Archive for the ‘Health & Fitness’ Category

Functional Fitness & Combat Conditioning

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Most martial artists are always seeking to find a balance between speed, strength, endurance, and flexibility.  Whether you are a San Da fighter (kung fu), Jiu Jitsu stylist or traditional Karateka, conditioning plays a huge role in the development of your overall skill level.

When it comes to conditioning, there are as many different kinds of exercises as there are martial arts (that’s a lot!)  I’m sure that you have heard it all before.  ”Do strength training one day and endurance training the next, and oh don’t forget to stretch!”  The problems with this isolation approach is that it fails to utilize and train the entire body as one cohesive unit.  Running for example, will build cardiovascular endurance but generally fails to build strength and lean muscle mass in the rest of the body.  Look at the physiques of long distance runners as an example.  Weight training although good for building muscle is notorious for building bad joints and restricting flexibility.

Traditional martial artists have been using body weight exercises for generations to simultaneously build strength, endurance and flexibility.  Take as an example a regular push up.

  1. Builds strength & lean muscle mass
  2. Integrates more muscle fiber than a weight machine or free weights by relying on supporting muscle groups for stability
  3. Builds core body strength
  4. Can give you a cardiovascular workout when performed with high repetitions
  5. Enhances flexibility and makes stronger joints
  6. Does not require expensive equipment or access to a gym
There are different body weight exercises that can build, strengthen and tone every part of your body.  The hindu squat, as another example, will build almost every muscle of the legs and lower body.  The gluteal muscles (butt), quadriceps, hamstrings, and calves get worked in one compound movement.  If you want to get that six pack going, well there are exercises for that too.
Body weight exercises, also called functional fitness movements or combat conditioning (for the more martial set), will make you better at your chosen art.  But body weight exercises have another added benefit.  When performed correctly and with proper form, these exercises will actually reduce your chances of injury!  That’s because these kinds of exercises strengthen connective tissue as well as muscle.
Traditional martial artists have been using body weight exercises to supplement their chosen art for many generations.  So if you are looking to improve that roundhouse kick or just simply wanting a way to improve your fitness level, make sure that you incorporate a wide variety of body weight exercises into your training regimen.
Learn more about martial arts training in San Diego visit: whitedragonmartialarts.com

Dit Da Jow

Monday, October 19th, 2009

By Grandmaster Doc Fai Wong

Training For Life February 1995

In ancient China healing arts were often reserved for martial artists. Injured people went to the martial arts sifu, calling him the dit da (tit da) doctor. Dit means falling, da translates to be beat up or struck, hence people injured from fighting or falling went to martial arts dit da doctors for treatment. From there dit da became a term for any injury, covering burns, cuts or bleeding, broken bones and even bullet wounds.

There were several levels of treatment practiced by dit da doctors. The first were minor injuries caused by falling, bruising such as hematomas and muscle injuries. The next level is joint dislocations, such as a broken nose, jammed finger or wrist joints, elbow or shoulder dislocations, and any joint hyper extensions. After that comes fractured bones. There are all injuries treated by martial arts masters. Even today, kung fu sifu in Asia treat and set injuries and broken bones.

Injuries come from sports, labor or work related injuries. In the old days small Chinese towns and villages didn’t have hospitals, so injured people went to see the local martial artist for relief. Some of these people were good doctors, who had special herbal formulas and techniques handed down from generation to generation in their families.

In China in the old days there were no such things as stitches for open wounds and cuts. Therefore, using the right herbal powder was a must for stopping bleeding. Any good dit da doctor had to have a good formula to stop bleeding. The one you buy over the counter today, yun nan bai yao, is rated the best in China for “blood stop” medicine.

Besides good herbal formulas, martial artists needed to be expert at certain healing techniques, such as how to replace a dislocated joint and how to set a broken bone without it healing crooked. Remember there were no X-rays in the old days.

Martial artists got their training from watching their own martial arts teacher in action healing others. Information was passed down from teacher to teacher. Today, in various parts of Asia, martial artist dit da doctors still practice their trade. Many people will go to no other doctor for relief from injuries.

Even those with muscular pains, such as an elbow that isn’t dislocated or fractured - possibly caused by a strained tendon or muscle - go to experienced dit da doctors. Dit da doctors should know whether to massage or not to massage soft tissue injuries, like the strained elbow. Sometimes rubbing an injury causes more damage to the original injury. On the other hand, some tendon injuries come from tendons that are slightly twisted or shortened. Good dit da doctors know massage techniques that loosen the tendons and relieve pain.

Besides massage, dit da doctors had a lotion to apply to the injured area. Now known as dit da jao, this lotion hastens healing when used with massage. Jao means alcohol or liquor and describes the base ingredient that speeds absorption into the injured area. Dit da jao has become the most popular lotion in the martial arts school.

For major injuries and deep bruises, rubbing dit da jao won’t do the job. Martial arts healers made a dough based plaster to apply to injured area for four to eight hours at a time. This means the dit da doctor has to have another remedy called dit da fun (powder). Dit da fun is made from many types of herbs, ground into powder, stored in a container and used by scooping anywhere from one half to one cup, heated and mixed with different lotions to make a dough that is not too weary nor too dry.

In the old days the dit da doctor might use a piece of leaf, like banana or lotus leaf, as backing for the dit da dough. Nowadays, they use wax paper or Saran Wrap, with the dough spread about a quarter to one half inch thick in a four to six inch rectangle, depending on the size of the injured area. For an injury caused by a hot swelling, a cool plaster is used.

If the injury is not swollen a hot plaster is used. The plaster is then wrapped with an Ace bandage. For example, a foot injury is treated by wearing a plaster for about eight hours overnight (longer than that might develop a rash because of a lack of air on the skin surface). Then the dried plaster is taken off its base and put in a bucket of hot water, where the injured foot is soaked for five to ten minutes for a second treatment at about 100 degrees Fahrenheit.

Deep injuries or internal bleeding that disturbs circulation heal faster with dit da yuen (pill), an internal medicine that helps improve circulation. These are large, ping-pong or golf-ball sized pills. The actual herbal pill inside is about the size of a marble - the rest is wax. To make dit da yuen, a special dit da powder is mixed with honey and rolled into a marble-sized ball. Then wrapped with a piece of rice paper, bee’s wax is used to seal it into a large ball for a longer shelf life. Dit da yuen is taken once in the morning and once at night, sometimes for a week to ten days. The pill can also be dissolved in a liquor and rubbed on the skin for muscle injuries.

Dit da doctors must also have the knowledge to cook specific herbs into teas for internal treatments. These are called dit da tang (soup). Most martial artists had only three formulas: neck and above injuries, body, and one for the legs to feet. Some with more knowledge have more formulas, one for every kind of injury.

While today many people go to hospitals for serious injuries, martial arts doctors still flourish in Asia and many Chinatowns throughout the world.

Grandmaster Doc Fai Wong is a columnist for Inside Kung Fu Magazine.

Martial Arts Improves Fitness Levels in Baby Boomers

Monday, September 28th, 2009

A 2004 study of middle agers showed that participants in a martial arts program showed an overall higher level of fitness than those who were sedentary.  The study conducted by the New York Institute of Technology measured the effects of a martial arts program on eighteen volunteers aged 40-60.  The group made up of 14 men and 4 women had an average age of 47 years.  Nine of the participants were actively engaged in a martial arts program while the other nine remained sedentary.

After a one day battery of tests the study found that body composition (body fat %) was 18.9% for the martial arts group and 30.8% for the sedentary group.  The martial arts group was able to balance for 61.8 seconds compared to 26.2 seconds for the sedentary.  The average number of push ups performed was 47 vs 19, and the number of sit ups was 66 vs 37.  The participants also had flexibility and leg strength measured and you guessed it, the martial arts group showed higher levels of flexibility and quadriceps strength.  Perhaps the biggest difference showed that the martial arts group had a 25% higher level of aerobic capacity.

The study concluded that there were significant differences in between the two groups on all of the physical fitness tests.  The martial arts group showed better strength, flexibility, balance and aerobic capacity.  The martial arts group also had a significantly lower body fat %.  However, the study did not point out how long the participants were engaged in their martial arts program or whether diet was a consideration.

Martial arts is an excellent form of physical exercise for adults and can be a great alternative to a gym membership or expensive home equipment.  The combination of physical and mental exercise creates a perfect method of training for the baby boomer set.  Studies have shown that martial arts is not only a way to improve overall fitness levels, but it can be an effective way of maintaining cognitive function and memory as well.

White Dragon Martial Arts, Train Hard-Live Better!

For Some Exercises, Slower is Better (Ars Technicha)

Monday, September 14th, 2009

THE BIOMECHANICS OF THE MEASURED, FLOWING MOVEMENTS OF TAI CHI DEMONSTRATE THAT SLOWER SPEEDS LEAD TO GREATER MUSCLE ACTIVATION IN THE LOWER BODY.

by Yun Shi | August 27, 2009

If you’re familiar with exercise, you know that speed is an important factor to control. For common exercises like running and weight lifting, volumes of research has shown that it’s generally necessary to move faster for a more intense cardio workout and to make measured, controlled movements for building muscles. Other workouts, like mind-body exercises (e.g., yoga and tai chi), are somewhat harder to pin down. They aren’t cardio exercises, nor are they strictly muscle building.

Tai Chi 2.jpg

The slow, flowing movements of mind-body exercises have been around for centuries, and they have been shown to help people develop balance, flexibility, and muscle function. Consequently, they’ve been increasing in popularity, both for physical therapy and personal enjoyment. While these exercises are widely practiced around the world, the biomechanical basis for their effects is not well known. To gain further insight, Ge Wu and Xiaolin Ren, biomedical engineers from the University of Vermont, chose to study how the unhurried steps of tai chi benefit its practitioners.

Experienced tai chi instructors like Ben Stanley and Leslie Edwards often remind their students that slower is better. Stanley says that “it’s about breathing and being attuned to the muscles as you’re moving. It’s important not to rush it, or you could miss the full benefits of the exercise.” In fact, Edwards pointed out that “the slower you go, the harder it is, and you definitely feel it in your legs.”

Tai chi can certainly be a test of patience for the inexperienced, as it is normally performed about 10 times slower than an average walk (2 mph), but it has a similar intensity to a moderate aerobic workout. Much of its direct benefits have been reported in the legs. To determine if and how the deliberate, gradual transitions in tai chi were responsible for these benefits, Wu and Ren employed a combination of biomechanical force plates, a camera-based motion analysis system, and EMG (electromyography) electrodes.

The 12 subjects, grouped as young (22-34 years) and old (64-80 years), performed a fundamental tai chi movement, “part wild horse’s mane,” at various speeds. Besides marking the participant’s motion from shoulder to toe, Wu and Ren measured the duration and magnitude of activation for six muscles that are key to ankle, knee, and hip mobility.

Tai Chi 3.jpg

They found, as expected, that the duration of muscle activation was longer during slower motions in all six muscles. The effect was most significant for the rectus femoris (one of the quadriceps muscles) and semitendinosus (one of the hamstrings). When the participants sped up, these muscles lost this activation duration, while two muscles, the soleus (part of the calf) and semitendinosus, showed an increased activation. Thus, speeding up created an overall loss in muscle activation.

Age was also a factor in muscle activation. At slower speeds, younger subjects showed more muscle activation than older participants. This could be the result of older practitioners having a more limited range of movement. Stanley has often observed that it’s “difficult for older people to really sink down and fully extend in some of the postures compared to younger students,” but he has “seen posture, balance, and overall well being improve through time.”

Overall, Wu and Ren observed that speed had a greater impact on lower body muscles than other factors, like age or depth of movement. Their work demonstrate that slow, controlled movements can activate muscles more than rapid motion. The approach can also be used to study additional movements in tai chi and other exercises like yoga—a thorough understanding of exercise biomechanics should allow people to make more informed choices about what activities to pursue.

View the original article here: arstechnicha.com

A Grandmaster’s View on Longevity

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Wong Gong was born in 1928 and has been practicing and teaching Choy Li Fut Kung Fu for nearly 70 years.  Not only is Wong Gong an expert in traditional Southern Chinese Lion Dancing, he has also learned all of Choy Li Fut’s rare animal forms, and the founder’s special weapon the Nine Dragon Trident.  Wong Gong is also a highly respected Chinese herbalist and acupuncturist: he has practiced Chinese medicine as a full time profession since 1997.

With 6 generations underneath him and over 50,000 students worldwide, the Jiangmen Branch of Choy Li Fut under Wong Gong has become one of the most successful branches of Choy Li Fut in the world.

Here are Grandmaster Wong Gong’s principles for leading a long and productive life (with a little bit of modern science to go along with the ancient wisdom).

1.  Laugh a Lot Recent scientific studies show that laughter has the ability to increase blood supply to the brain.  Laughter also has shown to decrease the levels of the stress hormones cortisol and epinephrine and increase the level of immune boosting hormones beta-endorphins and human growth hormone.

2.  Practice Your Marital Arts Regularly The benefits of being engaged in a regular exercise regimen are well documented.  Exercise helps with weight management and the prevention of chronic disease like diabetes, improves cardiovascular function and even elevates mood.

3.  Avoid Alcohol and Tobacco Alcohol and tobacco abuse leads to a wide variety of chronic illness that include cancer, diabetes, and arteriosclerosis.

4.  Eat a Healthy Diet A healthy diet that includes lots of fresh vegetables reduces the risk of coronary heart disease, type 2 diabetes, stroke and cancer.  A healthy diet has many, many other benefits too.

5.  Get Plenty of Rest Your body produces more protein while you sleep.  This helps to mend the body at the cellular level.  Getting plenty of sleep will also reduce stress levels and improve memory.  A good night’s rest can also help to control body weight!  That’s right, sleep helps to regulate hormones that are associated with appetite control.

Discover the benefits of Kung Fu and Tai Chi training in San Diego County: whitedragonmartialarts.com

The Health Benefits of Raw Foods

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

If you started an exercise program (like martial arts) and haven’t thought about your diet, then you are missing a key ingredient for long term success. In today’s world of fad diets and nutrition gurus, it is easy to get caught up in a world of gimmicks and diet tricks.  It’s easy to get swept away in the science of “nutritionism” and miss the big picture.  The big picture should always be focused on two precepts: we should eat for health, and we should eat for pleasure.

Our society’s infatuation with weight loss has often caused more damage than good.  The modern diet fads of today are failing because Americans continue to have major health crises.  Diabetes, cancer and obesity are at all time highs.  So if you are searching for something that works, then perhaps history can be your guide.  All you have to do is look back far enough to find one of man’s original diets, the raw food diet.

When food is cooked above 118 degrees, the enzyme content is destroyed.  Enzymes are biomolecules that help us digest and assimilate food.  When we deprive our bodies of enzymes, our pancrease has to work harder to keep up with the demand.  Over time, this excessive work can lead to the impairment of other metabolic functions like the secretion of insulin.  In addition, high temperatures will cause the food to lose up to 80% of its vitamins and up to 95% of its phytonutrients.

People who have increased the amount of raw foods in their diets have seen some amazing changes in their overall health.   Eating raw foods has been shown to stop the advance of many of the “middle age diseases” like diabetes, heart disease and cancer.  In addition, raw foods improve immune function, increase energy, and aid in weight loss.  People who consume a high level of raw foods claim better digestion and more radiant skin!

You don’t have to eat 100% raw to have benefit.  People who have a diet that comprises 50-75% raw are seeing great results.  The more hardcore “raw-foodists” however will suggest 75-100%.  Regardless of the amount in your diet, simply increasing the consumption of raw foods over time will help you in your quest for optimal health.  A diet that is rich in fresh vegetables and fruits (organic preferrably) is widely accepted as cornerstone for great health.