I dont know about your dojo so I really cant say much about your particular art. All I have is my own experience to go on.
Fair enough.
Now I know this is really going to stir up some people. Let me apologize before hand. I'm not really out to personally disrespect any one. Just speaking frankly about what I have experienced. If you can say or even better show me something to change my mind. Great! I will have learned something new.
I havent stepped inside a TMA school for at least 6~7 years now, but most of the traditional schools I have trained at used archaic methods of training which were slow to produce effect skills. They ignored modern training equipment and sport science in favor of protecting the old ways."If it was good enough then its good enough now" mentality.
Then your dojos were indeed different than mine. What training equipment do you refer to? What science have we not accounted for? I'm just asking.
I couldn't disagree more with this hard core traditionalist attitude.
I have not experienced that attitude, so I can see we have a different basis. We routinely examine techniques from outside our own style in my dojo. We try them, we see that many of them work quite well. Perfectly usable and quite acceptable for self-defense. It is made clear to students that it is not part of our style, but we also are taught that what is important is that the technique does or does not work, not where it came from.
Back in the day they didnt have sparring equipment so they couldnt really spar with realistic contact without seriously injuring each other. So they had to compromise by finding less effective ways to train that enabled them to practice their art without maiming each other. Thats not so much the case anymore. We have a variety of equipment that enables us to go at it pretty hard without serious injury.
Actually, many traditional martial artists in Okinawa worked their techniques by maiming and killing each other. Not in a sporting event, but from bar to bar, village to village. They were also not uncommonly called upon to defend themselves against drunks, bandits, and even invaders. They honed their skills by seeing what worked for themselves and for others when they were defeated. It was in fact a matter of life and death for them to get it right. I actually think that trumps protective equipment that allows people to hammer each other hard to see what works.
You and I may live our entire lives without ever having a brigand jump in front of us on a path and demand our money. In older times, this was just not that uncommon. We live in a much more peaceful world in many ways than our ancestors. Their martial arts inventions were designed to counter threats which actually existed, not theoretical threats which might happen. They had to find out if their skills worked as they hoped they would by applying them for real, against real people who were really trying to kill them.
Now I'm sure most of us are taking advantage of this and sparring hard frequently.That experience itself is surely going to open your eyes to things that those who never got to spar were not aware of. Yet I still see guys who refuse to acknowledge when things they have been taught are simply unrealistic.They just get better at finding ways to justify it.
Well, I'm not sure what to tell you there. I'm sure you're right. I'm glad to say that I can demonstrate that my skills work. And if my abilities are not yet up to my statements, I have senseis who can and do demonstrate it with alacrity. I have never yet seen anyone say "Oh yeah? Then what do you do when THIS happens [throw technique]" and not have it utterly defeated with extreme ease.
Most(but not all) of the guys teaching pure TMA that I have met have never been in any kind of fight. They've never even had any one seriously try to knock them out.They dont really know what its like to face that level of aggression. All they have is their tradition, based on something someone used a long time ago, presumably effectively, against the type of attacks that were common in that region and time period. Passed down by generations of teachers who never really tested them out but had lots of time to theorize and systemize their art.
Again, not my experience. And I've got a solid background of law enforcement and military experience fighting that tells me what's BS and what isn't. I'm not claiming to be a great fighter or to have even had that many 'street' fights, but I've had my share. I am not going to tell tales on my senseis, but suffice to say they have been around the block more than once. They walk it like they talk it.
When I first started training most of the traditional schools didnt spar full contact. In fact they hardly sparred at all. Lots of unrealistic kata applications and one step drills where some guy does a telegraphed lunge punch and the other does a multiple step counter while the attacker just stands there. Why is it that the lunge punch is so common in traditional arts anyway? Do you know anybody besides a TMArtist who punches like that? Could it be due to the influence of some of the thrusting techs used by armed warriors in the past? Today you'd be better off learning how to defend jabs crosses uppercuts knees takedowns submissions knife and gun attacks multiple attackers etc. The types of attacks that are popular in our time. As I'm sure most of you do.
This is where, in my world, it becomes more difficult to explain to those who dislike TMA. No, you won't commonly see a lunge punch in self-defense situations. But what you will see is that the defense to a lunge punch is very useful for very many things - if you've been shown the bunkai by people who know how to teach it and understand how it works. The same block I would use against a lunge punch (as an example) applies just as easily to a punch to the head or even a kick. I raise or lower my arm a bit. The mechanics are the same, the movement is the same, and if applied correctly, the result is the same.
As regards the self-defense to a punch to the head, in my experience, most non-trained Americans wind up and throw a haymaker. So yes, they telegraph. However, part of our training is learning to look for the 'tell' that lets us know the punch is coming. Nearly everybody telegraphs their intentions if you know how to look for it. And we practice those fast-twitch reflexes that let us throw our counter before the punch even draws back to be thrown at us if we want to respond that way.
Please don't take this the wrong way, but I believe an awful lot of people with a negative view of TMA have only had experience with poor teachers in bad dojos teaching watered down skills that have drifted and become more-or-less useless. And there are a lot of those, and yes, that's a real shame. But I have NEVER had an instructor of mine say
"We do it that way because that's the way it is done!" NEVER. We ask and we are shown - often painfully - what the technique is for, how it is applied, why it works, what the variations on it are, and so on. This is what good instruction does. And (again, no insult to you intended), there are also a lot of crap students out there. Two years of training, 1st degree black belt, and they open their dojo and start teaching. It's BS, IMHO. That's a business, it's not an art.
In the past communication with and sharing of techniques between dojos was rare. More often teachers were very secretive about their styles. So they didnt get to see what others did or think about how to counter them. Now we have competitions on every week somewhere. The internet where you can go online and study other styles techs.Dojos with doors open to anybody interested in testing their skills.( something I have always made an effort to take advantage of) The UFC where highly trained fighters go at it under very liberal rules with any style they choose. Interestingly they always seem to chose the same styles though. Ones that are progressive in their thinking, constantly growing adapting and testing their arts BY FIGHTING AND EVOLVING.
We don't have any secrets. I communicate here all the time. What would you like to know?
As to UFC fighting and evolving, yes, indeed. And do you know why? Because fighting in a cage for sport with two men and a referee is relatively new in this country. People are still figuring out what works and what does not. This was done a long time ago with regard to hand-to-hand self-defense outside of a ring or a cage.
Why would you chose to ignore these things? I'm sorry I just dont get it.
First, I don't ignore those things. If I wanted to fight in a cage, they'd be excellent skills to have. Second, you assume a great deal.
Another thing to consider. If it takes 20 years to become truly effective in your style maybe you should be looking for ways to improve on the way it is practiced and taught.
Or maybe the concept of mastery is lost on some. 20 years should get a person well on the way towards mastery. I can defend myself now, after 4 years. I'm just going to keep getting better.
I know many of the TMA dojos I trained at were crap. And that there are good ones out there. But there is just as much rubbish being justified by tradition refusing to grow as there is rubbish being created by mixing things up.
So we agree that people who teach crap skills are harming martial arts. And it doesn't matter if they teach so-called TMA or more modern combative arts. Right? So yes, crap is crap. That does not easily extend to a blanket condemnation of traditional martial arts. I'm not sure how you are making that leap.
"There is only one thing which is unchanging in the universe. It is the fact that everything is in a constant state of change"
This demonstrates a lack of understanding of the concept of rate of change. Yes, everything changes. But we will not all have three arms in the next generation. Change is constant - and often quite slow. There is a need to change responses to threats which have changed. But if the threat has not changed, then the response does not need to change.
The first question is to evaluate the basic premise - have threats requiring self-defense capability changed? If yes, then how have the threats changed? If not, then the ways that worked then, work now. And we're not a whole lot smarter than the people who thought up and tested self-defense techniques that got them dead or maimed if they didn't work.