To this day conditioning misconceptions continue.
As always, conditioning comes in when you have failed to avoid the strike.
We want more than just hoping to tough through the strike on our side.
We want to give our bodies a little edge.
What if it was Mike Tyson hitting?
What if it was a knife?
Both those questions begin with the assumption that you volunteer to be hit which is flawed.
What is anyone going to do if Mike Tyson was hitting?
What is anyone going to do if they have a knife?
Same thing as the Uechi folk I suspect – try not to get hit or knifed.
What if it is not Mike Tyson trying to hit you?
What if they do not have a knife?
What if you can’t avoid the strike but when they hit you they roll their wrist and damage it?
What if you can’t avoid the kick and you clash shin on shin and they hurt themselves more than they hurt you?
What if you have never trained your shins and when you clash shins you react in pain dropping your hands towards your hurting shin and they punch you in the head?
What if you have never trained to take a punch and fold over when hit in the stomach by a punch that would not have bothered a person who had their breathing down (let’s assume it was not Mike Tyson but one of the common folk who sometimes don’t punch that hard) and they stab you?
The “what if” scenario can go both ways – what if conditioning would have saved your life?
There are some drills that we do where it is not the optimum situation.
We call this training from a loss position.
Because if you have never been in the loss position you may be in bad shape when you find yourself there.
I do know that standing and allowing myself to be kicked and hit has strengthened and toughened my body and my mind.
I do know that training conditioning has allowed me to have my breathing strong in most situations.
I do know that training conditioning allows me to recover faster than before conditioning.
I do know that in the real world if you think you will never get hit you are in for a major shock.
I also know there are some folk I hate getting hit by and some I would hope never to get hit by.
I do know that nothing protects you from everything and that certainly goes for conditioning.
Which is why I spend more time training avoidance.
But, should they ever hit me, then the question is – what if with conditioning I survive the strike to hit back but without it I don’t?
If I don’t survive the strike then either way, having trained to avoid getting hit and gotten hit, and having trained to take a hit and having the hit do me in – it just wasn’t going to be my day anyway.
So the question is how prepared do we want to be?
A personal choice, and most certainly everyone will decided what they want in their training and they are free to do so BUT it is a decision that Uechi people have made. We include conditioning.
Is it foolproof?
HARDLY, nothing is.
Expecting to avoid all strikes is not foolproof.
It is just one of the tools Uechi practitioners have chosen to use.