Rolling is a fundamental skill to any Systema trainee. Its uses are infinite and it is a highly practical, usable skill. There are many dimensions to a good roll,
which include:
- Proper balance of tension and relaxation
- Awareness throughout the entire movement
- Correct breathing and form
The basic Systema roll is as follows -
- Starting on your knees, extend one arm straight out to the side
- Place the other hand on the floor next to your shoulder and look under and through the space between your arm and the floor.
- Now continue rolling over from shoulder to the other shoulder and down to the opposite hip.
(For more information about rolling and for a greater and more precise description of how to roll see "Let Every Breath" by Vladimir Vasiliev and Scott Merideth
Note - In the movement this may become a shoulder to hip roll, but emphasizing the shoulder, shoulder, hip instead, gives overall better form and teaches you to have a greater degree of control over your own body.
Once you have evolved your roll into a fairly soft roll. Here are some challenging and interesting variations, Which help you gain more precision and control of your movement and breathing.
- Start the roll in different stages of the breath cycle , inhale , exhale , breath held on inhale, breath held on exhale.
- Using a stick hold it in different and uncomfortable positions Eg - On the shoulders which the hands draped over it.
- Blindfolded or with eyes closed
- With the whole body or specific parts tense
- With a stick down one trouser leg or tied to a leg
- Roll with any object held in your hands - a knife, a whip, a chain, a cap etc
- Roll over and on a stick or sticks -- ouch
- Roll towards an obstacle and change direction mid- roll to avoid it
Practice these drills they will take your rolls to the next level.
Have fun
Tom
Monday, May 5, 2008
Rolling - learning how to swim on dry land
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Training log post
Here is a quick training log of my own personal training yesterday.
- I started with some segmented tension and full body tension work only instead of laying on my back i laid on my front. I found this more challenging and harder to tense up the body as a whole unit.
- I then moved into doing 7 of each the core exercises with full body tension and then with moderate tension, then with minimal muscular activation then with no muscle.
I'm just starting to get the no muscle work now, but i still feel like i may be using too much tension.
- I then started doing a drill where you tense your fists slightly and roll, move around and fall while keeping your fists slightly tense. This is to add fullness and power to your hands while dynamically relaxing your shoulders, arms and the rest of your body.
- I finished with walking up the wall on my fists, facing forwards and backwards and then sideways.
I also did this with straight arms.
- i then moved onto the floor and did some wrist exercises, where you start in push up position and you collapse your wrist one side then go back up then repeat the other side + many more variations of this.
Total time - 40 mins
Have fun
Tom
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Full body and segmented tension Futhur work
There is a Systema practice which involves consciously tensing different muscles or groups of muscles with different degrees of strength.
There is deeper work where you can tense the tendons, nerves and joints but this is beyond the scope of this post. I shall be primarily focusing on the muscular variations.
These can be as simple as tensing an arm of a leg or can be made much more challenging by incorporating motion and control into the practice.
These drills teach you to become more adaptable and free.
They help you recognize where in your body you have excess tension, due to past injury, incorrect posture or imbalances and help you to release that tension, through becoming aware of your own internal and external condition.
Here are a number of variations that i have found more challenging:
- Change the position: lay of your front/ side instead of your back, while sitting down, while against a wall, while halfway through a roll/ in the lowest or topmost position in any the core exercises
- Add motion: during walking, running, rolling or falling
- Add time: extend the length of time you hold the tension try 30 seconds or even a minute, extend the length of time after you have exhaled in the relaxed state (just hold your breath)
- Muscle group variations - just tense your arms and legs, the shoulders and buttocks, the top half/bottom half of body, hands and feet, the fingers, the jaw, shoulders and hands, thighs and feet.
Different degrees - See if you can tense the upper body 50% and the lower body 100% vice versa, hands and feet 100% and the rest of the body 50%, whole body 25%
There are many more variations and they really are only limited by your imagination. If you always give yourself a challenge, your body will respond with enhanced awareness, sensitivity and control.
Good luck
Tom
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Keeping the body healthy
In this post i am going to talk about how to keep the whole body physically healthy.
To have health in any part of the body we need 3 key things:
- Strength - Strength of muscles and connective tissue, Correct alignment and structure
- Relaxation - The overall tension quotient of the body part must be low, so that all movements are carried out with the least possible effort, which reduces the risk of injury or strain.
- Mobility and awareness - The body part must be mobile in all planes of movement. You must also be kinesthetically aware of the body part.
- Do body weight exercises as these strengthen the muscles as well as the connective tissue(tendons, ligaments etc)
- Exercise every part of your body not just the obvious ones from the neck and spine to the feet ankles and toes
- While laying down on your back, bring your awareness to a particular body part and consciously try and relax it.
- Stretch out the muscles in unusual ways. Google: stretches and make up your own.
- Circle and move all your joints in various planes. One of Mikhails drills for this, is to write out your name with 1 arm or both arms in the air.
- Pick a specific body part and inhale through your nose and tense that part as hard as possible, hold the tension for 10 seconds and then exhale and relax that part. Repeat as required. This drill teaches you to become aware of tension and relaxation in specific body parts.
Have fun
Tom
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Systema - Foundation of movement
Foundation of movement
The core exercises provide a foundation for movement and these 4 exercises form the programs of movement in our body. These exercises are gross/large muscular movements which as opposed to smaller/fine muscular movements/ techniques do not limit us and allow our freedom and creativity to express itself.
Done for a long time they erode the old habital motor programs or patterns of tension (conscious or unconscious)
which have become ingrained over the years into our body eg bending down to pick up an object with a rounded back as opposed to squatting low and bending forward with the back straight.
The core exercises done slowly and relaxed using only the amount of tension required and no more excessive or unconscious tension load these gross movements into the muscles, tendons and ligaments as opposed to gym style pushups or situps with the breath held or creased, which increases the muscular and nervous tension.
Any technique is really an engrained pattern of tension that limits us to a particular response and causes us to be tense. If were are told for example to punch someone into the body in a specific way or direction then our mind focuses only on that and other options are not seen, so that however the person reacts to that punch we have a specific counter movement and are not flexible or fluid in our approach or further work. This is the same for the bodies senses when when we focus on one sense eg hearing our sight, smell, touch, the other senses are dulled.
Systema instead allows you to see what you can do and what needs to be done
Systema instead allows you to see what must be done and to do it.
In systema one approach is to use tension and the three main ways of doing this are to - make use of existing unconscious tension in the attacker eg - hitting towards a tense arms, shoulders or back.
- make use of the attackers use of conscious tension eg – a stance or a movement towards you which carries tension.
- To create tension in the attacker using your own movement, gestures, sound etc
Tension can be physiological and psychological and usually one leads to the other and they both influence each other.
Our ideal level of overall body tension must allow for maximum mobility and strength. Doing these exercises over a period of time creates a unique muscle tone, and connects all parts of the body with an overall awareness and strengthStay healthy
Tom