09/25/2025
Thinking out loud here. There are a few basic concepts that exist in all martial arts that we focus on our regular training. Balance, posture, distance, angle, inertia, timing, intent, tension, etc. There are many. There are also correlations between them. Then we have Kyusho points. The general idea is that these are "sensitive areas" of human body that once pressed something happens. Not true in my opinion as this is a very misleading description. Some are not points, they are areas, some can be pressed, other pulled, other need rotation, etc. Either way many hope to learn these and hope they can use them against an attacker. But these points are completely useless if the first category is not undestood. If an attacker comes with intent, power, speed, most likely benefiting by the surprise element, too, you don't have time to hit any of those points. This is why Hatsumi Sensei recommended to study Gyokko Ryu (which has lots of basic elements described above and a bit less emphasis on pressure points) and then Koto Ryu (which probably has the most emphasis on these pressure points). So that the art of using the pressure points is a natural extension of the normal martial art, not a magic power on its own. At least I am not aware of a good way to use it otherwise. So lately we are trying to embed pressure points awareness in our natural flow. Seems odd, but it has to be a natural movement added slightly to a real, beneficial martial arts movement, not a separate movement by itself. I can't just kick a guy in the groin, first I need to be close enough to be able to execute that, but wait - he can punch me at that distance, he may have a guard, one leg in front, and he's moving. What then? This is where the martial arts training begins, not by knowing some points...