Friday, 6 June 2025

Enjoy my work and blog? You’ll love my Patreon

 


If you enjoy the work I’m doing here at Traditional Taekwondo Ramblings — the historical deep dives, translations, and practical applications — and you’d like to support it, I’ve now created a Patreon page.


This isn’t a pitch or a hard ask. The blog will always remain free and open. But if you find value in the material I’m sharing, and feel it’s worth supporting, it would mean a lot.


Your support helps cover the costs involved in doing this work — including research equipment, computer upkeep, licenses, access to books and historical documents, and of course the many hours spent reading, translating, editing, and writing. It’s a quiet but steady effort — and if it’s helping you in your training or teaching, then I’m grateful.


I’ll also try to give back through Patreon by offering quality content for supporters. Currently available are:


  • A 14-page translation and commentary on a previously untranslated paragraph from Choi Hong Hi’s 1959 Taekwondo textbook
  • A 42-page early draft of my upcoming book The ABCs of Practical Poomsae Application
  • And more to come.



If you’d like to take part in that journey and help keep it going, you can visit the Patreon page here:

๐Ÿ‘‰ www.patreon.com/traditionaltaekwondoramblings


Thank you for reading — and for being part of this journey and community ๐Ÿ™๐Ÿ™‡๐Ÿป


Chon-Ji Tul/Hyung's Karate roots



In modern ITF Taekwon-Do the karate roots of Taekwondo is often overlooked, or downplayed. I think this is also true for most schools of Taekwondo, and I think that is a mistake, because we need to have a good grasp of where we came from to see where we should continue to go. Without a proper setting off point, how can we determine the route or destination? Some "Taekwon-Do rebels" such as Paul O'Leary has written for many years on the Karate roots of different Chang Hon Ryu forms, noting how Won-Hyo Hyung is a composite of two different Pinan/Heian Karate Kata. There are several forms in Chang Hon Ryu who lifts whole sequences of Karate Kata move for move or with very small tweaks. There is nothing wrong with that, and I truly enjoy practising them, because Choi and his team really has in my opinion taken their Karate roots and infused them with a Korean identity by repackeging them, lifting sequences from Karate kata, but also expanding upon them and so on. I find great value in them in other words. One form that few people if any have noticed is also largely a repackaged Karate Kata is Chon-Ji Hyung or Tul. In this post I want to shed some light on the roots of Chon-Ji Hyung, and how it is repackaged. I have previously written about how the technical makeup of Chon-Ji Hyung is brilliant, and closely linked to philosophy, I will try to do it justice here as well. If however you want to check out a deep dive into Chon-Ji Hyung as a philosophical-Physical link you can click here for that. For the Karate roots of Chon-Ji Hyung please click to read on on this post :-)