Gilman Studio
On-Line Lessons[Home] [Return
to Lesson Index]
This Lesson Contains:
Movement # 28 – Golden Pheasant Strikes Forward
This movement is exactly the same as movement # 18. The opponent pokes to my center. I neutralize it back and to my left and quickly follow with a poke to her face.
|
|
The opponent pokes to my center. |
|
|
1) I join, stick and lead the opponent’s saber to the left, opening her center. 2) I
poke to her face. |
|
|
I neutralize back. Shift
the weight back onto the left foot and pull in the right toe to empty step. The
torso turns slightly to the left. The saber
is drawn into the center in front of the belly button. The saber rotates
clockwise until the cutting edge faces up. Keep the saber parallel to the
ground. Be sure the point faces the opponent. The left
hand moves in so the palm faces the pommel. Focus on
the outside of the saber blade for joining, sticking, and leading. Also, be
aware of sinking deeply into the left Kua so you store energy there for the
coming release. |
|
|
I poke the opponent. The right
knee is lifted until the upper leg is parallel to the ground. In actual usage,
the right foot might rest on the left leg, or even slightly to the rear, so
the body can incline or stretch further forward for the poke. The body
continues to face halfway between north and east. As the
knee is lifted, the saber rotates and thrusts forward to end up coming
straight out of the shoulder. Keep the elbow and shoulder relaxed. The saber
points in the same direction that the body is headed. As the
saber thrusts outward, the left palm presses back and out. This
counterbalances the tendency to poke too far forward and lose root. Focus on
the point of the saber. Remember that the energy for the thrust comes from
the stored energy in the left Kua. |