Difference between revisions of "089"

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(Created page with "[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 p...")
 
 
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[Video of this waza fast and slow, from the side, and ideally, overhead]
 
[Video of this waza fast and slow, from the side, and ideally, overhead]
 
== 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.
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*[[7-3]] inside with a simultaneous ([[Kūsankū]]) same-side downward [[Pressing block|pressing block]] and an opposite-side [[Palmheel_strike#Rising_palmheel_strike|rising palmheel strike]] to the [[Kyūsho#Philtrum|nose]] or [[Kyūsho#Chin|chin]].
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=== Notes ===
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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.
  
  
== Notes ==
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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.
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Latest revision as of 21:50, 23 March 2017

[Video of this waza fast and slow, from the side, and ideally, overhead]

Defense against a pursuit punch

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.