How to Build True Power in the Martial Arts!

Submitted by staff on Mon, 02/08/2010 at 2:05am.

(By Al Case)

Everybody wants power! They want to be strong, able to jump in the mixed martial arts ring and toss around an attacker like a rag doll. The problem is that nobody knows what power really is.

Everybody confuses this concept of power with strength, or big muscles, or other things. But power has nothing to do with muscles or strength. The truth of the matter is that Power has to do with stabilizing your body as a motor.

japanese martial artsA motor is two terminals between which there is tension. Whether it is a push or a pull, the tension between two poles creates a motor. Push on another body and you have a motor, love somebody and you have a motor, and so on from the smallest to the largest objects in this universe.

In the world of physics as we know it on this planet, a motor, unless held in place, will move as result of the forces it is creating and using. A car motor has motor mounts, brackets, which hold the machine in place, lest it flip over and fall on the ground. A helicopter has a tail rotor to hold it in place and stop it from spinning around.

In the martial arts one must hold oneself in place to weather the onslaught of combat, or to launch an attack. That is the purposes of stances, incidentally, not to make strong muscles, but to fix the body in place, or to launch it through space. Once one learns how to use stances to do these things one is able to use energy much more efficiently.

chinese martial artsNow boxing, or the mixed martial arts type of fisticuffs, does not use stances, and they waste energy, and do not build it. Thus, they must rely on the strength of individual motors such as biceps and triceps, and so on, which provide tension across the bones and enable them to move. At this point, unless there is an accident of collision, the only power provided is the weight of the arm, but when you hold the whole body in place you use the weight of the whole body, and this is efficiency.

The point here is that you must use a stance if you wish to enable the body to create true power, and this means you must sink your weight with the execution of technique. Whether you punch, or block, or do any basic motion, you must learn how to sink the weight when doing so. This will lock the motor of the body down, and actually cause the energy generator of the body to function far more efficiently, and to create usable energy in vast amounts.

I know everybody wants to knock people over and win money, but MMA fighting doesn't create energy, it only wastes bodies. Thus, a practice of Karate, or Shaolin, or especially the wudan arts, results in far greater amounts of power, and with no risk of damage to the body. No offense to the big muscle boys, but we are talking about the source of power here, the kind of power that endures long and does lead the student of classical arts, such as karate or shaolin or wudan, to higher levels.

Al Case has practiced martial arts for over 40+ years. A writer for the magazines, with his own column in Inside Karate, he is the founder of Matrixing Technology. He is has written a book on developing the Most Powerful Punch in the world. You can find it, and a free ebook about Matrixing, at Monster Martial Arts.

(Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Al_Case)

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