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Fixed stance (Gojung Sogi) technical reference

May 22, 2026 站姿 16 views
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Ricardo Scheidegger

May 22, 2026

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Main stance dimensions

Reference pointMeasurement
WidthMinimal lateral offset
Width detailPractically 0 shoulder widths wide, with the heels separated laterally by roughly 1 inch or 2.5 cm
Length1.5 shoulder widths long
Length measuring pointMeasured from the big toe of the rear foot to the toes of the front foot
Weight distribution50% on the front leg and 50% on the rear leg

Foot and leg structure

Body partTechnical requirement
Rear footTurns 15 degrees inward
Front footTurns 15 degrees inward
Rear legCarries 50% of the body weight
Front legCarries 50% of the body weight
Body weightBalanced equally through both legs, without leaning forward or backward

How to measure the stance

The length of Fixed Stance is 1.5 shoulder widths. It is measured from the big toe of the rear foot to the toes of the front foot. This gives the stance a long front-to-back structure while keeping the body controlled over the base.

The width is minimal. The stance is practically 0 shoulder widths wide, with the heels separated laterally by roughly 1 inch or 2.5 cm. This small offset prevents the feet from sitting directly on the same line while still keeping the stance narrow and compact.

Students should not widen Fixed Stance to make it feel easier. A wider base may feel more comfortable at first, but it changes the technical character of Gojung Sogi. The stance should remain long, narrow, and measured, with the front and rear feet placed according to the correct reference points.

Weight distribution and posture

Fixed Stance uses a 50% and 50% weight distribution. The body weight is shared equally between the front leg and the rear leg. This is one of the main details that separates Fixed Stance from L-Stance, which places more weight on the rear leg.

The equal weight distribution should not make the stance loose or casual. The body must remain organized over the feet, with both legs supporting the position. The practitioner should avoid leaning forward into the front leg or sitting backward onto the rear leg.

Because Fixed Stance is long and narrow, balance depends on accurate placement. The equal weight should be felt through both legs, but the stance should still look compact from the side. If the student shifts too much weight forward or backward, the stance loses its fixed structure and becomes less reliable for technical application.

Half facing in Fixed Stance

Fixed Stance is executed always in Half Facing, the shoulders and hips are angled rather than squared directly sideways. This keeps the body narrower while maintaining the long, stable base of the stance.

The length is 1.5 shoulder widths, the lateral heel separation remains roughly 1 inch or 2.5 cm, both feet turn 15 degrees inward, and the weight stays equally distributed between both legs.

The student should avoid turning only the shoulders while leaving the hips disconnected. The facing must be organized through the whole body. The feet, hips, shoulders, and direction of the technique should work together without changing the stance into another Sogi.

Reference checklist

CheckCorrect standard
Stance nameFixed Stance (Gojung Sogi)
WidthMinimal lateral offset, practically 0 shoulder widths wide
Width detailHeels separated laterally by roughly 1 inch or 2.5 cm
Length1.5 shoulder widths
Measuring pointFrom the big toe of the rear foot to the toes of the front foot
Weight50% front leg and 50% rear leg
Foot anglesBoth feet turn 15 degrees inward
Facing optionsStrictly Half Facing

Common technical errors

The most common error in Fixed Stance is making the stance too wide. The stance should have only a minimal lateral offset, with the heels separated by roughly 1 inch or 2.5 cm. If the feet are spread too far apart sideways, the stance loses its correct narrow structure.

Another common error is using the weight distribution of L-Stance. Fixed Stance is not 70% on the rear leg and 30% on the front leg. It uses equal weight: 50% on each leg. Students should check that the body is not leaning backward or sitting too heavily on the rear leg.

Students should also check the foot angles. Both feet turn 15 degrees inward. If the feet point too far outward or too straight ahead, the stance may lose alignment and the body may become difficult to organize in half facing. The final check is the facing: Fixed Stance is performed in half facing, not side facing.

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Key principle

Fixed Stance keeps the body stable through a long stance line, minimal lateral width, equal weight on both legs, and controlled half-facing structure.

Technical purpose

Fixed Stance, called Gojung Sogi in Korean terminology, is an ITF Taekwon-Do stance with a long base, minimal lateral width, and equal weight distribution. It is similar in length to L-Stance, but its weight is shared equally between the front and rear legs.

This article is a technical reference. It focuses on the specific structure of the stance: length, minimal width, measuring point, weight distribution, foot angles, and facing options. Students should use it to check the stance accurately, and instructors may use it as a simple correction guide in the Dojang.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Fixed Stance is executed only in half facing.

Fixed Stance is called Gojung Sogi.

Fixed Stance is 1.5 shoulder widths long, measured from the big toe of the rear foot to the toes of the front foot.

Fixed Stance has minimal lateral width, with the heels separated by roughly 1 inch or 2.5 cm.

The weight distribution is 50% on the front leg and 50% on the rear leg.

Both feet turn 15 degrees inward.

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