Комментарии:
thank you!
ОтветитьHi, thanks for the video. I saw this video for the first time around 4 months ago. I went and purchased a bag of walnuts to try this. I've been trying this every day without getting close. However today I made it work for the first time! I broke the first one though it took me about 30 minutes to crack it. Then I broke a second one really easily! It is really a good feeling when you see results from practise. I'm not a chow gar practitioner. I train in Bak Mei in UK. I found that practising Jik Lik (from your Udemy video)has given me more strength in fingers which I'm sure helped. Thank you!
ОтветитьI love to use it at the zygomatic part of the skull 💀 to break it (it’s the part near your eyes)
ОтветитьIt's not a "power skill" it is a physical attribute just like speed and quickness. The other thing is you are issuing force load entirely too slow to be of much use in any thing other than cracking nuts. It's as useful as being able to bench press a lot of weight from chest to lock out in about three seconds is in acquiring a high foot pounds strike in around 1/10th of a second, which is to say, not at all. The speed of neurological recruitment patterns are entirely different. The body becomes its function. Less antiquated theory/beliefs and more Sports Science is the right track for pursuing and obtaining real skill in TCMA ... or any other physical activity for that matter.
ОтветитьBro you can make holes in metal with your fingers.!!
ОтветитьLove it. Great to hear from a fellow Chow Gar practitioner, I can see you are advanced in the system. Who is your sifu? (Mine were Mark Leung and then Paul Whitrod.)
ОтветитьI find lots of walnuts break with training. But you will find one that just cannot break and just keep that one. Or use an almond and work on it for some years.
ОтветитьYa ya strong finger result
But where is the finger training vid?
Thank you for the insightful video, very nice demonstration and explanation :)
Ответить