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THE FOUR STAGES OF
KATA PRACTISE
Iain Abernethy
Practically
all karateka practise kata; however,
most only practise the initial stage
and therefore they do not develop a
rounded and more complete
understanding of what kata has to
offer. In this article we shall
discuss all four stages of kata
practise.
The first stage is the practise
of the solo form and is what most
people think of when they talk about
kata practise. The first thing that
a karateka learns is the actual
physical sequence of the kata; the
body mechanics required for maximum
efficiency; the correct mental
attitude etc. This is a very
important stage of kata practise. If
you are unable to perform the
movements of the form in an
efficient way when there is no
opponent present, you will have
absolutely no chance of being able
to make those same techniques work
when an aggressive opponent is
trying to cause you physical harm!
The initial stage of solo
performance is often where kata
practise begins and ends in many
modern dojos. One of the main
reasons for this is that the
criteria used for determining the
quality of a kata is frequently just
its visual appearance. If the kata
looks good, then it is good! This is
obviously a flawed way to view kata
when you consider that the katas are
supposed to have a functional and
pragmatic purpose. To my mind, it is
better to judge a kata against its
pragmatic use; if the karateka can
successfully apply the techniques of
the kata, then their kata is good,
regardless of what it looks like.
Please don't misunderstand me; I'm
in no way saying that poor solo
performance is acceptable, just that
the goal should always be function
as opposed to appearance. A
functional kata will often be
striking to the eye, but the
aesthetics of the kata are
essentially an irrelevant by-product
rather than the whole purpose of
kata training.
Gichin Funakoshi (the founder of
Shotokan karate) in his book
'Karate-Do Kyohan' stated, "Once
a form has been learned, it must be
practised repeatedly until it can be
applied in an emergency, for
knowledge of just the sequence of a
form in karate is useless ".
Although the solo performance of a
kata is very important, it should
not be viewed as the entirety of
kata practise. As Funakoshi himself
said, unless you can actually apply
the techniques of the kata in an
emergency, simply knowing how to
perform the solo sequence is "
useless ". We need to be sure
we progress our training onto the
subsequent stages.
The second stage of kata practise
is to study the functional
application of the movements of the
kata (bunkai). You need to practise
applying the techniques of the kata
with your practise partners. At this
point it is probably worth pointing
out the important distinction
between realistic bunkai and the
more common long range,
choreographed karateka vs. karateka
battles that are so often seen. The
katas were never designed for
fighting other karateka; they were
intended to be a record of realistic
techniques for use in a civilian
environment (self-protection). In
real situations, people do not
assume a stance and then execute an
oi-zuki from ten-feet away! If we
accept that kata were designed for
use in real situations, then we must
also accept that in a real situation
we are very unlikely to face a
fellow karateka, especially one who
executes their techniques in such a
contrived and formal manner (you can
thank your lucky stars if you ever
did!). The applications of the kata
should be simple, close-range and
not dependant on the attacker
performing certain actions in a
certain way.
Once you have gained an
understanding of the practical
application of the techniques of the
kata, you should begin to include
variations of those techniques in
your training. It should be
remembered that a kata is meant to
record an entire, stand-alone
combative system. However, it would
not be practical to record every
single aspect of that system or the
kata would become ridiculously long.
It would be far better to record
techniques that succinctly express
the key principles of the system.
An analogy I like to use to
explain how a form records a
complete system is that of an acorn
and an oak tree (my apologies to
those who've heard this before :-).
An oak tree is vast, both in terms
of its size and years lived, but
everything about that tree, and
everything required to reproduce it,
is found in a single acorn. A
fighting system produces a kata in
the same way that an oak tree
produces acorns. Both the acorn and
the kata are not as vast as the
thing that created them, but they
record them perfectly. For an acorn
to become an oak tree it must be
correctly planted and nurtured. For
a kata to become a fighting system
it must be correctly studied and
practised. It is here that we find
one of modern karate's biggest
failings, in that the katas are
rarely studied sufficiently. To
return to my analogy, we have the
seeds but we don't plant them!
Hironori Otsuka (founder of
Wado-Ryu karate) once wrote; "
It is obvious that these kata must
be trained and practised
sufficiently, but one must not be
'stuck' in them. One must withdraw
from the kata to produce forms with
no limits or else it becomes
useless. It is important to alter
the form of the trained kata without
hesitation to produce countless
other forms of training.
Essentially, it is a habit - created
over long periods of training.
Because it is a habit, it comes to
life with no hesitation - by the
subconscious mind. " ('Wado-Ryu
Karate' page 19-20). I believe that
Otsuka is telling us to practise
varying the applications of the kata
or else we run the risk of being
'stuck' in the form and hence
becoming limited fighters. We need
to follow Otsuka's advice and
practise so that the form can be
utilised, without hesitation, in any
situation in which we should find
ourselves.
Katas express good examples of
the core principles of the combative
system that is being recorded. Katas
do not record every single
technique, combination and variation
in the entire system! How could
they? So to get the most out of kata
we need to practise varying the
techniques of the kata whilst
staying true to the principles that
the techniques represent. This is
the third stage of kata practise.
The fourth and most neglected
stage is to practise applying the
techniques, variations and
principles of the kata in live
practise. The only way to ensure
that you will be able to utilise
techniques in a live situation is to
practise your techniques in live
situations. You need to engage in
live any-range sparring if you are
to make your kata practise
worthwhile. No amount of solo
practice or drilling the techniques
with a compliant partner will give
you the skills needed to apply what
you have learnt in a live situation.
In recent years we have seen more
and more karateka begin to include
bunkai practise in their training.
And whilst this is to be applauded,
it is of little use unless we take
things one step further and engage
in kata-based sparring (see my books
'Bunkai-Jutsu'
and 'Karate's
Grappling Methods' for further
details).
Live sparring and the solo
performance of a kata may look
radically different, but they are
essentially exactly the same. As an
analogy, think of a kata as being
like a block of ice. The shape of
the block of ice is constant.
However, if heat is added, the ice
will turn into water and its shape
will adapt to fit its circumstances.
Likewise, a kata also is constant,
but in the heat of combat it will
also adapt to its circumstances. The
block of ice and the free flowing
water may look very different, but
they are essentially identical (the
same molecules of hydrogen and
oxygen). In the same way, a form
will often look different to the
techniques being applied in an
ever-changing live fight, but they
are also essentially identical (the
same fighting principles). Although
the four stages of kata practise may
look different, it is vital that you
understand that all of them are
identical at their core. All four
stages are 'kata', not just the solo
performance.
These four stages are by no means
unique to Karate. In boxing, for
example, a student would first be
taught the mechanics of the basic
punches (stage one). They would then
practice applying those punches
against bags, focus mitts and a
padded up compliant partner (stage
two). Once competence had been
achieved, the student would practise
combinations, blending the punches
etc (stage three). And finally they
would get in the ring and try it for
real (stage four).
Whilst a student would initially
start at stage one and progress to
stage four, it should be remembered
that the preceding stages should not
be abandoned and they must also be
practised. Stage four practise is
undoubtedly the most realistic;
however, you should not abandon the
other three stages when you are
competent enough to engage in kata-based
sparring. The practise of the solo
form will allow you to refine
technique, visualisation and mental
attitude without the pressure
induced by an opponent (it's also a
good way to train on the days where
your partners are unable to get to
training). The practise of the
bunkai (stage two) and variations
(stage three) will also help you to
improve technique. You will also
become a more versatile fighter as
your understanding of the kata's
core principles improves through
stage three training. Conversely, as
your ability to apply the techniques
of the kata in live practise
increases, so will the quality of
your solo form as the kata will
become more meaningful and mentally
intense.
The katas truly are works of
genius that have a great deal to
offer the pragmatically minded
karateka. To unlock the whole of
what kata has offer, you need to
practise your katas in their
entirety. Whilst the solo aspect of
the form is very important, it only
represents the first initial stage.
It is only when you move beyond the
solo form onto the subsequent stages
that is becomes apparent how
pragmatic and holistic karate can
be. I'll close by thanking you for
taking the time to read this
article; I sincerely hope that you
found it useful. |