This is great. I've seen some arm trap bunkai for this before, but usually a one arm grab with the second "uppercut" arm almost always used as a strike, not a wrist lock.
I enjoy the amount of nuanced applications there are for the Heian series of kata. Some of the earlier kata that are 'simpler' still have a variety of ways in which they can be interpreted. To see it applied as a block, lock, and strike is very interesting, and helps my Green belt brain to break out of the perception of kata as procedural and rigid. It is fluid and adaptable, as evidenced in your videos.
I think. one of the best Heian Nidan Bunkai analyses I've ever seen. Congrats. Oss!
Thank you for the kind words
@0:09 This is after the first TWO moves. While it is called as a single move, there are two separate and distinct techniques.
This is great. I've seen some arm trap bunkai for this before, but usually a one arm grab with the second "uppercut" arm almost always used as a strike, not a wrist lock.
@@Bread_45 thank you
I enjoy the amount of nuanced applications there are for the Heian series of kata. Some of the earlier kata that are 'simpler' still have a variety of ways in which they can be interpreted. To see it applied as a block, lock, and strike is very interesting, and helps my Green belt brain to break out of the perception of kata as procedural and rigid. It is fluid and adaptable, as evidenced in your videos.
Happy to help
Excellent Commentary Senior 👏🥋🙌🙏👌🥋oss
Thank you
0:46...ingenious!!!
Thank you
Crazy that shit like this still exsists to this day
Theirs or mine?