Jan 10 2009
The Corkscrew Effect.
pardon my use of capitalization in this post. my keyboard is restricting the use of the left shift key temporarily, and i don’t feel like retraining my right hand.
there is an important concept which relates to moving the body quickly and powerfully that is sometimes overlooked. when your techniques lack power and speed they say, “look to the ground”. this sounds good, it is atleast an answer, but what does that mean exactly?
remember that all of your power to effect other objects forcefully is derived from your root. if you struck someone while laying on your back, your root might be your back. since you are standing for must techniques, your root is your feet. there is another saying “the toes grip the ground”. this can be taken literaly to mean that the toes should seperate, like a claw, extend outward, and press against the ground, retracting slightly to grip with their pads, or print areas. this allows a person to gain a firmer grip initially, but it also eventually develops a feeling of firmly “gripping” the ground with the body as a connected unit and mostly the legs and feet.
another thing that can be repeated to help a person see this, is that when you stand normally, most people allow the weight of their body to flucuate in different joints and areas of the foot. in kung fu, one should try to concentrate all of the body’s weight into the center/s of the balls of the feet/foot. in order to do this, the legs must gently pull together slightly if they are positioned apart from one another. a constant inward pull however, would not put the weight of the body directy into the ground through the balls of the feet, instead, the body’s weight would be dispersed throughout the feet and the gripping forces of the legs pulling straight toward eachother. instead, in proper posture, the legs are gently pulling only slightly together, while relaxed and very controlled, directing their force straight into the ground.
now, when you decide to move, in order to do that, you first must press against the ground with one or both of the feet. “corkscrewing” or gripping, is a way to maximize that press to project you in whichever direction with speed and power.
the best illustration of corkscrewing, or “drilling” the feet may be as follows:
stand upright with your feet together. sink your weight folding slighly at the hips (the area that I call the literal waist, and what i mean by that is the area where the femur meets the pelvic opening) and backs of the knees. think of taking a step forward, and use this procedure;
shift all of your weight to the right foot, firmly gripping the ground. the fold is now more dramtic on the right side and your torso trns slightly, naturally, so that your left shoulder is a little forward and your right shoulder thus drawn back.
lift the left foot, and place just the heel in front of you on the ground close enough to the body that it does not bare any weight. start to transfer to the left foot, and the toes will slap the ground. as soon as they do, immediatly grab the ground with them, the left toes and the bottom of that foot, and release the grip from the right foot. do not rise up or down, but let yor head/torso etc float on the same plane. if you did it right, you will have moved faster, and more forcefully than you probably ever had before.
storing and releasing slight tension, in a domino effect is one of the key secrets to effectively practicing gong fu.