Hmmm....the way someone performs Long Form 4 would tell me whether the individual moves like a black belt in terms of his/her basics. But what if the same person can't fight himself out of a wet paper bag?
Jamie Seabrook
Interesting comment... Far be it from me to disagree with anyone so far, but ... The ability to move like a black belt is way over-rated ... Long philosophical discourse to follow.
Most people, so it seems, appear to have forgotten that the black belt is really the entry level to learning and that is for any art, chess, aikido, various forms of karatƩ and our own Kenpo.
The way people scramble for belts now a days, is intriguing. I know one fellow that I, personally, am fond of and he has numerous black belts. Does this make him able to fight his way out of a wet paper bag, as it were? Hardly.
The black belt is only an indication of knowledge acquired and perceived skill or technical capability. It has, now at any rate, no real indication of overall proficiency in the arena of combat.
As Martial Artists, we cover ourselves with various cloaks of ethics, honor, integrity, and bravery (well some of us do at any rate), but that, and all that, does not create a warrior.
There are, I surmise, a number of black belts out there, and some of them are relatively highly ranked I'd wager, who have never been in a fight. They have all the tools and knowledge, because they have done the required materials and put in the time and effort to become what they are. Is this an indication that they could fight their way out of a wet paper bag?
NOT Ā
AT Ā
ALL!
In my tiny shelllike mind, I believe that we can all sit around and talk "smack" as they call it today. But it is a different time and place than it was when folks like Doc, Conatser, myself (not including myself as a notable, only as at it a very long time), and others came up through the ranks.
In those golden and halcyon days, it was not improbable to come out of the dojo with smashed, sprained, gouged, and broken things hanging off of our bodies. It was not a matter of someone attacking you, you defending and then having to defend yourself again when s/he sued you for whatever they could get. A fight, win, lose or draw, was simply that, a fight.
We, I think I speak for others here but maybe not all, really aspired to the much coveted
Black Belt. Not necessarily for how tough we were, but more for the idea that, at that point, we realized we really could begin to learn the system of Kenpo.
Heck, where I was, there was no rank beyond third Black and in our inestimable opinion, a first black could walk on water, lift buildings and walk under them, and catch arrows in his teeth (too bad no one carries bows and arrows anymore). But I digress.
The provenance of the black belt is, as I said before, nothing more than an indication of time spent. In the old Chinese arts, the didnĀt use belts, they used titles, and called it all "Kung fu", a word that boils down in translation, to time spent and skill learned and earned. You could be considered to be "Kung fu" as a floor mopper, mechanic, cook, or whatever.
The black belt skills do not necessarily indicate that, in real life, a person could fight his or her way out of a wet paper bag. That, however, is the perception that we place on it, however mistaken that perception might be.
The only real way to know if someone can fight their way out of a wet paper bag is for them to have been tested in combat, and not found wanting. And, in all honesty, unless one lives in a movieland neighborhood like Speakman did in Perfect Weapon, or has a job like a bouncer, mercenary, bounty hunter, special ops, or the like, one does not have that many opportunities to find out if one can fight oneself out of a wet paper bag. Today, all these combative types of livelyhoods rely more on technology to complete the destruction of an enemy.
Even then, it is problematic.
It depends on the day, the surroundings, the opponent, the time, and on and on. One day, you may be the bravest or most foolish warrior in existence, like Funakoshi, who said, "If the foe be 10,000, but the cause is just, I go". Or ... you may be cloaked in all the sayings of Ed Parker, have all the chivalric attitudes of a Knight Templar, and when it comes down to crunch you might freeze and get your butt kicked. It happens.
So Ā
I put to you that a Black Belt is not an indication of warrior capability.
Hope my ramblings didnĀt put you to sleep.