Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Comfortably Sore

November 9, 2008

We got our shipment of martial art equipment in from Taiwan a couple days ago and I bought a Kwan Dao. I had talked to Master Brinker about getting a Kwan Dao, he has a really nice (but expensive one), so he helped me order one in. I was concerned about the weight of the weapon. I did not want Wushu steel; a real Kwan Dao should be heavy and solid. I hate those flimsy, wobbly Wushu weapons. They look flashy but there’s no realism behind them. The catalogue we ordered from didn’t have the weight listed so I didn’t really know what I was going to get. I got lucky though because my Kwan Dao is awesome! Its heavy (12 pounds), solid, a good length and I like the butt end design.

Yesterday I played around with it for an hour trying to get a feel for the weapon and I can say I have never been so enthusiastic about a weapon before. It has so much potential! I already have a bunch of ideas and cannot wait to come up with a form for it. It’s a heck of a lot of fun swinging around the huge, heavy blade. Swinging it around is a major upper body workout; my arms, back and chest are really sore just from an hour of practice. I’m looking forward to the muscle I should build up from using it. I was interested in the weapon from the beginning because I wanted to see if I could come up with a cool form where I swing it quickly and smoothly. I want to see how close I can get, using my heavy weapon, to what the Wushu guys are doing with a fake light weapon. Obviously I will move slower but my goal is to make it look quick and uncumbersome. Personally I would be much more impressed with a medium speed realistic based form with a real Kwan Dao than a fast, unrealistic form with a light one.

One another note my reading is going well. I believe I am now on my 11th book on the list. Since my last update I finished “To the light house”, “Lord Jim”, “As I Lay Dying” and catch-22. I absolutely loved Catch-22! It’s a fantastic satire of the U.S. army during the Second World War. I love the constant contradictions, paradoxes and absurdity that oppose the protagonist Yossarian at every turn. It’s fantastically dark humored, silly, absurd, terrifying, and at times frighteningly realistic. I laughed out loud and often reading this book, I can’t say the same for anything else I’ve ever read. The ending was great and lifted my spirits for the rest of my day, somehow giving me a little bit for faith in the common man. The preface inspired me to leave little, “Yossarian Lives” notes lying around like John Chancellor did. I Think I might write them on random P-Can walls present on some of the construction sites I work at.

2 comments:

Jeff Brinker said...

Felt more like 50 lbs to me and the mats you have been resting it on.

Jesse Wetter said...

lol yeah... sorry about the mats. I'm going to have to wrap a sock around the bottom end or something.