Many of the guys around here for the last couple of years are practitioners with many years of training and study and a basic explanation (kaisetsu) is traditionally a simple role for ukemi where the explanation involves only a part of his anatomy - usually his arm and perhaps his leg in a basic movement. - at first. The process does not start with a fighting movement neither is it a fighting technique at this early stage plus it is NOT limited to this kaisetsu however and many more vigorous examples will follow to prove the theory, this is where ohyo kumite comes in. It is a wado ryu practice that makes it different from Bunkai and it is always carried out in kihon technically. Then we have Kihon Kumite also as part of this learning cycle so it is only a small part that you are seeing from Setamatsu sensei. What we see here is Setamatsu sensei explaining the principles at work that need to happen in one's body and understanding of wado movement to build the body memory so it is just a method of study.
Fair enough..So, could you please show me the next stage then?The examples that will follow ?How these principles applied against I don’t know,hook punches?Low kicks?Take downs something different from the usually jun tsuki attacks?Off topic I know but I always wonder why we don’t have kihons with hook punches or even pair works against those kinds of attacks (hook punches,takedowns,low kicks)
Our drills focus only against straight punches what about the rest?
mentioned deja vu because this is the second attempt on this forum where you are hollering at a particular practice that you see as being wrong - even though you have a Japanese sensei with 50 plus years of experience showing the way. D'you think perhaps you could possibly be wrong?
And this is the reason I ask questions that somebody don’t like and answer with irony...
some of them are very skilled sensei with many years study of wado ryu under their obi and they are really being quite gentle.
The irony is the gentle way?Ok.....