Yes, it should be labeled "How not to do No Pae" At 7 sec. I stepped out too soon, the arm spread and step should be simultaneous. At 18 sec. the first hop was too low, plus, I think that would have been a good spot for a pause. At 35 sec. my left elbow as too far from my body during the punch and I led with my shoulder too much on the right punch. The whole series from 38-44 sec. needs work...my feet were not coming back together after the strikes. The strikes were not an extension of my core. The final clearing glance probably should have been after the final strike when I stepped forward, feet together at 53 sec. but before circling the arms, instead of after the Koo Cho.
Well, what I see is the some of the details that I am missing in my form, not any flaws on your part. As you mentioned, practicing outside is an interesting challenge. No mirrors, uneven or soft ground, wind, rain, snow, nosey neighbors, etc. Maybe stances and movements have to be modified somewhat to perform them under less than perfect circumstances?? Outside the dojang, It's tough to make it look like we think it should. IMHO
3 comments:
Thanks for posting this Master Crane, I think I know why you did it:) Point taken.
SUN!
Yes, it should be labeled "How not to do No Pae"
At 7 sec. I stepped out too soon, the arm spread and step should be simultaneous. At 18 sec. the first hop was too low, plus, I think that would have been a good spot for a pause. At 35 sec. my left elbow as too far from my body during the punch and I led with my shoulder too much on the right punch. The whole series from 38-44 sec. needs work...my feet were not coming back together after the strikes. The strikes were not an extension of my core.
The final clearing glance probably should have been after the final strike when I stepped forward, feet together at 53 sec. but before circling the arms, instead of after the Koo Cho.
Well, what I see is the some of the details that I am missing in my form, not any flaws on your part. As you mentioned, practicing outside is an interesting challenge. No mirrors, uneven or soft ground, wind, rain, snow, nosey neighbors, etc. Maybe stances and movements have to be modified somewhat to perform them under less than perfect circumstances?? Outside the dojang, It's tough to make it look like we think it should. IMHO
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