I saw someone comment that :
“my Sa Bom Nim says, "You can't learn something until you are ready to learn it." That's why repetition is so important in the martial arts, because you never know when that "learning moment" will arrive. Doing that technique thousands of times was what made you ready to learn the new setup. “
I used to do thousands of repetitions of individual techniques and movements. I thought it was essential to mastering the techniques. I would set my mind on autopilot and do the same technique over and over, thinking I was building speed and consistency.
I can’t say about speed for sure, but I can speak to the consistency part of that. I was building consistency. I was teaching myself to always do the technique a the same level of skill. I wasn’t improving myself, I was nailing my skills to the ground where I was at. My father is a music teacher, and he has always said “Practice doesn’t make perfect. Practice makes permanent.” However you practice something is how you will do it. A thousand repetitions of a technique done one way, make it a thousand times harder to do it another way. You will always do it the way you practice it. Any errors in the technique you are repeating will be reinforced and that much tougher to correct.
One of the few things I know about my technique is that it’s not perfect. I don’t want to be doing things tomorrow the way I am doing them today. I want to be doing them better. So I don’t do lots of repetitions of my techniques any more. I try to do every technique one time only.
This is a pretty radical sounding statement for someone who trains classical Japanese martial arts, with a teaching methodology built upon the continued practice of a small set of techniques and kata. It’s true though.
Each each time I do a technique or kata it is a unique event, never to be repeated. Now one of my goals is for my mind to never go on autopilot. I try to always be fully present when I practice. I want to be completely mindful of what I am doing. By being aware of what I’m doing with each cut and in each kata that I do, I can make every cut and every kata unique. I can sense that I am using my hips one way or another, how I’m gripping the sword, what sort of rhythm I’m moving with, how I’m breathing.
If my practice of the kata is a unique event where the combination of all these factors and many more come together to create a single, unique, expression of the kata, then with this awareness of the kata, I can change elements of my action to make my next expression of the kata both unique and, hopefully, better. To do this though, I have to be mindful.
The best practice is mindful, aware and always looking for ways to improve what you are doing. SImple repetition means that you are just programing yourself to do the kata at whatever level you’re currently at. It ingrains your current mistakes into your body and makes them permanent. Mindful practice never does the same kata twice. Mindful practice seeks to improve with every action. If I’m not really aware of what I’m doing, I can’t change it. To change things, we have to be aware. When you do a kata, be aware of your hands, your feet, you tanden, your hips, the location of your head, the rhythm of your breath. All of these are important. If you are aware, you can experiment with how you use all these elements of your body to improve the kata. And even if a particular mix of elements isn’t an improvement, you’ll be learning. You’ll know about another combination that you want to avoid.
I try never to do the same kata twice. If I’m repeating the kata, I’m stagnating. It’s only when I mindfully do new things that I can really improve.
(How I balance this with mushin is fodder for another essay)
One of my old instructors used to say "practice doesn't' make perfect: Perfect practice makes perfect."
ReplyDeleteThe same mindfulness is required. Perhaps just another view into the same state of being.
Frank, that is exactly the thinking I was trying to get at. If I could practice perfectly, I would do thousands of perfect repetitions. Since I can't, I have to settle for mindful practice.
ReplyDeleteGoing through a long list of kata, I constantly found I could improve one thing, and then had to go through all the kata from the start again and adapt them to it. It's the way I do everything, though. I derive it as I go. I only repetitively practice one technique if I'm changing it. It's that fresh-from-the-get-go feeling I'm after. This carries into whether it is always best to do warm-ups (as opposed to, say, cool-downs which are highly underrated) especially in iai-type training . . .
ReplyDeleteThis is the way I try to pray, and why I hardly ever can actually finish a rosary. I've been told I'm "doing it wrong." Thanks for the thoughts. Maybe I'm not so bad off after all ...
ReplyDeleteThe NYT recently had an article about elite swimmers in particular, who began to realize the endless repetition of hundreds of laps does not result in any sort of improvement unless it is done with a sense of mindfulness. One swimmer said the coach never mentioned this idea, and it seemed that the way to improve was just to keep swimming. But after awhile her time leveled off. Once she started to practice mindfully, considering how to make her technique more efficient, her times began to improve.
ReplyDeleteIt would seem this style of practice goes beyond budo...
I think the NYT article you are referring to is at http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/14/training-insights-from-star-athletes/
ReplyDeleteOne thing is to do the kata like your life depends on your skills each time, and other thing is to do it just one time 'perfect'. Understanding different fighting sequences that a kata can bring on the table - especially multiple attacks scenario in iaido - requires more than 1 time per training session.
ReplyDeleteThere are too many variables to consider that one time is enough. Sure, since training time is limited and you want to get through all the katas in one session, 1 or 2 times will be just right to cover all of them (24/36/48 or whatever number) but for me is not enough to understand their subtleties. One thing is to know the movements and do them right and other thing is to think that kata and try to improve it each time. A great Sensei told me one time that in the beginning you will see the difference between one year of practice to another, but the moment you move up in time, that difference will be harder and harder to see if you don't know where to look for improvement. If you were meaning:"think a week and do it once", I might take it. But even this it means that your skills are way up high.