What Are You Waiting For?

Karate has changed – we all know that. The karate created by the pioneers on Okinawa looks very different from much of what we see today. And of course, those later pioneers were part of that shift themselves. Change didn’t happen by accident. When I watch students from other dojo trying to work out bunkai…

Lineage Is Not a Substitute for Reality.

I’ve seen a series of so-called self-defense demonstrations doing the rounds on social media recently. They’re being promoted under the banner of a well-known karate lineage. So what? You might say. Well, it matters. Because when a respected name is attached to something, people assume credibility. They assume it must be solid. But that is…

Leaving Yourself Options.

In any form of martial art, action is always faster than reaction. There’s a difference between anticipating something and reacting to it. If your interest is in self-protection, anticipation is what keeps you safe. One of those principles is simple – ask yourself “what if?” When I used to teach advanced driving, we taught it all…

When the Drill Breaks.

Sometimes a student freezes. Not because they don’t know a technique – but because the expected sequence has disappeared. That is the moment training becomes real. In my last article, I wrote that cooperation is not the same as pressure – that structure without uncertainty becomes choreography. The natural question follows. How do we introduce uncertainty…

Cooperation Is Not Pressure.

In my last article, I wrote that before there were kata, there were two people working together. That order matters. But working together is not the same as working under pressure. There is a difference between training with a partner and training against uncertainty. And that difference matters. Many schools spend a great deal of time…

Before There Were Kata.

Kata Came Later In my previous article, I wrote that training existed first and kata came later. That order matters. Before forms were formalized, people trained together. They worked through problems with a partner. They tested movement under pressure. They adjusted and refined what was useful. Think about that for a moment. It had to be…

The Doorway Threshold: Why Starting is Harder than Training.

It is one of the great ironies of the martial arts – and life in general. We can spend two hours pushing our bodies to the limit, sweat‑drenched and exhausted, and feel absolutely fantastic. Yet the simple act of putting on our gear and stepping onto the mat can feel like trying to move a…

Context Before Criticism. Without it – It’s Just Opinion.

Recently there was a video clip doing the usual rounds on social media of a highly skilled and knowledgeable karate instructor being ridiculed for his defense against an ‘oi zuki’ attack. Now I am usually the first to criticize any kind of step-kumite drill as practically useless for anything but the drill itself. However, in…

You Can’t Learn Awareness With Your Eyes Closed – or in a Workshop.

I’ve written extensively about awareness in my recent articles, and some of the comments have been quite illuminating. I keep returning to this subject, which should tell you something: the misunderstandings around it are persistent. One in particular stood out. . People often talk about “learning awareness” as if it’s a checklist or a memory…