October 16 2013

Dan Harden Internal Power seminar

2013-10-06 Dan Harden SeminarThe weekend of 10-4-2013, I attended a seminar at Randall Smith Sensei’s Aikido of Palm Beach County with Dan Harden. It was an internal power seminar. It was good and Dan is intense.

I was only able to attend the Friday and Sunday sessions. I missed Saturday.

Let me start with two quotes:

  1. shoulder below elbow below hand
  2. your hand should always be doing something different than your elbow

Shoulder below elbow below hand. This concept I have been grappling with for a couple of years now; since my first Dan Harden seminar. Its vitally important and I believe it summarizes the totality of the internal energy concept.

As I understand it, to get to the point where you can feel that radiating internal energy, you need to manipulate your body, with active intent. You need to think of your body in new ways such as, shoulders below elbows below hands.

So in this concept, you let your shoulders drop into their shoulder sockets where they should naturally be. Easier said than done. Especially when you have been carrying your shoulders high and pumping your chest out for years. Most of us carry ourselves this way, me included.

The magic to dropping your shoulders is that you release the energy block that exists. Carrying your shoulders high is done by muscle. Dropping your shoulders into thier sockets releases the muscle and you can really start to move. Your body opens and you free yourself. You attenuate a different part of your being.

Since I actively started dropping my shoulders, I can now feel the connection between my hands and my dantien.  I mostly feel this when I am doing my solo exercises.

Dropping your shoulders then starts to engage your whole body. To maximize this engagement, you need to concentrate on dropping your shoulders below your elbows. Yes I know, physically speaking, this is an impossibility. But energetically, this is where you want to be. Your intent will get you there.

Once you get this and have a feeling that your shoulders are below your elbows, you apply this same intent to dropping you elbows below your hands. The whole time, energetically, your power is going down. Dropping your elbows below your hands opens up your hands. Your wrists become lose and your hands become the expression of your intent. You end up moving under your  opponent’s center.

The catch is that your hands are not necessarily following the same order as your shoulders and your elbows. Hence, quote number two; your hand should be doing something different than your elbow.

This concept, has the effect of your hands moving separate from your elbows with your forearm as the fulcrum. You move your elbow so that it is going over, under or around your attacker’s point of center. The place where they are attacking you. It can be them holding your forearm or wrist of something different.

Anyway, this is an ongoing process. I know where I want to get to, and I think I found the path that will get me there.

October 13 2013

About

Welcome to my site, Black Belt Lawyer. Its dedicated to my martial arts journey. I am an attorney in Fort Lauderdale FL. Here’s my site link: Law Office of Alexander Socia, P.A.

boca2I practice Aikido under Peter Bernath Sensei, Daitoryu under Johnny Schu Sensei and Systema under Tom Burgess and Scott Vail of Systema Boca. Our Daitoryu comes directly under Howard Popkin Sensei and Joe Brogna Sensei of Daitoryu Aikijujitsu Ginjukai. The Systema is directly under Dave and Rick Merrell.  I study all three on a mostly regular and on going basis.

This site is primarily my take about the seminars I attend. I like to write about what I have learned from the seminars because it helps me process the knowledge.

My thoughts aren’t always a correct portrayal of the seminar teaching. So, if you are reading this and want to put in your two cents, please do so. Learning is a communal effort.

God bless you,

Alex Socia

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September 29 2013

Howard Popkin, Joe Brogna & Dmitri Deglas Daitoryu Aikijustsu Seminar

2013-09-21 Shindai daitoryu seminar 2I had the audacious opportunity to attend a Daitoryu Aikijutsu seminar taught by Howard Popkin Sensei, Joe Brogna Sensei and Dimitri Deglas Sensei, last weekend at Shindai Aikikai in Orlando, FL. It was an awesome experience and tons good work was accomplished. Shindai folks were great hosts and all around good guys.

One of the major concepts I took away from this seminar was going underneath, over or around your opponents center. Specifically, the idea of maneuvering your elbows in a circular motion under your aggressor’s oncoming rush of force.

I know, moving around an opponents center is a recurring theme throughout my posts. But, it’s one I haven’t ingrained in my system so that its second nature and happening without reactionary thought. The concept hasn’t become learned behavior yet. Hence, my constant writing about it.

I am always amazed at how these guys move.I go after them full bore with all my guns blazing and they cut me down to nothing. Its like a hot knife through butter and I am the butter. Their apparently simple moves continually left me as a useless heap on the mat.

The thing about the elbow technique is to make your elbow the point of energy dissipation. In practice, your wrist is being grabbed and the force is driving into you. Your reaction is to fight force with force. The better practice is to let the force drive and you go under or around the force by letting the grab happen and focusing your force through aiming your elbow. Your energy should find its exit through the point of your elbow instead of that point where you are being grabbed. It’s not as easy as it sounds.

Besides having to overcome years of conditioning to the contrary, there is also the subtle, sublime and innate emotional blocks that end up controlling autonomous motor response. In a word, ego.

 

August 25 2013

Claude Berthiaume Seminar

Florida Aikikai hosted a weekend long seminar with Claude Berthiaume Sensei. I attended the Saturday session and it was awesome.

Berthiaume Sensei was teaching the subtle intricacies of Aikido. The “hidden stuff” that seems to get overlooked by those of us still trying to move our opponents through our own brute force and muscle.

He was showing elbow placement and small circle hand movements to move your opponent. Such as, placing your elbow under your attacker’s elbow to gain advantage over your attacker’s center.  Going under the attacker’s force disables their power and redirects their total energy which is manifested in your opponent physically turning in another direction. The elbow placement is done with little effort on your part so its energy efficient. We were studying this on multiple shomenuchi exercises with and without weapons.

The small circle hand movements were similar, in theory, to the elbow placement mechanics. When the attacker grabs your wrist,  think tenchin nage, you don’t respond with huge movement but rather respond by palm placement and circular movement. A direct force is easily manipulated by a circular movement. Its like rain falling on a beach ball and dripping off unable to make a pool.

There was also the small circle hand movement used in conjunction with “folding” your hand into your center. The attacker does a wrist grab and you respond by letting the grab happen, bringing your hand , knife edge first, to your center while you step back and dissipate your attackers energy. While you circle back around your opponent, they are left defending their ability to maintain their balance.

Every time I attend a Sensei Berthiamue seminar, it always seems he has stepped it up a notch or two since his last seminar. I don’t think he has peaked yet. Its all good.

Unfortunately, I did not get a group picture of the seminar attendees.

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June 9 2013

Harvey Konigsberg Seminar

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Sensei Harvey Konigsberg taught a day long seminar at Florida Aikikai yesterday. It was awesome. His seminars are always good.

He teaches a subtle and powerful type of Aikido. What I get from his teaching is that you let the attacker’s move happen and you move to the empty spot. By doing so, you compromise the attacker’s center and then, you got them. You are in control.

 

 

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