I have a fair few friends who are trainers in combat pistol marksmanship (the only martial art that truly originated in the United States), and they are fond of using a phrase that seems to communicate what your student is on about. They refer to bad habits picked up by effective trainers as "training scars."Audi wrote: ↑Wed Sep 26, 2018 10:13 pmMy two caveats are that you should not learn this form out of a sense that something key is missing from the Association’s curriculum or that the details of this form are instantly and automatically translatable to how we train. Someone doing either would probably not have a good understanding on how exactly we are supposed to train. To paraphrase one of my students, I could say that even good teaching can have undesirable side effects.
Our class formally starts Tuesday, and we're meeting one last time in the park this Saturday. After our Saturday session, I mean to spend time with the senior instructor - in addition to asking him to teach me the "fast set" shown above (well enough to do if not to teach myself), I also want to discuss with him the possibility of us working much more systematically on tui-shou than our class had done in the past. This of course means the three of us "cadre" members need to "step up our push-hands game" and get much better at it than we are now. I'm convinced we are each capable enough in the art to get there mostly on our own, though we will be attending a workshop in the near future where we hope to learn more.
Back to the fast form, I'll keep an open mind toward it - thanks for the advice in this regard.
gvi