To you?
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As near as I can tell;
1.) Fighting methods that follow Bruce Lee's basic guidelines
- Interception
- Longest weapon nearest target
- Simplicity
- Economy of motion
- Non-classical
2.) Utilizes his mechanics regarding punching and kicking
You were taught "longest weapon to closest target?"
Wasn't it closest weapon to closest target?
My friend John,By trying to define it, you have already lost something....One could say, it may be what is neither for nor against in a moment of relating time...This, but not that nor that, but not this, changing with what is....Returning back to human nature of the individual...Hmmm, but these are some of my thoughts and thats fine if you see something different from your eye's...IT was ment to be, what it is....Nothing special for us, with someone else maybe so!
Keep "IT" Real,
John McNabney
You were taught "longest weapon to closest target?"
Wasn't it closest weapon to closest target?
I may only be a beginner in the ways of JKD, but this reflects my own opinion quite accurately. JKD was an approach to martial arts, a way of thinking that enables its practitioners to improve themselves and free them from the bonds of any restrictions present in singular martial arts.I am reading and responding to this way after the fact but I like what Chinaboxer has to say. I periodically go back to the Tao of JKD and apply the lessons of Bruce's philosophy to my own understanding of my art. I always understood JKD to be more a philosophy rather than an actual style. Regardless, I have read this book several times and learn some valuable lesson on each occasion. The point that really resonates with me is that JKD seems most applicable to a preexisting body of knowledge.