I’m once again going to tap into my first “love” of martial arts/combat sports (which, for those that are interested, I’m over 1 year strong in Tang Soo Do now, competed in a tournament and won Silver in open hand forms and am on my way toward testing for “4th Gup”, so I’m a huge deal) for this one, because, as is often the case: lessons transfer across mediums. For those of you out there that haven’t been in a fight since elementary school, the idea of “leaning AWAY from the blow” makes a LOT of sense. When someone is taking a swing at you, you want to escape it, so you lean away. You try to get away from the attack so that it can’t hit you, you try to dodge, you try to evade, you try to NOT BE THERE. Because really: who WANTS to get hit? But anyone that has ever fought in any capacity understands that, when you flee, you lose your power. When you are standing still, steady and strong, you are rooted and braced and ready to absorb impact, but when you are back peddling and fleeing, you take away that strong connection and are now suddenly at the mercy of your attacker. Which, a GOOD fighter, will capitalize on and strike you AS you flee, such that they catch you flush and “the blow you don’t see coming” knocks you out. This is why those who fight know about this dirty little secret: they don’t lean AWAY from the blow, they lean INTO it.
Once again I
offer my standard “mea culpa” that I am a student of politics and philosophy,
not physics, so I’m sure I’m screwing this up but I’m ALSO sure I don’t care:
when we lean INTO a blow, we rob the attacker of their power. A punch, thrown with violent intention,
reaches full power at the full extension of said punch. The attacker has an intended trajectory that
they aim to hit with their attack, and your chin or liver is at the end of
it. When we lean AWAY from the blow,
often, this results in MORE power being generated: the blow gets to travel even
FURTHER. BUT, if we lean INTO the blow:
we STUFF the attack. We cut it short, we
intercept it partway through its trajectory, it never gets to achieve “full
force” or realize its potential, because its course was interrupted. And, if we are TRULY “with bad intentions”,
we are now CLOSER to our opponent, and, to paraphrase 7th United States
President Andrew Jackson upon letting his dueling opponent shoot him first so
that he could take time to aim: “you’ve had your chance Sir, now it is MY
turn”.
And in that regard we understand the
difference between the two: fear. Fear
compels one to flee the blow, whereas there needs to be an absence of fear to
lean into it. There needs to be an
understanding of “this is going to suck, but it’s going to suck MORE if I DON’T
do it”. And that’s how we rob the
opponent of their power: we rob them of their ability to EMPLOY fear. Mike Tyson was ferocious, he fought with
absolute “bad intentions”, and had insane punching power BUT, in truth, almost
every fight he won was won BEFORE he fought, because he had inspired SO much
fear in his opponents that they were looking to ESCAPE rather than fight. The few fights that Mike lost were against
opponents that did NOT have that fear.
They withstood the shots, leaned into the blows, and fought a smarter,
more effective fight. They conquered the
fear, and it let them conquer the man.
To be clear: fear wasn't an unreasonable response
This has
been a long climb for this slide, but this lesson DOES hold true to the process
of physical transformation. Those that
lack the “fighting experience” often lean AWAY from the blow when it comes to
physical transformation. When losing fat, they desperately seek methods to
mitigate hunger. When conditioning, they
try to figure out how to make it NOT feel like their lungs are going to escape
through their throat. When gaining, they
want to know how to NOT feel constantly full and bloated. When training heavy, they don’t want to feel
like they’re getting crushed, and when getting in reps, they don’t want to feel
like they’re dying.
Folks: those
are the blows. Your own body is throwing
them at you. Your body IS the opponent:
it is RESISTING your efforts to change it, and it’s doing so “with bad
intentions”. You try to lose fat, so it
makes you hungry so you’ll eat. You want
to get better conditioned, it produces lactic acid to set you own fire so you
stop. You push hard, it gets injured so
that you quit moving. And all we need to
do is NOT FEAR the body and its bad intentions.
Instead of leaning away, we lean INTO the blow.
This is how you say "f**k you body" with Polish sign language
You’re
losing fat and you feel hungry? Lean
into it: see how long you can push that hunger feeling, and once you DO eat,
eat sparingly: don’t binge. You’ll find
that, the longer you do it, the further out you can set your hunger tolerance
(hey, isn’t that the whole “ghrelin/leptin hormone thing” people talk about
training?). Feel like you’re gonna die
during your conditioning workout?
Excellent: do 2 more rounds. You
keep leaning into that feeling and your conditioning WILL improve. Injured?
MOVE THE DAMN THING! Get blood
flowing INTO the injured part so that it will HEAL: don’t give it rest so that
it stagnates and dies. You’re
gaining? Go read some 2008 Dave Tate
articles and embrace that bloated, sick and swollen feeling, KNOWING that every
calorie you take in is directly fueling you achieving your goals. When I ran Super Squats, I could legit feel
myself GROWING bigger and stronger with every sip of milk I took.
Lean INTO
these blows and rob the power from your opponent.
Once again an inspiring post - thanks!
ReplyDeleteI can relate about the shortening the distance in fights. That's what I did back in my teen karate days. It felt natural and definitely was one reason I won more fights than I lost.
Hell yeah dude! Take away their power AND show them no fear.
DeleteGreat post!
ReplyDeleteBeen doing front squat holds for time in my program. Front squats feel uncomfortable and give you a feeling that you are being choked, so I up the weight for them to hold and deliberately do them to get used to the pain.
That's a fantastic application right there! Great stuff dude
DeleteEvery time you mention Super Squats I get a little hyped up, because being able to compare your old super squats run to your new one, so many years apart, sounds incredible.
ReplyDeleteThanks dude! If it pans out, it is going to be an interesting data point
Delete