiai. "Yelling" while attacking or defending removes oxygen from the body and lowering the center of gravity so more torque can be applied. He's just doing it slowly but in a fight scenario, he'd have to make some noise while breathing out quickly because releasing that much air so fast will always make a sound. So I guess you don't have to scream but it's alot more daunting than just exhaling fast... It's a requirement for many karate styles while testing for upper belts in Kata.

    • @Thundergod_au
      @Thundergod_au Месяц назад +3

      It's not the releasing of oxygen.
      It's the tension you apply as you breath out.
      You can't be tense with lungs full of air.

    • @kedabro1957
      @kedabro1957 Месяц назад

      How does removing oxygen result in more torque?

    • @Lavie_Azure
      @Lavie_Azure Месяц назад

      ​@@kedabro1957More oxygen = more contraction, less oxigen = less friction

    • @denisbratic1920
      @denisbratic1920 16 дней назад

      ​@@Thundergod_auDa.Zapravo na taj način izbacuješ višak povratne energije kad udarac pogodi svoj cilj.Ja ispuštam zvuke kod cijepanja drva.Sasvim spontano.

  • @Monkey_on_Call
    @Monkey_on_Call Месяц назад +1

    Let it go.
    Let yourself flow.
    Slow and low.
    That is the tempo.
    -My Dad, quoting the Beastie Boys

  • @Rouie4444
    @Rouie4444 Месяц назад +4

    Stepping back gives you more weight. It's about the distance where your feet are.

    • @sugizotakuro
      @sugizotakuro Месяц назад +2

      That is what i saw. He just makes the distance longer than before

    • @nylesprint
      @nylesprint 25 дней назад

      Stepping back gives you, haduken! 😂

  • @johndoe4073
    @johndoe4073 Месяц назад

    Wonderful demonstration and explanation

    • @NOIEVER
      @NOIEVER Месяц назад

      😂😂there's no way you don't understand what he is doing

  • @nilsonpimenteldossantos3323
    @nilsonpimenteldossantos3323 Месяц назад +12

    This also I have tried with my wife. An it really works! Indeed, I knew this exercise from theater, and it's so nice.

    • @DishyLemon
      @DishyLemon Месяц назад

      So, like, are you sparring with your wife or...?

  • @klerain5774
    @klerain5774 Месяц назад

    Wonderful teacher!

  • @zinger7014
    @zinger7014 Месяц назад +82

    He was taking steps back before "relaxing" the body 😂

    • @reddaneali5997
      @reddaneali5997 Месяц назад +22

      Exactly it appears that he lands lower on the person's hand when "dropping his COG" I don't know why people still fall for this type of trickery ?

    • @carlpanzram7081
      @carlpanzram7081 Месяц назад +1

      ​​​​@@reddaneali5997People desperately want to believe there to be some sort of super natural, spiritual energy that they can harvest. It's magical thinking.
      Imagine this. Martial arts ability Requires years of grueling physical training as well as inherent talent. If you do not feel like you are fit to do that, and posses no inherent talent, then your last hope is that you can harvest some sort of energy that other people can not. You see this video and gain hope "I can be physically capable after all, by using this magic" 😂
      You might just hope to become super-human....
      Just eat well, do weight training and light sparring. That is too difficult and uncomfortable for most, so they seek short cuts. There are no short cuts. 😤

    • @fonz2002
      @fonz2002 Месяц назад +2

      Glad I wasn't delusional

    • @mhamzakhalid5385
      @mhamzakhalid5385 Месяц назад +3

      Yeah you are right about his step back. But by taking a step back when he falls on the other person his CG does move forward.

    • @abdulqahar2943
      @abdulqahar2943 Месяц назад

      Why don't u try it and see the different

  • @siddhantabarnowal3973
    @siddhantabarnowal3973 Месяц назад +1

    Its the component of weight. When at first two case, the leaning was small, so the vertical component of weight was smaller. This is because of fear instinct of our brain. But as you get relaxed, the leaning increases and so the weight component in vertical and hence large force generated. That's why lifting a fainted person is hard but injured person is easy👍

  • @randotobogon2824
    @randotobogon2824 Месяц назад +2

    One crazy thing you grounded your spirit but using power you demonstrate is true

  • @KATKattalestv
    @KATKattalestv 20 дней назад

    He has Beautiful Voice 💜😻

  • @Mysteryman242
    @Mysteryman242 Месяц назад +19

    This is a great way to show if you move back a foot or so you can increase your momentum

  • @coyz2209
    @coyz2209 Месяц назад

    Glad i learn taekwondo and reiki on my mid school, bullies never touch me 😊

  • @uuum5587
    @uuum5587 Месяц назад +10

    だからだよ、酔っ払いが重いのは(遠い目)

    • @natsunoyuugata
      @natsunoyuugata Месяц назад +2

      寝てる子も

    • @neciss
      @neciss Месяц назад

      すごい納得したw なるほど!

  • @leonestello
    @leonestello Месяц назад +1

    Dude's a Genius👍🧠

  • @xsdash
    @xsdash Месяц назад +6

    Nah.. he just increases a slight distance in between. That's why it feels like a higher amount of weight is being pushed onto the opponent's hands.
    As it requires more of a lifting force rather than a pushing force, like in the previous cases. ✌️

    • @Yiryujin
      @Yiryujin Месяц назад

      no, he is actually correct and even explained why. its called deadweight. when you fireman carry someone out, someone that is conscious and stiff is easier to hoist up and carry out than someone that is unconscious and deadweight.
      when they are deadweight and relaxed, body is floppy and harder to handle and move. when body is stiff some of the force or weight is supported by the person so its easier to handle.
      once lifted it doesn't matter because weight is the same, but pre lift it makes night and day difference.

    • @xsdash
      @xsdash Месяц назад

      @@Yiryujin i know what you mean to say, but the point you're making isn't creating that much of an effect in this very case.
      there are definitely several other factors as well, but i pointed out the most prominent one.
      The reason he gave was not even making that much of a practical difference.

    • @Yiryujin
      @Yiryujin Месяц назад

      @@xsdash honestly, it does make quite a difference when you're trying to hold up a prone person but not for punching power.
      This is one of the reasons why EMS and firefighters use backboard and stretchers, because the rigidity allows easier transport and lift compared to floppy person whose center of gravity is shifting with every minor motion. The stiff board stabilizes the center of gravity.
      This is why fireman's carry secures the arms and legs so that the center of gravity does not shift making it easier to carry someone out of fire. It makes a huge difference.

  • @_SweetLittleAngel_
    @_SweetLittleAngel_ 24 дня назад +1

    The center of gravity isn't actually going up. When you relax, muscles loosen and take much more space.

  • @i-am-at
    @i-am-at Месяц назад +4

    When "relaxing" he was 5-6 feet away from the guy, and when "tensed", he was a 3 feet away, of course when "realixing" the impact is greater than when "tensed".

    • @Yiryujin
      @Yiryujin Месяц назад

      ... its same distance, look at his foot. his right foot didn't move at all. its from the same spot all 3 falls/demonstration.
      relaxed body falling puts irregularly distributed bodyweight fully onto the other person. its 90 to 100% of your body weight.
      stiff body falling puts regularly distributed bodyweight onto your legs and the other person. at most its only 30% of your body weight.
      its physics. this is why its harder to carry unconscious person than drunk person that semiconscious.
      Any EMS / Firefighter will tell you the same thing.

  • @doncarloswijayakusuma
    @doncarloswijayakusuma 28 дней назад

    I love his explanation is Super 👏👏👍🙏

  • @Sickzero
    @Sickzero Месяц назад +3

    The only thing you're changing is the distance between you both, therefore changing the momentum of your impact.

  • @luissierra2350
    @luissierra2350 Месяц назад

    She's gorgeous ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @holdenmuganda97
    @holdenmuganda97 Месяц назад +4

    The falling step-Jack Dempsey.

  • @Paboriginal-k4z
    @Paboriginal-k4z Месяц назад +2

    Danke, sehr gut Erklärt.
    Sehen und Verstehen.👍🏻
    OSS aus Berlin.💐☯️🍀

    • @ZakJey
      @ZakJey Месяц назад

      Hallöchen

  • @Mr_Abdisalam7
    @Mr_Abdisalam7 Месяц назад +3

    Instructions unclear, I had a fight in the street with a girl, we hugged each other.. long story short, we're expecting our 2nd baby in 2 weeks!

  • @victorb96.
    @victorb96. Месяц назад +8

    He is not changing his center of gravity. He is just stepping further from the person the last time. It's amazing how people believe everything they're told in the internet without question

    • @Siganati
      @Siganati Месяц назад +1

      Watch again

    • @victorb96.
      @victorb96. Месяц назад

      @@Siganati no need, thanks

    • @Siganati
      @Siganati Месяц назад

      @@victorb96. ignorance.

    • @victorb96.
      @victorb96. Месяц назад

      @@Siganati yeah people are so naive...

    • @Naturgewalt69
      @Naturgewalt69 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@SiganatiHe is literally right? Exactly what I was thinking and suprised that everyone in these comments say how great He is, when He just fell with more weight by stepping more back 😂

  • @charlesgiltner5609
    @charlesgiltner5609 Месяц назад +1

    I love this wisdom.

  • @Despair_8
    @Despair_8 Месяц назад +3

    That punch in the end was powerful , so sound it made with air

  • @johndepalm4180
    @johndepalm4180 Месяц назад

    This guy is a really good teacher.
    I absolutely understand what he's saying.
    Although I know it helps that I have training previously.

  • @jokeer14
    @jokeer14 Месяц назад +4

    You are just starting further away from them when you “seem” more heavy.

    • @user-ku2rp5yx9u
      @user-ku2rp5yx9u Месяц назад

      I think the principal still applies, but yes I did notice that as well.

    • @luminosity1641
      @luminosity1641 Месяц назад

      ​@@user-ku2rp5yx9u What principal? Under same starting conditions he has the same mass and speed on impact. Thus the same kinectic energy.
      Only difference is, an uncooked spaghetto will be held up after impact, a cooked one will collapse in itself, because it does not have the stability to stay upright. It will not push you away any more than the uncooked one though.

    • @Fuannai04
      @Fuannai04 Месяц назад

      ​@@luminosity1641same principle as when you're focusing on doing something, you hold your breathing. For example balancing a rock on top of another rock.
      Also same principle as why it's easier to push yourself up while exhaling in a push up.
      Also same principle as why you don't fully relax yourself while leaning on a glass window/door. You lean on the glass but stiffen up some parts of your body so that your whole weight isn't applied to the glass

    • @luminosity1641
      @luminosity1641 Месяц назад

      @@Fuannai04 You are mixing something up.
      It does not matter for your push or whatever, whether or not the other person is exhaling relaxed etc.
      Your example all talk about something in a person that results in something in the same person.
      Also people do not hold their breath when focused. You chose a specific example where breathing could actually translate to your hands moving ever so slightly.
      A chess player would collapse if that was an actual thing.
      People that need precision hold their breath to stop them from "shaking", not because they mentally focus.
      A comparison to the video is more around the lines whether a 150 kg pool noodle or a 150kg steelplate can push you away more easily.
      And I tell you its the steel plate. Firstly as the plate is rigid, you actually have to hold the entire plates weight to stop it. Secondly as its hard the moment it does contact, it will hurt.
      The pool noodle however will simply bend in itself just after you stop the top of the pool noodle with your hands. Actually making it easier to not get pushed away, because you do not get impacted by the entire weight at once and you never have to hold the entire weight.

    • @Fuannai04
      @Fuannai04 Месяц назад

      ​@@luminosity1641 from the looks of it, you're just speaking out theories in your head rather than talking from experience. that's why you're taking what's in the video at face value. the video isn't really about making yourself heavier or harder to catch. it's more about how you can apply more force towards your opponent via adjustments in your micro-actions.
      it's not about "whether a 150 kg pool noodle or a 150kg steelplate can push you away more easily". it's more of how will you push a 150kg steel plate easier. the form and techniques you'll use to execute.
      so yes, the video is "about something in a person that results in something in the same person" that leads to difference in execution.
      in chess, while you need focus, you don't really need extreme stability to produce precise movement. so no, chess players won't collapse.

  • @paulgabriel4360
    @paulgabriel4360 Месяц назад +1

    Hardly anything to do with center of gravity. It just a matter of not resisting with your feet as you fall.
    Also, moving your center of gravity up should make you generate more torque when falling, so you will appear heavier not lighter.

  • @mccory00
    @mccory00 Месяц назад

    i give this Japanese Guy a good thumb up👍🏻 English speaking is really good ,and explain thing is easy understand。 he is good teacher i believe.

  • @jacobforrester9827
    @jacobforrester9827 Месяц назад +1

    I've never heard it explained this way. I remember switching between right and left forward stance and having it described as a relaxed stomp for rebounding from the strike. I felt it give the body mechanics for a whip in the strike. Sure, good follow through, but it spring-loaded the withdrawal of the strike. A falling step and relaxed stomp could be interchangeable in this explanation.

  • @danielcox7629
    @danielcox7629 Месяц назад +1

    I call this a falling strike. Practice it from you normal standing position and fall into your fighting position. Master it in every direction. All of a sudden your martial knowledge is more useful when you are caught off balance. The trick is striking in the same motion as you take form.

  • @Thelastsamurai07
    @Thelastsamurai07 Месяц назад

    Thanks for teaching this technique for free... Love from India

  • @jonathanmellqvist2
    @jonathanmellqvist2 Месяц назад +1

    Karate teacher: ✅
    Physics teacher: ❌

  • @Flakfritz
    @Flakfritz 8 дней назад

    Your english ist perfect understandable. Thank you!😊

  • @chrisb8698
    @chrisb8698 Месяц назад

    This is crazy. I imagine most of us have heard about deadweighting to make grabs more difficult, but I would have never have thought to incorporate it into strikes or other techniques.

  • @jezael2023
    @jezael2023 Месяц назад

    I like this man, he's like a martial magician with just science. Well done sir🤝🏼🙏🏽

  • @JerichoStephen
    @JerichoStephen Месяц назад

    I love your partner , the way she laugh has lots + energy💝 🌹🥀🌷💝🍃
    Great Master

  • @fedorvoronovcomposer
    @fedorvoronovcomposer Месяц назад

    The girl is immensely cuuuuuute

  • @Joegamermobile
    @Joegamermobile Месяц назад

    The best explanation

  • @Bitterswheat
    @Bitterswheat Месяц назад +1

    If it doesn’t make sense to you just think when you tighten your body your muscles are carrying that weight, when they aren’t working then something needs to carry it or it’ll fall

  • @Leoppassion
    @Leoppassion Месяц назад

    It’s like the next level. We train hard to gain and train the muscles, but there is a point of learning to relax and get rid of unnecesary energy loss. We learn that we were using too much to do something. This applies to pretty much everything physical.

  • @mactireliath2356
    @mactireliath2356 Месяц назад

    A good tactile demonstration of a complex idea. I’ll hold onto that one, thank you

  • @shukenadashore6527
    @shukenadashore6527 Месяц назад

    Also the limp weight is being cought at a further distance than when the body is tight. Somehow no one noticed that. The longer you allow the body to fall under gravity the more is the momentum.

  • @mayurtummewar3312
    @mayurtummewar3312 Месяц назад +1

    he's just moving a step back and making the stopper halt the fall too late so that he has max speed and also the direction of his velocity is more downwards so pushing back doesn't do much good, not as well as pushing up would do

  • @kimjerim9869
    @kimjerim9869 Месяц назад

    Owww, now i understand. That's the reason why my classmates can't pull me up even when i have the lowest weight among them. I started to become more relax, scattering my weight inside me when i learned the basic of swimming: floating. Thank you for sharing this

  • @signupisannoying
    @signupisannoying 26 дней назад +1

    That's why Jacky Chan fights better when drunk

  • @ARNOLDMENDOZA-f5l
    @ARNOLDMENDOZA-f5l Месяц назад

    A best technique,thank you...

  • @foolsfury9958
    @foolsfury9958 Месяц назад

    Bruce Lee was a master at this. Weight manipulation is why he was so strong and why he used the analogy of being like water. Bruce was no more than 60-70kg but could generate such force with a lightning fast kick that you would think it's inhumane

  • @cgimang1297
    @cgimang1297 Месяц назад +1

    Good lesson

  • @danilomax844
    @danilomax844 Месяц назад

    Great, master! Thanks a lot!

  • @TheMaverickSoldier
    @TheMaverickSoldier Месяц назад +1

    That last punch execution 😮

  • @BeNh72
    @BeNh72 Месяц назад

    I'm sure that's true but what he just showed was actually a demonstration of leverage. It had less to do with his stiffness and more to do with distance. He's farther away when relaxed and therefore applies higher forces when falling compared to when stiff

  • @DanOre-m2y
    @DanOre-m2y 19 дней назад

    Excellent First I've seen this And Makes Perfect Sense 👌 🖖💯🇺🇸

  • @dannielazizi
    @dannielazizi Месяц назад

    Our body tenses when fighting to protect ourselves, instinctively to show doninance. But when striking we need to be calm and be light

  • @ARMADUS.ULTIMA
    @ARMADUS.ULTIMA Месяц назад

    This is Kamikata basic knowledge ❤❤❤

  • @mivalentine2794
    @mivalentine2794 Месяц назад

    Fighter who relax fight like a mountain.
    And fighter who flow and fly actually feel like steel.
    Not about what should and should not, but about what is fit.

  • @franszmarwa9955
    @franszmarwa9955 Месяц назад

    Good basic training.
    Thanks for sharing, Sensei 🥋

  • @grahamabbott2270
    @grahamabbott2270 Месяц назад

    Excellent demo ...makes sense

  • @darrenmelchi946
    @darrenmelchi946 Месяц назад +1

    From taking martial arts when I was younger .. this makes so much sense to me

  • @thirumalai7719
    @thirumalai7719 Месяц назад +1

    Everything is funny until he gave that last punch 👊🏻👊🏻👊🏻......

  • @looqischmidt5581
    @looqischmidt5581 Месяц назад

    Naka Sensei is a great teacher.😊❤

  • @DeadPool----
    @DeadPool---- Месяц назад

    Ok that is actually the first step on learning shiyori. And I was like how a relaxed elder can generate so much power

  • @alimeer8708
    @alimeer8708 Месяц назад +1

    Everyone gangsta until the thief has knife in his hand.

  • @RR-mu3wu
    @RR-mu3wu Месяц назад

    I'm going to become a RUclips Certified Karate Master with all these great lessons..

  • @WhyDark2000
    @WhyDark2000 Месяц назад

    The last punch was smoot AF

  • @PianoFromtheBeginning-dh9gi
    @PianoFromtheBeginning-dh9gi Месяц назад

    Great one

  • @skysmith4221
    @skysmith4221 Месяц назад +1

    The punch at the end sounded deadly!

  • @SadulloKhadjibayev
    @SadulloKhadjibayev Месяц назад

    Excellent

  • @chaddon7685
    @chaddon7685 28 дней назад

    This dude is a martial arts master from every movie I've ever seen.

  • @tropicalstorm339
    @tropicalstorm339 Месяц назад +1

    Dead weight is a lot harder to carry than a non-dead weight.

  • @EeLyos
    @EeLyos Месяц назад

    the first bad habit a good boxing coach tries to get rid of in his students is them tensing up when punching. You just tense up at the final moment when making contact, staying loose and turning into your punches with most power coming from your legs that drive your hips to twist the arm, into the fist on contact. Boxers have a good balance of leveraging a low center of gravity and using fast twitch muscle fibres. Hence the emphasis on footwork and speed.
    I think karate is cool and beautiful with an amazing rich history. But the way punches are explained here is just over complicated and gives rookies who try to implement this a false sense of security in their ability just because they know about how they can be more “heavy” when punching. This is however a very interesting explanation for someone that is already advanced and knows how to punch to understand why we do not tense up when punching.

  • @xpdahh
    @xpdahh Месяц назад

    So Great....real master

  • @LehmannTheGTO
    @LehmannTheGTO Месяц назад

    Seems to be a good teacher

  • @kokovas
    @kokovas Месяц назад +2

    Making tanden concept more scientific.

    • @rojodiver3344
      @rojodiver3344 Месяц назад

      This is garbage. He falls from farther away when he wants to make it harder to catch him. There's lines on the ground and you can see he starts with the girl with his feet in the line and the last one he is further back. With the guy he takes an even bigger step back.

  • @jasonkemp3998
    @jasonkemp3998 22 дня назад

    Falling at greater distance will always be more effective and harder to stop.

  • @tornadoandy123
    @tornadoandy123 Месяц назад

    Just like good ol' Dempsey's teachings about how to set our bodyweight into fast motion.
    Gotta hone this skill.

  • @darenhughes4809
    @darenhughes4809 27 дней назад

    Very interesting, will have to try this now..