Below is an excerpt from a post at The Budo Bum. The author describes the same sort of power that is cultivated in internal Chinese Martial Arts. The full post may be read here.
We want powerful budo. Powerful budo is effective budo. Powerful budo
is good budo. So how do we make our budo powerful? We make it stronger.
The stronger someone’s budo is the more powerful it is. How do we make
our budo stronger?
Usually we add muscle. We do push-ups and
sit-ups. We train with weights to increase our bench press and our
squat. Then we throw this additional muscle into our budo so we can hit
harder, throw bigger, cut deeper. It makes our budo more effective and
more powerful so we can beat the big guys. This is the way to powerful
budo. Or is it?
None of the people whose budo I strive to
emulate do muscular budo, yet all of their budo is powerful and dynamic.
When they cut or strike or throw, the movement is solid and crisp.
Nothing is done that isn’t essential to the movement. The cuts look like
they could slice through stone. The strikes look, and feel, like
getting hit with a truck. Throws hit you with the force of the planet.
All of this without being muscular.
My teachers don’t need to be muscular to generate power. They have a combination of structure
and technique that creates power and lets them direct it to where it
will be most effective. Correct structure allows you to harness all the
power of your body, not just a few big muscles. Precise technique puts
all that power exactly where you want it for maximum effect.
If your structure isn’t right, even loads of muscle won’t make your budo strong.
There is always someone more muscular. I used to train with a guy who
was a good 15 cm (6 inches) taller, 80 pounds heavier, and able to lift
me off my feet without using any sort of judo technique. He was powerful
and he could throw people around, but he wasn’t doing judo. His raw
muscular strength got in the way of him learning good technique. He
could jerk people so hard they were off balance from the force of the
pull and then he would throw them by manually lifting them into
position, but that wasn’t budo.
What frustrated this guy was
that even though I was 80 pounds lighter and significantly weaker, he
couldn’t throw me but I could throw him, hard. He was strong enough to
pick me up off my feet, something I could only do to him with the help
of winch, and yet I was the one doing the throwing. I used good
structure to hold my partner off without getting tired. If I tried to go
muscle to muscle with any of the big guys, I’d be exhausted and beaten
in moments. Power doesn’t come from strength, it comes from structure
and technique. If I let my structure absorb their power and redirect it
into the ground, I can still go many rounds with the big 20-somethings
in the dojo.
Just as a building with a flawed structure will
quickly collapse under pressure, a person with bad structure is quickly
demolished by an adversary. Good structure is not only the key to
withstanding pressure, it is fundamental to projecting your power
outward. You can only project as much force as your structure can
support. Exceed that limit and you will crumble rather than your target.
Boxers wrap their hands and wear gloves to improve the structure of
their hands so they can deal with the forces they generate when
punching. Take off those gloves and all the wrapping and boxers would be
breaking the bones in their hands with the power generated by their
technique.
If your structure can’t handle the forces you
are generating, then your technique will never be able to generate
power. Building a good structure is the first step to generating great
power. Build a good structure and you build and project power
effectively. Good structure also neutralizes other people’s power.
That’s how you deal with bigger, stronger and faster. You have a
structure that is stable under attack.
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