|
If you have practiced these
few exercises, here are a few more tips to improve your balance immediately.
1/ Make sure your support leg
i.e. the one holding your weight that you are not kicking with, is locked
straight! Do not bend at the knee at all. Lock it!
Try it again and you will see
an immediate improvement in your balance. If you can not lock it because you
are kicking too high, then you are kicking too high beyond your flexibility
range. This locking of the leg is not easy with the front kick, so you
can bend your leg slightly on that one, but all the other kicks lock it. In
fact with the front kick, turn your supporting foot slightly out to the
11'o'clock position. This helps with the holding of the kick.
2/ Make that support foot work
harder to keep your balance. You will be amazed at how effective the support
foot is at correcting balance. It is probably the one main influencing
factor. Experiment with it to see how easy it is to correct your balance
when you are in a kicking position. Get your balance, then alter the
supporting foot position, you will see how it actually throws you off
balance if you alter it. Try all different positions of the support foot to
see which one feels the most comfortable with each particular kick. This
position will alter according to the type of kick and the height.
3/ Turn that supporting foot
out and around to improve balance especially in the roundhouse and side kick
positions. Usually the more you turn your support foot away from the kick
the better the stability. This is usually governed by the height of your
kick and direction relative to your hip position.
4/ This is a good tip.
When you are holding your leg
out and trying to keep your balance make sure you have your eyes fixed on a
stationary object. Look at a point on the wall beyond your foot, pick a mark
or pattern out on the wall and stare at it.
Do not look at your foot or
the floor or the instructor or anything except a solid fixed object.
Also keep the head as still as
possible.
Try it now, you will see a
real improvement in your balance.
Usually the eyes fix onto the
kicking foot or you dart a glance everywhere.
It is important to concentrate
on a non moving object.
This is relevant when holding
the kick in a stationary position, not when you are sparring e.t.c
5/ Try to keep your head above
the support leg as much as possible this is to try to centre the balance.
Good flexibility will assist this, but still try to do it if you can. In
other words do not throw your head away from the kicking leg too much in
fact do the opposite and try to nod towards it.
6/ If your find that when you
are delivering a side kick or roundhouse kick and you are falling off
balance backwards. Try to turn the supporting foot away even more into an
opposite position to the kicking direction. If you feel that when you are
delivering the kick that you are rolling on the knife edge of the support
foot that is usually an indication that you need to turn the foot a little
more. Try it!
|