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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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138 Form/Xing/Kata/Pattern Practice<br />

they do not tutor them. Instruction is viewed as a gradual, developmental<br />

process in which teachers help students to internalize the key precepts of<br />

doctrine. <strong>The</strong> teacher presents the precepts and creates an environment in<br />

which the student can absorb and comprehend them, but understanding—<br />

mastery—of these precepts comes from within, the result of the student’s<br />

own efforts. <strong>The</strong> overall process might be likened to teaching a child to<br />

ride a bicycle: Children do not innately know how to balance, pedal, and<br />

steer, nor will they be likely to discover how on their own. At the same<br />

time, no one can fully explain any of these skills either; one can only<br />

demonstrate them and help children practice them until they figure out for<br />

themselves which muscles are doing what at which times to make the actions<br />

possible.<br />

Pattern practice in martial art also bears some resemblance to medieval<br />

(Western) methods of teaching painting and drawing, in which art<br />

students first spent years copying the works of old masters, learning to imitate<br />

them perfectly, before venturing on to original works of their own.<br />

Through this copying, they learned and absorbed the secrets and principles<br />

inherent in the masters’ techniques, without consciously analyzing or extrapolating<br />

them. In like manner, kata are the “works” of a school’s current<br />

and past masters, the living embodiment of the school’s teachings.<br />

Through their practice, students make these teachings a part of themselves<br />

and later pass them on to students of their own.<br />

Many contemporary students of Japanese, Chinese, and Korean martial<br />

art, particularly in the West, are highly critical of pattern practice,<br />

charging that it leads to stagnation, fossilization, and empty formalism.<br />

Pattern practice, they argue, cannot teach students how to read and respond<br />

to a real—and unpredictable—opponent. Nor can pattern practice<br />

alone develop the seriousness of purpose, the courage, decisiveness, aggressiveness,<br />

and forbearance vital to true mastery of combat. Such skills,<br />

it is argued, can be fostered only by contesting with an equally serious opponent,<br />

not by dancing through kata. Thus, in place of pattern practice<br />

many of these critics advocate a stronger emphasis on free sparring, often<br />

involving the use of protective gear to allow students to exchange blows<br />

with one another at full speed and power without injury.<br />

Kata purists, on the other hand, retort that competitive sparring does<br />

not produce the same state of mind as real combat and is not, therefore,<br />

any more realistic a method of training than pattern practice. Sparring also<br />

inevitably requires rules and modifications of equipment that move trainees<br />

even further away from the conditions of duels and the battlefield. Moreover,<br />

sparring distracts students from the mastery of the kata and encourages<br />

them to develop their own moves and techniques before they have<br />

fully absorbed those of the system they are studying.

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