Back in the day, our school had a makiwara mounted on a concrete block wall. It was promotional testing day. some kids were punching the makiwara. I had just tested for green belt. I told the kids "Hit it hard!" I got in a horse stance and hit right, left, right. I broke a carpal bone in my hand. The moral of the story is always punch from a front stance! And if the makiwara moves, the better!
For when you really wanna piss off the upstairs apartment lol
😅😅
Back in the day, our school had a makiwara mounted on a concrete block wall. It was promotional testing day. some kids were punching the makiwara. I had just tested for green belt. I told the kids "Hit it hard!" I got in a horse stance and hit right, left, right. I broke a carpal bone in my hand. The moral of the story is always punch from a front stance! And if the makiwara moves, the better!
☺️☺️☺️
Was that sheet rock you wrapped with rope?
That's hardboard
looks good.
Thank you 😌
A makiwara needs to be flexible, it needs to give in a bit additional to the softer striking area.
@@redruMVRit’s a balance of both, because you need to be able to toughen up your hands, but also do thousands of reps. Like tempering steel
For the rest of you maybe don't install it in the dry wall under electrical switches.
Bad
Why