Difference between revisions of "089"
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== Defense against a pursuit punch == | == Defense against a pursuit punch == | ||
*7-3 inside with a simultaneous (Kūsankū) same-side downward pressing block and an opposite-side rising palmheel strike to the nose or chin. | *7-3 inside with a simultaneous (Kūsankū) same-side downward pressing block and an opposite-side rising palmheel strike to the nose or chin. | ||
| − | == Notes == | + | === Notes === |
T’ai Chi practitioners call this movement “Repulse the Monkey,” because when performed repeatedly, it looks as though you are fighting off an imaginary pack of hyperactive monkeys. | T’ai Chi practitioners call this movement “Repulse the Monkey,” because when performed repeatedly, it looks as though you are fighting off an imaginary pack of hyperactive monkeys. | ||
Revision as of 06:28, 20 September 2016
[Video of this waza fast and slow, from the side, and ideally, overhead]
Defense against a pursuit punch
- 7-3 inside with a simultaneous (Kūsankū) same-side downward pressing block and an opposite-side rising palmheel strike to the nose or chin.
Notes
T’ai Chi practitioners call this movement “Repulse the Monkey,” because when performed repeatedly, it looks as though you are fighting off an imaginary pack of hyperactive monkeys.