Right. Ras, try to listen here.
At first I wasn't going to reply to this post...the dooficity level was exceptional even for Chris. But others prevailed upon me to respond. This thread has quite a few views, so it's clear that there are more people scanning this thread than Chris Twin Fist Kenshin and jks9199. It is for the benefit of these others that I reply [ even though quite a few of these "others" took it upon themselves to contact me and express privately their amusement over my detractors not grasping the amazing obviousness of my oft-repeated position ].
"Dooficity level was exceptional even for Chris"? Ras, that comes remarkably close to a personal attack you know... And seriously, making up words like that makes you look immature at best... especially when coupled with the fingers-in-the-ears pose yelling about how your "detractors" (no, Ras, just critics who have legitimate questions) don't grasp the "amazing obviousness" of your comments... and you wonder why we think you're arrogant...
So. For the last time...
...my position has always been one of Functionality over Dysfunction. I have always been a proponent of what Bruce and others called the "Alive" Method. This means train realistically. Actually grab. Actually punch, choke, whack with the stick, stab realistically with the knife and keep going, really tackle, etc etc. Do NOT pose, or other horribly unrealistic stuff.
And in this you miss what the comments that started all of this actually were. Realistic training we're all for, same with functionality... thing is, though, that's beside the point of the initial critiques, which were centered around the fact that your version didn't satisfy the criteria to make what you were doing Sword and Hammer, functional or not. And all of your comments since then have actually demonstrated that you just don't get that... but have shown me why. Which is interesting. But I'm getting ahead of myself....
None of the craptasticness masquerading as THEE IP has even the faintest element of realism. Let us take this more common stuff that others like Chris think is a wonderful tech.
Now, Ras, if you start by describing the technique taught in all other Kenpo schools as "craptasticness", how does that show you to always have an open mind, hmm? Oh, and I said it was a fairly solid technique (of course, when trained properly, which you seem to have missed when you were taught it...), not a wonderful one.
This tech purports to defeat what is essentially a Hockey Punch from the flank...sans grab or punch. It takes as a working hypothesis that Kenpoists in general will be able to act and react preemptively with the Sword and Hammer as a central element and tenant to the tech itself. They take it for granted that essentially newb Kenpoists [ Yellow Belters ] in general will reliably react to fast enough to an attack in progress to get off the handsword and hammerfist to their targets prior to the punch even being thrown.
Hmm, well you seem to miss what the attack is, misuse the French term "sans", and completely fail to understand what is involved in a pre-emptive response. As well as missing entirely the fact that that pre-emptive response is key to what Sword and Hammer teaches, and is the reason for training it. To remove it is to not be teaching/training Sword and Hammer.
Look carefully. The common expression of Sword and Hammer is against something that isn't an ACTUAL attack, it's in response to a POTENTIAL attack in progress. You catch the BG before he throws the punch. Fencers call it catching him on the "preparation".
No, it's not catching on the preparation, it's a pre-emptive strike. They are actually different tactics, and employed in different contexts, but that seems to have escaped you. Additionally, you seem to miss all the measures within the technique itself, the reality of the attacking method, and so on that do make it quite a realistic tactic... just not for competition or sparring, which you seem to think is reality. News for ya, bub, it ain't.
This contention is roundly refuted on the mat in objective reality. The whole premise is flawed and rather preposterous. 2 Kenpo Elders whom I've been known to both agree and disagree with--Larry Tatum and Doc Chapel--both concur at the absurdness of this idea. So do I. In fact, Mr. Tatum wrote an article touching upon this facet in the training of Kenpoists when he wrote a piece about stepping in to Triggered Salute or something.
Ras, the "mat" isn't objective reality, you know. And from my perspective, it looks like there's a fair gap in the understanding of such tactics.
The central tenet of this tech is flawed and wholly divorced from combat reality. Sans proper functional training to make the tech workable? Newbs and most people period will not be able to react with this tech under duress in that scenario. WITH proper functional training? You STILL won't do it exactly as the more common expression does it because the more common Sword and Hammer expressions articulate dysfunction.
Again with the "sans"? And who says that no-one is training it properly, or functionally? I went through it with some of my guys the other week, and your version simply doesn't work against the attack that's intended...
In other words...if it reliably works? It won't look like the more common Sword and Hammer IP expression.
Here's a question... what if you were shown that it does reliably work? And that you didn't understand it well enough in the first place? And that, when done properly, against a realistic attack (as described by the mechanics of the technique itself), it actually does look remarkably like the "IP" expression? Just curious...
However, if you have a functional expression such as mine? You reliably defeat the BG in both the "classic" scenario [ you react before the punch is thrown ] aaaaaaannnnd multiple other scenarios that the more common expression Sword and Hammer doesn't approach and has no hope of addressing with their expression.
Truthfully, Ras, no, you won't "reliably defeat the BG... before the punch is thrown", as the pull that would be required for the attack as informed by the technique itself would make it rather difficult for you to spin in the direction you are planning. Frankly, against the actual attack, your response is rather mechanically flawed... but against the attacks you've changed it to, it's okay. Then again, it's not the same technique on any level at all, which is what has been said from the beginning.
Look at this more common Sword and Hammer expression go to 1:52:
[video=youtube_share;9B8OXVJNmB0]http://youtu.be/9B8OXVJNmB0[/video]
and look at these videos of the more common Sword and Hammer expression here. Pay close attention to their positioning:
[video=youtube_share;YGDc1oOFDcI]http://youtu.be/YGDc1oOFDcI[/video]
[video=youtube_share;ts1Qgemr11M]http://youtu.be/ts1Qgemr11M[/video]
and look at this more common expression of the Sword and Hammer, the only one that actually mentions being pulled and attempts to explain how the more common expression of the tech defeats the pull:
[video=youtube_share;04Hp8tDAw3g]http://youtu.be/04Hp8tDAw3g[/video]
Look at how similar that position is to my starting position here:
[video=youtube_share;R-mmdyIHkjs]http://youtu.be/R-mmdyIHkjs[/video]
Go to 0:54 of this video. We start at the same or very similar places...in my scenario, though, I have the BG actually fire punches.
[video=youtube_share;AuvuhW1u2WE]http://youtu.be/AuvuhW1u2WE[/video]
That was frankly all completely pointless, Ras. The only connection between your technique and Sword and Hammer is the start position of your attacker. And as far as the whole "though, I have the BG actually fire punches" just shows again that you've missed the meaning and importance of the lessons of the technique in the first place.
The rest should be obvious. I cover punches, multiple angles of attack, pushes and pulls, and even though I don't show it on video I gave a 15 Round training method that covers everything up to and including weapons and multifights...all with the Sword and Hammer...and will allow a complete newb to be able to fight with that tech in 8 hours or less.
And this is completely delusional, Ras. From a range of levels.
I've been contacted by several MMA coaches and self-defense instructors who saw my post. They thanked me for publishing it and informed me that they're using this method and a few others that I demonstrated with exactly the speedy success that I guaranteed that it would yield.
Seriously? MMA coaches who saw your post? The methods you're showing have no place in MMA, as it doesn't suit the context of their approach, and as for self defense instructors thanking you and validating your correctness? I don't think they've gotten what the argument was about either...
The above is part of the reason why I can say all at once and be undeniably right that:
1. The Sword and Hammer that is most popular is dysfunctional, and there are no lessons to be learned from it other than: FIX IT SO IT WORKS
Right, now we're down to it...
Ras, to be completely blunt, this is the core of your problems, and the absolute evidence that you are not in any way right. In the slightest. Let's demonstrate, as you seem rather ignorant of what, or even how a technique teaches it's lessons.
The lessons of EPAK Sword and Hammer are numerous, but some that are immediately apparent are as follows:
- When grabbed, capture the grabbing hand for psychological and physical control.
- When being pulled, go with the energy of that pull.
- The use of pre-emptive striking as a tactic.
- The application of strikes to weak areas that are difficult to build up (throat, groin, solar plexus or floating ribs in other versions).
- Choose powerful, high-return targets.
- Drop your weight when being pulled to retain your balance
- Choose appropriate weapons to the targets.
- Use two strikes to respond, with the first being an "interrupting" strike, the second being a "stopping" strike, allowing the escape.
Your version, though Ras...
- Does not feature the covering grab to the attackers grabbing hand (sometimes called the "controlling" hand), so you miss this lesson.
- Does not "go with the pull", as you actually go in the opposite direction to the energy of the pull after it has stopped.
- Does not use pre-emptive striking, even though that is a fundamental lesson and integral element of Sword and Hammer, and a huge part of what makes the technique what it is... hence my first comments saying that what you are doing is something completely different.
- Uses a range of strikes to multiple targets without looking specifically to the results or the effect.
- Uses Swordhand and Hammerfist strikes seemingly only to justify it being called Sword and Hammer, rather than those weapons being appropriate to the targets chosen. Your first usage is to have a Swordhand and Hammerfist raised against the grabbing arm, despite there being no benefit whatsoever.
- Uses multiple strikes, continuing on to grappling in some occasions, rather than a couple of deliberately chosen strikes to escape from the grab.
This has been my point. You miss every single beat of the very reason that Sword and Hammer exists, why it is structured the way it is, and what it teaches from a strategic and tactical point. You've looked at a single idea, which is whether or not it fits what you think is realistic, without looking at what it actually teaches and why. There's a reason it's a Yellow Belt technique, Ras, and it's because it's teaching fundamental tactics and concepts that can be built on later in your education and training. By not understanding this, and only having your attitude of "this is craptastical hyperunrealistic kenpofantasyland stuff" you are frankly robbing your students of actually learning Kenpo in the first place. Because if you don't see the structure of the techniques and their reasons for being the way they are, you don't get the art.
Oh, and Mike? That's been what I've been talking about. I've been trying to get Ras to say what Sword and Hammer teaches, but he seems to not understand that question....
2. Supporters of this tech who claim that the tech defeats the flank Hockey Punch before the punch can be thrown do NOT fight with the tech or spar with it with any kind of realistic energy or regularity...so their opinions are factually without merit.
Dude, just because you don't know how to train it doesn't mean that others don't. I can think of numerous ways of training it that are highly realistic (far more realistic than sparring, for the record), and can show it's use easily. So I wouldn't be so quick to say such things are "factually without merit". But again, you might want to look at what the actual attack is, as you still seem to be missing it.
3. Any Sword and Hammer that works perforce cannot look like the common expression. Even those who claim that the classic tech exactly as proscribed will eventually admit that they use it primarily as a teaching tool or intro or something but they don't and can't fight with it exactly as shown in the more common expression.
Well, firstly, what's wrong with it as a teaching tool? This is another thing, Ras, there are huge numbers of drills, training tools, methods, and more that have no functional application, but are essential to learn the system. By cutting them out, as you only "deal with the functional", you're missing huge sections of the system and what it's trying to teach you.
But leaving that aside, in application no technique is exactly like it's practiced, but you practice an "ideal" way to ensure that the lessons it's giving you have the best chance at being instilled... and once they are, they can be expressed in many ways. They won't apply to all situations, though.
4. I'm not dealing with JUST the same scenario of the "more common" dysfunctional expression S&H, I'm dealing with a 360 degree Hockey Punch attack which is perpetually superior to the dysfunctional single side expression. Note that my version covers all of the various positioning that the more traditional, dysfunctional tech proponents take...and I do more. The Sword and Hammer that does more in a superior manner than the Sword and Hammer that does less is without a doubt the superior expression.
Oh dear... okay, let's look at this "Hockey Punch" that the technique is supposed to deal with. Essentially, that attack involves someone approaching from the side/rear, grabbing your shoulder, then pulling to turn you towards them (if grabbed on your right shoulder, which would be with their left hand, it turns you clockwise and back, if grabbed on your left shoulder, it turns you counterclockwise and back), then punching after you've turned. The turning is to disorient you, as well as line you up for the punch, so the punch doesn't happen until after the grab and pull. Right, so that's understood hopefully.
But here's the thing. If you're grabbed (we'll say right shoulder) and pulled, you have one option of angle, which is back along the lines of the pull. You can't go counterclockwise (as you show), as you'll just be pulled off balance. The only other option, really, is to brace and try to resist the pull... but that goes against the lessons of the technique in the first place.
And frankly, doing different things unrelated to the actual technique doesn't make it a better version, it makes it a different technique. But I do have to say that your technique does neither more, nor in a superior manner. It's just a different technique against a different attack with different tactics and a different premise and rhythm. It's not superior. You just don't get the original one, or what it's about.
5. I don't have to compare my expression to the less functional expression; all I have to do is show that mine works. If I'm not lost, and I'm safe at home? Well, I don't have to prove that I'm NOT lost to people who are lost. It's incumbent upon the lost to orient themselves...and after they orient themselves and bring themselves to a point that they recognize that they're not lost? They'll see that I've looong been where they were trying to go to. I can, however, offer a map to get home. If you don't want to make it back to the Land of the Found and Functional? Cool. Have fun with the Lost Boys.
If you don't have to compare it, why have you for most of the thread, starting with a direct comparison as your very first post, and repeating it time and again, including in this post itself? If you don't need to compare to EPAK Sword and Hammer, as yours is completely removed from it, why have you? Cake is not a better version of bread, even if both are baked in an oven, Ras. If you doubt that, make a sandwich with cake.
6. Chris Parker's second paragraph simply shows that he is completely lost...and that's okay. My tech is related to the original in the sense that the Mercedes or Bentley or some such is related to a broken down inoperational Model T. My version is the more operational more modern top of the line expression. It actually does what the Model T purports to do...it's a automated conveyance...and it does it in ways far superior to and never imagined by the poor dysfunctional broken down Model T.
You're kidding, right? You mean this paragraph:
[QUOTE-Chris Parker]
Seriously, Ras, we've been saying from the beginning that your version is not even related to the first ones you show (the standard forms), and have been asking you to clarify that... which you have completely failed to do. Now, 12 pages and 167 posts in, you've finally said that your technique has no connection to the original from whom you took the name, and very little else... so what was the point? You might as well have put up a video of someone defending against a bear hug and pointed out how that defence doesn't work against a stabbing knife attack.[/QUOTE]
right?
Dude, seriously, read what you're saying. In the last paragraph you say you don't have to show a comparison... and now you're defending them as being related? When it comes to the idea of your Sword and Hammer being related to the EPAK version you compare it to without needing to compare it to (you are following this, yeah?), the relationship is as follows: Same angle of attack (but a different attack), same name, and the identification of the art as Kenpo. As far as your idea of a Mercedes being related to a Model T, not really the same thing as you're putting forth here, unless, of course, you were putting a Ford badge on your Merc and saying it was a more functional version of the Model T.... honestly, I'd give up on analogies, you missed the mark on that one.
Lastly for those who asked...I never changed the name of my techs. I simply abbreviated the whole name for two reasons:
1. I refer to my ATACX GYM KENPO KARATE SWORD AND HAMMER as...ATACX GYM KENPO SWORD AND HAMMER during class. It's full name as I wrote it down is ATACX GYM KENPO KARATE SWORD AND HAMMER RADIUS R.D.L. 1-4. Saying that over and over again is a mouth full so I say SWORD AND HAMMER in class. [ Everybody in my Gym...literally everyone...knows that our techs are different than other schools' techs. When we go scout other schools at various competitons before we spar with and compete against them? Everyone from the newbs to the seasoned Coaches in my Gym sees the huge advantage we have over them due to our superior functional training. ]
2. It's hard to get a name as long as the official name for my tech onto youtube easily.
Ras, if your techniques are completely different, why the need to point out that yours is a better version of a different technique? It's like my saying that our front kicks are a better version of karate's front kicks... even though they have no real points of similarity other than both having a forward angle and using the foot to contact the opponent.
Oh, and seriously drop the hard sell, it makes you look cheap.
If you don't get it by now? Fine. Thank you to the dozens of you who've contacted me and informed me that you do get it and you do appreciate what I'm trying to convey. Thank you to people like jks9199 who disagree with me but do so from a position of openminded intelligent criticism and cordiality, which I will and do return in kind.
Right. And if you don't get what I've been saying from the first response on page 1 now, I don't think you'll ever get it. Mainly as you're simply not coming from an open minded standpoint, but are insistent on repeating yourself without understanding the questions in the first place.
Chris and Twin Fist? We disagree. Let's leave it at that.
No, it's not that we disagree, Ras, it's that you haven't understood the actual criticism. So let's not leave it at you thinking your still so far superior, as all you've shown is that you have a different approach, which to my mind is rather limited in many ways, not anything superior, and have a bit of an ego problem dealing with people who don't automatically honour your brilliance.
To your approach, and the reason I find it limited, which is tied with what you've shown me of why you haven't understood what I've been asking.
Ras, you don't teach martial arts. You don't understand martial arts. You haven't learnt martial arts. You teach techniques. You have some understanding of techniques. That's all. Your entire focus is on "how to use a technique", not on how to employ strategies or tactics. Each of your videos is only a collection of mechanical approaches, none follow any understanding of the strategies of the techniques themselves. The thing is, though, the mechanical methods (particular grips, strikes, kicks etc) are not what works, it's the application of strategies and tactics that employ those mechanics. In short, you teach the use of a bunch of ingredients, some of which can be eaten by themselves, others can't, but have no idea of the recipes. And trying to talk to you in terms of martial art concepts of strategy and tactics (asking what the lessons of Sword and Hammer are, for instance) has simply confused you, as you don't understand it. If it's not a mechanical technique, you don't get it. But, of course, that's really been the thrust of the argument. Which is why it's now 17 pages long.