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Master Nicholls in conjunction with Grand Master Choi
Jung Hwa has provided this section to help our Taekwon-Do
community in standardising the way ITF Tuls are performed. As you well
know there are many different opinions, variations, applications and
implementation for Tul movements which in turn lead to slight
differences in the actual performance.
As a group,
Imperial aim to standardise the way we perform the ITF Tuls. We will
use the following sections to provide useful information from Master
Nicholls and President Choi Jung Hwa on how the ITF wish to implement
these movements.
Latest Update:
◊ Juche ◊
Eui-Am ◊
So-San
Please feel
free to submit questions regarding any of the ITF Tuls. We will
endeavour to post answers at the earliest opportunity. Select a Tul
and click on the button to the right
The Reason for 24 Patterns
The life of a human being, perhaps 100 years, can be considered as a day
when compared with eternity. Therefore, we mortals are no more than simple
travellers who pass by the eternal years of an eon in a day. It is evident
that no one can live more than a limited amount of time. Nevertheless,
most people foolishly enslave themselves to materialism as if they could
live for thousands of years. And some people strive to bequeath a good
spiritual legacy for coming generations, in this way, gaining immortality.
Obviously, the spirit is perpetual while material is not; therefore, what
we can do to leave behind something for the welfare of mankind is,
perhaps, the most important thing in our lives.
Here I leave Taekwon-Do for mankind as a trace of man of the late 20th
century. The 24 patterns represent 24 hours, one day, or all my life. The
name of the pattern, the number of movements, and the diagrammatic symbol
of each pattern symbolizes either heroic figures in Korean history or
instances relating to historical events.
- General Choi Hong Hi -
Essential
Information about Patterns
The following points should be considered
while performing patterns:
- Pattern should begin and end at exactly
the same spot. This will indicate the performer's accuracy.
- Correct posture and facing must be
maintained at all times.
- Muscles of the body should be either
tensed or relaxed at the proper critical moments in the exercise.
- The exercise should be performed in a
rhythmic movement with an absence of stiffness.
- Movement should be accelerated or
decelerated according to the instructions in this book.
- Each pattern should be perfected before
moving to the next.
- Students should know the purpose of
each movement.
- Students should perform each movement
with realism.
- Attack and defence techniques should be
equally distributed among right and left hands and feet.
All patterns listed are performed under
the assumption the student is facing "D" (see pattern diagrams). There are
a total of twenty-four patterns in Taekwon-Do. The name of the pattern,
the number of movements, and the diagrammatic symbol of each pattern
symbolize either heroic figures in Korean history or instances relating to
historical events.
©2003
INTERNATIONAL TAEKWON-DO FEDERATION |