Blythe decided to stretch, just to get her body loosened up a bit before she started really working out. She started by jogging in place, kicking her knees up as far as she could, and kicking up small bits of sand with the movement. She did that for a good ten minutes before moving on to other stretches.
Blythe extended her right arm out in front of her, keeping her palm up, and elbow straight. She pointed her fingers, down and out the ground by bending her hand at the wrist. She reached out her left arm, and grabbed her right hand, gently pulling it toward her. She held this position for 15 seconds, before switching arms, and repeating over and over again four separate times.
Then, she started make smooth circles with her shoulders. Blythe would raise her shoulders as high as she could, before pulling them together behind her, and then bringing them back to her typical position. She did this over and over again for about five minutes, first rolling her shoulders forward, and then back.
Blythe then put her right hand in the middle of her back, right under her neck, her palm flat on her back. With her free hand, she grabbed her right elbow, and began to pull downward. She started to feel a stretch in the back of her right arm. She held this position for thirty seconds, counting silently in her head, before she switched arms, and repeated another two times.
Then Blythe stood with her arms lying limp by her side. She turned her head as far left as it could go, peering down the empty beach, and then right, as a seagull walked across the sand, a small fish dangling in its beak. Each time she turned her head as far as it would go, Blythe held the position for seven seconds before turning her head to face the other direction. She repeated this five times.
Still with her arms at her side, Blythe tilted her head to the side, putting her right ear on her right shoulder four five seconds, then tilting her head in the other direction, resting her left ear on her left shoulder. She held the position for five seconds, before repeating the exercise another three times.
Standing with her knees slightly bent, Blythe reached her hands over her head, grabbing her right elbow in her left hand, and left elbow in her right hand. She gently pulled her right elbow behind her head and leaned to the side until she felt a stretch. She held the position for ten seconds until switching to the other side of her body, and repeating the stretch three more times.
When that was done, Blythe put her hands on her hips. Gently, she twisted her torso at the waist, so that she was looking over her right shoulder, and began to feel a stretch. She held the position for 11 seconds, counting silently in her head, before repeating the stretch on the other side of her body. The last thing Blythe did, were a few lunges to stretch out her legs. When that was done, she stood up straight again, and wiggled her body, getting all the kinks out as she rolled her head around and around, before assuming mountain pose.
In this position, Blythe faced the sea, the crashing waves. She bowed at the waist, as if showing the sea her respect, before standing back up. She decided she would practice blocks, or how she imagined one would block someone if they were trying to attack her. Blythe balled up her hands into fists, she stood with her right foot stretched out about 8 inches in front of her left. Her right arm was resting by her side, her left arm tucked under her shoulder.
Blythe led with her elbow, moving her left arm across her chest, and rotating her hip slightly to the right. This left her middle area blocked, although it left her upper body and lower area wide open for attack.
There must be a way to correct that, Blythe thought as she tried using her left elbow as a pivot point, moving it down and to the left, which effectively blocked her lower half.
While that was going on, her right arm swung in a circular motion, protecting the lower area of her body while her left arm moved downward to form the intended block. (Even though both arms had effectively blocked a portion of her body). Blythe breathed deeply, in through the nose, and slowly out through the mouth, as she finished the block, her left arm coming to a stop at her side, and her right arm tucked under her right shoulder. She was essentially, back in the position in which she had begun.
Blythe repeated the block over and over again, until it had stuck in her mind. She was still a little shaky, and the movements felt rather out of place and awkward without someone else to try them out on. She wished she had someone to spar with, someone to watch her, teach her, as opposed to simply relying on her instincts, and what she had seen others do in the past. It was difficult to simply imagine blocking an arm that was about to strike you, as opposed to actually doing it.
Blythe sighed, trying not to dwell on the fact, and to simply move on in her training. Blythe decided to try another block, a lower inside forearm block that she had seen once as a small girl. She stood with her right foot about 6 inches in front of the left. Slowly, she extended her right arm out, and down across her body, from the outside to the inside, at approximately, a 45 degree angle, in relation to the ground. The block ended just past the left side of her body.
Blythe's movements were slow, calculated, uncertain. Her hands were shaky, confused, and it took her several tries to so much as begin to feel comfortable with the movements of her body, and the attempt at the second block. By the end of it however, her movements were only mildly more confident than when she had began, and only a little less shaky.
Figuring it was time to move on, Blythe tried another block, Blythe opened her hands, so that they were no longer balled up in fists. She was going to attempt what was called the hooking block, she had seen her mother practice it with her grandmother a few times before, but had never truly tried the move out for herself.
Blythe lifted her left arm so that it covered her face. In her starting position, Blythe's right hand rested under her left elbow. She then made a large arc with her hand that moved both slightly forward, and up. While she was doing this, her left arm returned, to the resting position.
Blythe imagined someone swinging at her, she imagined her right arm passing through the center area, which was directly in front of her body, and making contact with the imaginary arm. She imagined herself hooking onto the imaginary arm with her hand, before sliding the made-up opponent's wrist down and pulling. This movement had brought her right arm to rest close to her body, her right elbow was still pointing down, towards the ground, and her hands were shaking. This would be far far easier with someone else, she thought, before practicing the block a few more times, finally deciding that there was no point in practicing blocks with no one else present to practice with.
Blythe decided to move onto practicing punches. She began with her right hand hovering just below her left elbow. With her left arm, she made a circular open-handed block in front of her face. At the same time, she formed a large crescent-shaped arch in front of her form with her right hand. This was finished with her palm facing upwards, resting near her right hip.
Blythe's left arm completed a small circular hooking motion, coming to a rest under her shoulder. Blythe practiced this move over and over again, until she exhausted herself, her heart pounding in her chest, her breath becoming shallow. Blythe bent over and picked up her water skin. She opened the top and took a long drink from it, before closing it and putting it down on the sand once more.
Blythe wiped her mouth with the back of her hand, before resuming the mountain pose. Blythe stood like that for a long time, breathing deeply in through the nose, and out through the mouth, before she spread her legs again, her right foot firmly planted in the sand approximately a foot in front of her left. She balled her hands into fists, and raised them so they came to a rest, hovering just in front of her chest. Her right hand was slightly more forward than her left, and her body was twisting slightly to the right side.
Blythe took a deep breath before she extended her right hand forward, punching the air. Then she retracted her arm, punched with the left. It was like her arm had snapped into the punch. Her wrist twisting, and almost flinching at the same time. The movement was awkward, and more than likely in rather poor form. But Blythe didn't care, she just kept punching the air, over and over again. Right left right left right left, until beads of sweat appeared on her brow, and she had to wipe them away with the back of her hand before plopping back down on the sand, and taking another little break; another drink from the water skin.
Blythe looked out at the sea. It was still calm, still blue-green, pretty much as it had always seemed to be. Tired of resting, Blythe forced herself to get back up, even though her entire body ached, and she felt exhausted; even though she didn't know how much more her body could honestly take, Blythe forced herself back up, all she needed to do, was practice her kicking a bit, and then she could wrap up her intense work out.
Blythe slowly got to her feet, her hands balled into fists, resting in front of her chest, her left slightly in front of her right, as her body twisted to the side at the waist, and her left foot lay firmly on the sand, approximately ten inches in front of the right.
Blythe kicked, her form so poor, the movement so awkward, yet forceful, that she fell flat on her butt with a low thud, the sand around her flying in all sorts of directions. Blythe laughed, she supposed she wouldn't be practicing her kicks after all, instead, she'd go right back to stretching.
OOC: Referenced this site:
http://www.all-karate.com/129/how-to-learn-karate