Aren’t
you sick tired of it sometimes? I for sure am. It’s been a long time in the
fitness industry, people telling how they had a great workout and then pour
loads of numbers on you – sets, reps, poundage/kilos lifted etc. But when you
actually go and see them train, you cringe at their form and movement. I have
notices similar occurrence in martial/combative circles, especially related to
the solo training sessions…hundreds of punches, kicks, breakfalls…whatever.
Even partner drilling is too often based around the notion of “X repetitions
one side, then switch and X reps the other”.
The
humankind’s obsession with its own technological advances got really perverted,
to the degree where we are trying to imitate the machines we had made. Hence my
disdain for the above terms like “industry” when used in certain phrases. Nowadays
everything is about quantity, to the expense of quality. But it should not be. After
all, in the martial training we strive (well, we should) for the technical
proficiency, as it is the aspect that enables the grace and flow that puts the ART
in the martial art paradigm. Yes, I still believe the effectiveness should come
first, but it has never meant that efficiency is not important. Quite to the
contrary.
Let
us think for just a brief moment, who are typically the people whose
performance provides inspiration for so many of us in the fighting “universe”?
Is there anyone out there who sincerely believes that the likes of Muhammad
Ali, Kyuzo Mifune, Rickson Gracie and other greats of their ilk had become that
by the sheer amount of their training? No, they did not just train more (if
they did train more than their rivals at all), but they sure did train better!
Take
a look at the previous video and tell me if Rickson seems even remotely
concerned about the numbers – reps, miles, sets, rounds – or is it more about
the quality of what he does? Well, if one is in this for the long run, then we better
follow his lead.
OK,
so how to make sure you train well, not just a lot? Obviously, it demands presence
and focus during the sessions. In order to maintain the necessary level of
concentration, start by doing your activity (drills, techniques, forms) for
time periods/rounds and not preset number repetitions. Go as slow as needed to
prevent technical degradation. Make the rounds short and alternate between the
rounds of two or three unrelated skills. This sort of interleaved practice
keeps the nervous system operating better, thus yielding the better retention
in the long run.
Next,
be sure that everybody involved in the training understand that resistance does
not equal competition, and that you can’t win a drill. Training partners are
there to help each other grow by presenting challenge, not to impede one
another by boosting the ego. It is possible to training both hard and smart at
the same time.
Making
periodical video footage of you training sessions does not only provide great
feedback regarding the potential flaws and problems to work on, but also
motivation when comparing the progress made over the course of months or years.
This is particularly handy in those schools and systems that do not use those extrinsic
“measures” such as belts, grades etc.
Don’t
get me wrong, there are times when “hard facts” rule, and our training needs to
be as precisely measurable as possible, but for crying out loud, do not let statistics
take over your life, because numbers and papers will never be more important
than people.