Do you believe Bruce truely dropped Wing Chun or maybe he just stopped teaching it in order to evolve his"personal" JKD?
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Do you believe Bruce truely dropped Wing Chun or maybe he just stopped teaching it in order to evolve his"personal" JKD?
Thats what I would love to do someday. I wanna learn Wing Chun and later in my life Bild my own style. Or get so flippin awsome at wing chun that I can perhaps ADD to it. ya know what I mean?fun question, IMO Bruce was on his way to removing the wing chun "movements" from his personal JKD, at that moment in his life. But he never removed or would remove the wing chun "concepts" from his personal JKD, why? because it's the very foundation of his method.
look at his boxing structure, it's all fueled and modified to fit within the core wing chun "concepts" which is why it completely looks and feels differently than traditional boxing.
where the confusion lies is that many martial artists think of wing chun as a technique based martial art and it's not, it's completely concept based. that's why Bruce Lee could fit the "concepts" into any other method such as boxing, fencing, grappling etc...
Jin
Thats what I would love to do someday. I wanna learn Wing Chun and later in my life Bild my own style. Or get so flippin awsome at wing chun that I can perhaps ADD to it. ya know what I mean?
fun question, IMO Bruce was on his way to removing the wing chun "movements" from his personal JKD, at that moment in his life. But he never removed or would remove the wing chun "concepts" from his personal JKD, why? because it's the very foundation of his method.
look at his boxing structure, it's all fueled and modified to fit within the core wing chun "concepts" which is why it completely looks and feels differently than traditional boxing.
where the confusion lies is that many martial artists think of wing chun as a technique based martial art and it's not, it's completely concept based. that's why Bruce Lee could fit the "concepts" into any other method such as boxing, fencing, grappling etc...
Jin
Bruce Lee's teacher Master Wong Shun Leung was often on-set of 'Enter the Dragon' helping choreograph many fight scenes.
Off-set the two trained again and Bruce intended to finish his WC studies at some point in the future, unfortunately that never happened.
According to Dan Inosanto the last time he sparred with Bruce he said that Bruce was staying out of range and using his skill and speed to 'bridge the gap'. Of course this is more JKD than WC but others have noted that Bruce's JKD actually resembled WC before he died. But who knows for sure?
I personally think he valued the WC system and it was very much part of the JKD philosophy. Remember also that Master Wong modified WC accordingly as a result of his fights to make it as efficient as possible, Lee did the same.
Could this be the result of the way people fight and the age/physical abilities at the time of the WC master's life? At 37 yrs old, I am starting to clearly see some limitations as to what I used to be able to do and what I can do now, especially kicking techniques. People, even untrained people fight much differently as time goes by and not to mention WHERE said people are geographically and with their physical ability. I very much intend of returning to traditional Wing Chun or even Wing Tzun or Tsun. I guess I am saying as I get older, I prefer more countering and letting the opponent come to me, which plays to the strengths of Wing Chun. Am I off base with this thought? In my opinion, the less mobile we become as we age, it offers a better tool box for self defense outside of a sport or training hall. Why not use the physical abilities if you have them and adapt accordingly? I both can be done sticking to the WC principles...even on the ground or kicking range....and especial in boxing/clinch ranges.
All of my opinions are based off of what I have seen, done, and learned thus far and I am appreciative of any dialogue correcting these. We all see Martial Arts through our own windows so to speak.
I don't know how you truely "drop" a personal experience like that. His wing chun training was tied up in what he went on to do later, regardless of how little it might have resembled wing chun as it went along.
But if you're asking whether I think he was practicing textbook wing chun on the side, while publically developing his own JKD, nah I don't think so. I don't have any concrete basis for saying that. But I would wonder why the contradiction, when (with his charisma and following) he could have just as easily, or more easily, have furthered the cause of a style he still--according to this scenario--believed in.
Just doesn't seem likely.
Stuart