Karin Prinsloo – Karate Blog

6th Dan Japanese Karate Association – A Instructor B Examiner B Judge – Australia Karate Federation Accredited Coach – AKF State Level Referee

Why we bow in karate and what it means….

Why we bow in karate and what it means….

Why we bow in karate and what it means….

Karrinyup Karate – 2 Nerita Way – Stirling Karate.

www.stirlingkarate.com.au

Karate Bow - Karin Prinsloo - Karate BlogBowing is probably the feature of Japanese etiquette that is best known outside Japan, especially present in Japanese Martial Arts such as Karate.

Bowing is considered extremely important in Japan, so much so that, although children normally begin learning how to bow from a very young age, companies commonly provide training to their employees in how to execute bows correctly.

Basic bows are performed with the back straight and the hands at the sides (boys and men) or clasped in the lap (girls and women), and with the eyes down. Bows originate at the waist. Generally, the longer and deeper the bow, the stronger the emotion and the respect expressed.

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To Teach Is To Learn..

To Teach Is To Learn..

To teach is to learn.. Karin Prinsloo Karate Teaching Student 4

Its true. Ask anyone that teaches karate.

www.stirlingkarate.com.au

Karrinyup Karate – 2 Nerita Way – Stirling Karate.

Like well known karate blogger, Jessie said, “To teach is to learn twice. When you teach something to others you are forced to rethink your understanding of it.”

  • Einstein said: “If you can’t explain it to a 5 year old, you don’t understand it well enough”

Karate provides a lot of mental and intellectual stimulation over and above the physical benefits. To have a deeper understanding of karate technique will most certainly add to your enjoyment of the art. Teaching karate will force you to explain why and how techniques were designed to work, especially when a 6 year old puts you on the spot!

  • I have seen the benefits of seniors teaching in our dojo over the last 20 years. It is part of our dojo culture to Karin Prinsloo Karate Teaching Student 2teach at least once a Karin Prinsloo Karate Teaching Student 1week when you receive your shodan.

This is what it’s achieving:

  1. Young adults (and older ones) learning to take responsibility, build self esteem, become leaders and give back.
  2. Learning twice, re think karate. Remembering and executing karate better and become better karate-ka.
  3. Establishing a culture of friendship and caring for fellow dojo members which builds camaraderie and spirit.

I would love to know what you learn from teaching karate in the comments section below. What do you learn from teaching karate?

The Blog of Jesse Enkamp – Karate Nerd™ www.karatebyjesse.com

Pinetown JKA Karate Institute www.pinetownjka.co.za

Heian Nidan – Important Points and Bunkai by Karin Prinsloo

Heian Nidan – Important Points and Bunkai by Karin Prinsloo

Heian Nidan – Important Points and Bunkai by Karin Prinsloo

Karrinyup Karate – 2 Nerita Way – Stirling Karate

www.stirlingkarate.com.au

Heian Nidan is the second heian kata. In this video you will be taken through the kata step by step as well as learn important points and bunkai. ‪#‎jka‬ ‪#‎sajka‬ ‪#‎pinetownjka‬ ‪#‎karinprinsloo‬ ‪#‎heian‬ ‪#‎nidan‬ ‪#‎kata‬ ‪#‎shotokan‬

 Important Points and Bunkai 

Heian Shodan – Important Points and Bunkai by Karin Prinsloo

Heian Shodan – Important Points and Bunkai by Karin Prinsloo

Heian Shodan – Important Points and Bunkai 

Karrinyup Karate – 2 Nerita Way Stirling – Stirling Karate

www.karinprinsloo.com

www.stirlingkrate.com.au

Heian Shodan is the first of the Heian kata and often the first kata you learn in a JKA or Shotokan dojo. Heian Shodan is accepted as the beginner kata. This video will take you through the kata one move at a time as well as illustrate bunkai for certain moves. ‪#‎karinprinsloo‬ ‪#‎shotokan‬ ‪#‎kata‬ ‪#‎jka‬‪#‎sajka‬ ‪#‎karate‬ ‪#‎webvideosa‬

Hein Shodan Important Points and Bunkai