Hello everyone, I have been pretty much gone for a while but Mr. Speakman just taught a seminar here in Austin, TX tonight Thursday 12.20.2002 and I thought I might as well share my notes/outline with you here.
It was very educational. If you can go to a seminar with Mr. Speakman, go. He is a very nice guy.
Topics he hit upon:
1. Techniques are illustrations of principles. Experiment with your material.
2. Opposing forces enhances the Speed, Power and Balance of your execution
3. Rebounding
4. Outer Rim Theory (Anchor Your Elbows!)
5. Directonal Harmony and the common sacrifice of Power for Speed. You are "going to fast" when you fail to hit your stances properly
8. Knife fighting
9. Stick fighting
10. Kenpo family, as in Kenpo is more than punches and kicks...
11. Kenpo evolution throughout the lifetime of Mr. Parker and Mr. Sepulveda's relationship to it as a student witness of Mr. Parker from the 1960's until Mr. Parker's death
12. Weight training as a good suppliment to Kenpo and fitness in general
13. The day Wing Chung became Jeet Kune Do and why we do our Forward Bow differently from Korean systems for example
14. Right hand bias. One handed system vs One Sided system.
15. His teaching of Mr. Parker's system and the 5 techniques he has changed from their last "recorded" form.
16. Purposeful Compliance, Purposeful Defiance and Borrowed Force.
17. His movie/commercial ventures and what he is up to (in anticipation of a flame, I'll clarify that this was in response to a question)
18. The Form he did in The Perfect Weapon, the tribute to Mr. Lou Angel in The Perfect Weapon, where he "learned the Kali and Escrima that he did in The Perfect Weapon"
19. And I'm sure I'm missing some stuff. As I said, it was educational. It was also entertaining, fun and "comforting" in that Mr. Speakman really talked about mutual respect and honor and how Kenpo students and teachers can be a close knit family to each other.
All for $25.00. Incredible.
I just got home. These are my rough notes and I may post some more later. I think we worked on a drill and 4 techniques over 3hours. He ran an hour long apparently but no one complained and it really seemed to me like we were not there very long at all. There was no clock visible to me so this may have helped.
It may be hard for me to post a "blow by blow" or "strike by strike" account of the seminar, but this is what happened and maybe if you go next time it will be like this. I understand this was different from the seminar he taught in SA a week prior.
I hope these details prove interesting and inspiring to some of you. They were to me. Happy Holidays.
:asian:
P.S. I got to be an extra in a film he shot here last night and I am pretty sure I will prominently visible in a promotion ceremony that will run with the end credits. Woo Hoo!
It was very educational. If you can go to a seminar with Mr. Speakman, go. He is a very nice guy.
Topics he hit upon:
1. Techniques are illustrations of principles. Experiment with your material.
2. Opposing forces enhances the Speed, Power and Balance of your execution
3. Rebounding
4. Outer Rim Theory (Anchor Your Elbows!)
5. Directonal Harmony and the common sacrifice of Power for Speed. You are "going to fast" when you fail to hit your stances properly
8. Knife fighting
9. Stick fighting
10. Kenpo family, as in Kenpo is more than punches and kicks...
11. Kenpo evolution throughout the lifetime of Mr. Parker and Mr. Sepulveda's relationship to it as a student witness of Mr. Parker from the 1960's until Mr. Parker's death
12. Weight training as a good suppliment to Kenpo and fitness in general
13. The day Wing Chung became Jeet Kune Do and why we do our Forward Bow differently from Korean systems for example
14. Right hand bias. One handed system vs One Sided system.
15. His teaching of Mr. Parker's system and the 5 techniques he has changed from their last "recorded" form.
16. Purposeful Compliance, Purposeful Defiance and Borrowed Force.
17. His movie/commercial ventures and what he is up to (in anticipation of a flame, I'll clarify that this was in response to a question)
18. The Form he did in The Perfect Weapon, the tribute to Mr. Lou Angel in The Perfect Weapon, where he "learned the Kali and Escrima that he did in The Perfect Weapon"
19. And I'm sure I'm missing some stuff. As I said, it was educational. It was also entertaining, fun and "comforting" in that Mr. Speakman really talked about mutual respect and honor and how Kenpo students and teachers can be a close knit family to each other.
All for $25.00. Incredible.
I just got home. These are my rough notes and I may post some more later. I think we worked on a drill and 4 techniques over 3hours. He ran an hour long apparently but no one complained and it really seemed to me like we were not there very long at all. There was no clock visible to me so this may have helped.
It may be hard for me to post a "blow by blow" or "strike by strike" account of the seminar, but this is what happened and maybe if you go next time it will be like this. I understand this was different from the seminar he taught in SA a week prior.
I hope these details prove interesting and inspiring to some of you. They were to me. Happy Holidays.
:asian:
P.S. I got to be an extra in a film he shot here last night and I am pretty sure I will prominently visible in a promotion ceremony that will run with the end credits. Woo Hoo!