Well, I went down to the club as I planned and I had a really good time
It was sooooo nice not to be the teacher, and to be the student for once! I think I was almost forgetting what it feels like to just turn up, pay and have fun without worrying about accounting, hall rental, injuries, insurance, people's health, booking gradings etc.! I do enjoy teaching, but I enjoy learning more!
Anyway, the style didn't have anything remotely to do with EPAK as far as I could see, that was obvious straight away! As soon as we started my analytical EPAK brain was disecting the techniques I was being shown, deciding what would work and what wouldn't, spotting redundant motion and open targets etc. - I tried to clear my mind and take it as it came but I couldn't! I think this could be part of the whole cross training debate that I've so far avoided; I'm not sure I can ever now walk into another style and not try to lay EPAK templates if you will over the moves. I hope that makes sense, I can't think of another way to describe it!
There were many noticable differences but the biggest one was the absence of checks. As you all know, in EPAK the answer the question 'what's that hand doing?' is never, ever 'nothing!'. As we started to do some of the techniques, I found myself asking what I was meant to be doing with my other hand (feigning ignorance slightly, I stripped my rank for the evening to be polite so the guy didn't know exactly how much experience I did or didn't have) and the instructor answered 'nothing' or 'nothing yet' several times.
There were other things too such as taking sacrificial strikes. For example, as a defence against a right roundhouse club I was shown to step in with my right foot and lift my left arm up in the air, taking (essentially) a forearm strike to the ribcage and letting the stick strike my back. Then I was to bring my arm back down and underneath teh attackers arm and apply a classic figure-4 arm lock. The reasonong that was explained to me was that since I was closer to te pivot point of the strike, the arm has less power and the strike into the ribs wouldn't really hurt. I accept the logic but I'm not sure it's a good idea at all, ribs crack easily! Anyway, I couldn't think of any examples of this sort of sacrifice in EPAK, allowing yourself to take a strike just in order to apply your own technique.
There was a lot of arm-locks and throws as well, Jiu Jitsu sort of moves that were fun as I've not done too many before. I might go back another day since they were friendly, I also invited them all to an open seminar we're having, so we may have all made new friends too.
The full name that was given to the system was 'Shaolin Tsu Kempo'.
Ian.