Another eight days passed.
Su Jie had been studying at the "Minglun Martial Arts Academy" for half a month.
For most students, fifteen days would merely be a vacation filled with sleeping in, playing online games, and enjoying the air conditioning.
But for Su Jie, these fifteen days had brought about monumental changes in both body and mind.
Under the guidance of Odell, a world-class coach, Su Jieâs understanding of martial arts improved by leaps and bounds. He had shed all confusion and was progressing boldly.
His physical fitness also reached a new level.
Though he couldn't yet compare with athletes who had trained for years, he was far stronger than the average student.
The most important gain was that he learned the correct training methods from Odell, ensuring he wouldnât waste time on detours. Even after Odell left, Su Jie could train independently.
This was critical.
July 16th arrived, the official start of summer break according to Guyangâs schedule.
At three in the morning, Su Jie went to Odell's courtyard.
As usual, he enjoyed a hearty breakfast and began various flexibility exercises.
The warm-up routines resembled Tai Chi joint exercises, purely preparatory. However, as Su Jieâs body developed and his muscles became more defined, Odell tailored additional movements for him. These included simple actions like leg presses, splits, waist twists, forward and backward stretches, and symmetrical exercises to loosen up key areas of the body. This thorough preparation ensured that the formal training session would yield maximum benefits and help him quickly get into the right state.
Warm-ups were essential and could not be skipped.
Odell's meals were top-notch, consisting of nutritious, high-quality ingredients specifically tailored to Su Jieâs physique. This demonstrated the professionalism of a world-class martial arts coach.
âTraining is fundamentally about making yourself stronger, but if you donât understand the principles of becoming stronger, you canât grasp what true training is,â Odell said, watching Su Jie finish his warm-up and begin the lesson.
âWhen muscles are stimulated, glycogen is consumed. Afterward, the glycogen not only replenishes but also surpasses its original level. In science, this is called supercompensation, and itâs one reason why consistent training makes you stronger. However, thereâs a limitâovertraining can deplete key substances in the body, causing permanent reductions in physical ability. Accurately gauging this balance is crucial, and even I canât do it as well as artificial intelligence.â
âModeration in all things,â Su Jie agreed. âThis aligns with the Chinese philosophy of the golden meanâbalancing yin and yang. Only by achieving an extreme balance between training and recovery can progress be both rapid and perfect.â
âYou have great insight,â Odell nodded. âModern martial arts theory divides physical fitness into four key areas: the physiological cross-sectional area of muscles, the nervous system's regulation, the efficiency of bones acting as levers, and the composition of muscle fibers. All training revolves around these four aspects. For example, bone efficiency as a lever corresponds to the concept of unified power in Chinese martial arts, often called integrated force. Meanwhile, the nervous systemâs regulation ties to reaction speed, courage, hormone secretion, and inner calmâall of which are fundamental to internal cultivation methods in martial arts.â
Su Jie asked, âIâve researched martial arts materials online, and traditional Chinese martial arts often emphasize integrated force, with countless types of power and techniques. Even simple movements come with explanations that could fill essays or books. It all seems overly complex and hard to understand. Isnât there a lot of unnecessary mystification?â
âWhat do you think?â Odell countered.
âI think movements like the hoe strikeâlifting, plunging, stepping, wrapping, stretching, releasing, exhaling, and retractingâdo indeed involve deep principles. Writing a book about them isnât impossible. The more I practice, the more profound and expansive it feels,â Su Jie reflected. âBut once this move is mastered, it seems to encompass all other movements.â
âExactly. Your understanding shows that youâre on the right path in martial arts,â Odell said. âIâve seen many martial artists waste decades pursuing the wrong methods, achieving nothing in the end.â
âIâll be leaving soon. Tell me, what have I taught you during this time? Can you continue practicing on your own after I leave?â
âIâve learned the true method of practicing and applying the hoe strike, the warm-up joint exercises you taught me, and the muscle and skin conditioning techniques for relaxation and tension. You also taught me how to manage my eating and sleeping routines with the âGreat Corpse Stateâ method. If you leave, I can still practice the hoe strike, warm-ups, and maintain proper routines. However, continuing the muscle conditioning will be difficult without you. It requires precise striking techniques, and if someone else does it incorrectly, not only will it hinder progress, but I could also get injured,â Su Jie replied without hesitation, showing he had thought deeply about this issue.
In any sport, the coach is crucial.
Having an international top-tier coach like Odell was the key to Su Jieâs rapid progress. Without him, Su Jieâs training would stall.
Even world champions and boxing kings rely on coaches for daily training.
Without a coach, practicing alone is like a blind man feeling an elephantâitâs easy to develop bad habits. This is especially true for Su Jie, who is currently at a critical stage in his growth and cannot afford to lack guidance.
âYouâre right. After I leave, you canât just randomly find someone to hit you for horizontal training. However, there are some real experts at the Minglun Martial Arts Academy who can help you train. Once you truly reach the stage where your entire body becomes soft as cotton, hard as iron, and capable of twisting freely at will, youâll be able to train yourself through autonomous movement without needing anyone to strike you,â Odell said. âThis is a hallmark of Chinaâs hard Qigong, which actually mirrors a level in ancient yoga. It greatly benefits physical fitness.â
âIâve been training horizontally for so long that Iâve noticed something unusual. No matter how hard I train, my muscles donât get sore anymore, and my endurance has increased significantly,â Su Jie remarked, having long been aware of his peculiar situation.
âMuscle soreness results from prolonged tension and the accumulation of lactic acid under pressure. If not relieved through methods like massage or saunas, it can settle over time, leading to calcification. This causes frequent soreness in the soft tissues, eventually leading to numbness and loss of sensation,â Odell explained in his usual scientific and medical style. âTypically, students studying hunched over or working at a computer for long periods face these issues in their shoulders, neck, and lower back. The same goes for those doing farm work. Severe calcification sometimes requires surgical intervention, using needles to peel it off. Traditional Chinese acupuncture often works on the same principle, extracting blocked calcifications from the muscles and skin. My horizontal training method ensures your body remains free of blockages, making it hypersensitive. Eventually, youâll reach a state where your skin alone can sense even the subtlest changes in the surrounding airflow.â
Su Jie wanted to ask more questions, but Odell stopped him. âThatâs all Iâll teach for now. Letâs begin horizontal training.â
Su Jie quickly stood still, ready to accept Odellâs strikes.
Using a rubber baton, Odell struck him, producing varying soundsâsometimes crisp, sometimes muffled.
The crisp sounds indicated force concentrated on the surface, while the muffled ones showed deeper penetration of force.
At times, Odell also used his palms, fists, fingers, twists, pinches, and presses.
These techniques were all aimed at enhancing Su Jieâs skin, muscles, and tendonsâ flexibility and sharpening his perception.
This was the essence of Odellâs expertise as a world-class coach. Basic joint exercises and martial arts advice could be taught by many, but his methods set him apart.
After the horizontal training, they moved on to physical conditioning, the so-called martial arts drills.
Oddly, Odellâs physical training for Su Jie included only running, push-ups, planks, crawling in the "lying tiger" pose, squats, and jumpsânone of the usual bag-punching or striking drills essential in combat training.
âCoach, isnât bag-punching and target-striking vital in combat? Why donât you include those in my training?â Su Jie asked during a break after their session.
âBag-punching and target-striking are simple and can be practiced on your own later. Do you know why I have you focus on these specific exercises now?â Odell asked with a smile.
âIt feels like body sculpting in fitness,â Su Jie replied after some thought.
âExactly, body sculpting,â Odell confirmed, impressed by Su Jieâs quick thinking. âAt your age, your body is like a sapling. If it starts growing crooked, itâll never grow tall. But if itâs tied straight from the start, given proper nutrients, pest control, and care, itâll grow into a towering tree. My training ensures your physique is perfect, with no asymmetry, and prevents you from taking detours in your martial arts journey.â
âIsnât the training designed by artificial intelligence more advanced than yours? Wouldnât it achieve more perfect sculpting?â Su Jie posed a sharp question.
âThisâŠâ Odell faltered momentarily before his gaze turned deep. âIn truth, the human bodyâs potential is limitless, especially in terms of psychological resilience. Youâre my experimental subject. Iâm recording all your data to reference later. I believe I can do better than artificial intelligence.â
âIâll fully cooperate with your experiment,â Su Jie assured him.
âGood,â Odell said, clapping his hands. âLetâs continue training.â