Ohhhh my godddddddd oh my god
This has nothing to do with me or the martial arts I practice, but this is too cute not to share.
Ohhhh my godddddddd oh my god
This has nothing to do with me or the martial arts I practice, but this is too cute not to share.
[On Jaime’s gift to Brienne of Tarth] “Jaime wanted to show his regard for Brienne and the best way to do that is to give her something he would like. Jaime isn’t a particularly creative person, so the armor is quite functional.” (x)
The armor in this series is so cool. Beautiful, plain, functional, flashy – there’s something for everyone! I especially like the way they address how armor and movement are related.
I haven’t been doing much fighting, so I haven’t been doing much updating. I haven’t even attempted progress on my lunges.
I went to Krav on Wednesday and had a good and productive practice, but I was sore for days afterward. I’m going to both classes this week, but I’m going to tape my shoulder and tell my instructors what’s up. I think it’s pressure, not movement, that’s causing my problems.
I’ve been resting up as much as possible since then. It stinks, but it also really helps.
I see my GP on Thursday. Wish me luck.
Sword
- Culture: European
- Medium: steel
- Measurements: height: 0.977m; width: 0.18m; depth: 0.035m
Source: Copyright © 2015 Musée du Louvre/Photo: Stéphane Maréchalle
I was feeling pretty good, so I put in 100 lunges this afternoon. My right shoulder/back region started tingling about halfway through. I was in third hand position. I don’t know if the problem is hand position, body position, repetitive motion, or the time spent holding the sword out in front of me. Up to this point, my back has gotten tingly from sitting down. Leaning against a seat back usually helps.
I’ve noticed that when I do this drill, I square off a lot more than I usually do when I fence. I’m trying to turn sideways to present less of a target (you know, the way I was taught to fence in the first place). Unfortunately, whenever I think about narrowing the available target, then my lunge becomes narrower, or I stop hitting my target.
hi friend! as an epee fencer, i would suggest keeping your back straight instead of turning sideways. as youve noticed, you tend to miss the target. I too used to lunge like that but my coach told me to stop – for one, it’s also incredibly difficult to do a second action after the lunge. naturally, you should do what fit’s you best but my advice to you is to always keep your back straight and to not lean – this will stop bad habits from forming.
i think it’s really great that youre doing 100 lunges every day! that’s the kind of practice that will get you far.
Hi! Thanks for the advice. I’ll keep on doing what I was doing before then, but I have a question.
When you line up to fence, are you turning your body sideways, or are you more squared off with your opponent? When I do foil, epee, or single rapier, I try to present a small sideways target but almost always end up squared off. When I have an offhand device, being squared off has its advantages, but when I don’t, I’m not sure that I’m doing myself any favors.
If you’re interested in the 10,000 Lunge challenge, I’ll send you the document with details about each day’s prescribed drills. You’ll probably have to modify it to fit epee, though, since this was designed by a historic rapier fighter.
I was feeling pretty good, so I put in 100 lunges this afternoon. My right shoulder/back region started tingling about halfway through. I was in third hand position. I don’t know if the problem is hand position, body position, repetitive motion, or the time spent holding the sword out in front of me. Up to this point, my back has gotten tingly from sitting down. Leaning against a seat back usually helps.
I’ve noticed that when I do this drill, I square off a lot more than I usually do when I fence. I’m trying to turn sideways to present less of a target (you know, the way I was taught to fence in the first place). Unfortunately, whenever I think about narrowing the available target, then my lunge becomes narrower, or I stop hitting my target.
I decided to give it a try, and I did 100 lunges at practice tonight. I used Nik as my pell for the first 50 and hit a thumb-sized piece of tape on the wall for my next 50. We’ll see what the shoulder says in the morning.
I also got to do some endurance training. We fenced single sword for 10 minutes straight (well, 9 minutes, we were interrupted). We were going to do 11 minutes with sword and dagger, but I smashed my finger and had to stop. Somehow I managed to pin my middle finger on my left hand between the grip of my dagger and the hilt of his sword (yes, I got the kill). I’ll live, but I was done for the day.


This is how I feel when I’m too hurt to fight.
I had an awesome night at Krav Maga. We did some HIIT at the beginning and end and spent the rest of the class throwing each other around in an alley.
Tonight I realized that I make weird faces when I fight but never had to confront them because of my fencing mask. Also, if you need to do sit-ups and are prone to frequent gas, next to a Dumpster is the best place to do it.
My right shoulder is fine, maybe a little tingly after practice. My left shoulder is tight. I feel invincible right now, but I’m not going to lunge until tomorrow. I think the ~2lbs of steel at the end of my hand is what’s worsening the situation, so I’m not rushing back in yet. There will be a sword in my hand this week.