kroh
Brown Belt
While I am not an EPAK practitioner, I have quite a few friends that do. They voice many of the same concerns that have been evident in this thread. One of the points raised in this discussion has been that if you take out the techniques that "don't work," will you loose the principles they teach. A person that is a qualified teacher will find a better way to convey the lost principle should the tehcnique that teaches it be cast off.
In the recent years there has been a revival in martial arts training where stereo-typical movements are being re-evaluated at some of the highest levels. The reason for this is simple...we have better access to each other. With the net and other mediums present (how many youtube posts can you find on forums now), we can evaluate and dissiminate what works and what doesn't. Even the Military has joined the fray to re-envision their concept of what a close combatives program should look like (MMAP for the Marines and MCAP for he Army.). The fact of the matter is that people who want realistic combatives training do not want to waste the time standing in a horse stance and poping out reverse punches while learning the latest blocking set. Ever watch even some of the black belts spar? I don't see horse stances or weird manuevers... I see kickboxing. Why why would a person practice all of these strange "techniques" when the principles they teach are not even being used by so called experts?
If a person wants to practice the arts for asthetic reasons that is different. While iaido imparts fantastic lessons in spacial awareness and timing as well as an appreciation for closing with the enemy and striking with purpose...no one carries swords or fights with them anymore. The closest one might get is using a machete in the army but as any soldier will tell you...if you are down to your knife...call for the friends with the guns to come pick you up. The point is, you have an entire martial art dedicated to the use of a forgotten weapon (or group of techniques).
People look at these systems and say..."The founder must have been a genius to put this together like so...who am I to change it?" If we don't take what the people of the past gave us so that we can carry it into the future, we are curators and not instructors. Much like the old "samurai systems, " we are merely preserving a tradition for the sake of tradition (because it hasn't been a living breathing martial art since people wore lacquered armor).
"Absorb what is usefull, discard what is useless, and interject what is specifically your own", Said by some guy regarding his recipe for something or other...
My turn: http://youtube.com/watch?v=OplajPk-K6U
Regards,
Walt
In the recent years there has been a revival in martial arts training where stereo-typical movements are being re-evaluated at some of the highest levels. The reason for this is simple...we have better access to each other. With the net and other mediums present (how many youtube posts can you find on forums now), we can evaluate and dissiminate what works and what doesn't. Even the Military has joined the fray to re-envision their concept of what a close combatives program should look like (MMAP for the Marines and MCAP for he Army.). The fact of the matter is that people who want realistic combatives training do not want to waste the time standing in a horse stance and poping out reverse punches while learning the latest blocking set. Ever watch even some of the black belts spar? I don't see horse stances or weird manuevers... I see kickboxing. Why why would a person practice all of these strange "techniques" when the principles they teach are not even being used by so called experts?
If a person wants to practice the arts for asthetic reasons that is different. While iaido imparts fantastic lessons in spacial awareness and timing as well as an appreciation for closing with the enemy and striking with purpose...no one carries swords or fights with them anymore. The closest one might get is using a machete in the army but as any soldier will tell you...if you are down to your knife...call for the friends with the guns to come pick you up. The point is, you have an entire martial art dedicated to the use of a forgotten weapon (or group of techniques).
People look at these systems and say..."The founder must have been a genius to put this together like so...who am I to change it?" If we don't take what the people of the past gave us so that we can carry it into the future, we are curators and not instructors. Much like the old "samurai systems, " we are merely preserving a tradition for the sake of tradition (because it hasn't been a living breathing martial art since people wore lacquered armor).
"Absorb what is usefull, discard what is useless, and interject what is specifically your own", Said by some guy regarding his recipe for something or other...
My turn: http://youtube.com/watch?v=OplajPk-K6U
Regards,
Walt