zepedawingchun
Black Belt
In the 'Time Does Not Equal Skill' thread, during one of the many banters back and forth between me and coffeerox, he made a comment about Wing Chun that irked me. It irked me because I hear it a lot from people who have never officially trained in the system at all or trained for a short period of time and quit. I wanted to comment about it, but found the thread was getting too volitile. Eventually, it was locked by an Administrator.
Here is what he said:
Quote 'Without the ties to Wing Chun, I can focus on fighting and become proficient in that. I don't need you telling me that I can only learn sensitivity from a Wing Chun teacher when I've thrown that entire system out the door and instead focus on accurate striking, footwork and evasion. The best MMA fighters don't use any trapping at all and they are successful.' unquote.
The first line tells me he doesnt know or understand the art. The same with a lot of other people, they dont know the truth about the art. Much like JKD, it is a concepts based art, not driven by particular techniques. Once you learn the system, you ARE free to express your martial arts in any way you see fit. It does not bind you or hold you to any one thing, how can it? It is a tool, a means to an end, nothing more. You fight the way you want. It has suggestions with ideas on how to punch, parry, move, ideas that we call concepts (every art does that, even JKD), but you are not bound by it in anyway, shape, or form. Since it is an art form, you can express it anyway you want.
Even Bruce Lee agreed you must have some sort of form, a proper way or proper mechanics for a technique to be executed to be efficient. I see it from JKD practitioners all the time. JKD has an idea of how to throw a proper punch, kick, parry, etc. But it doesn't command that you use the punch in this way or that way, or in a fight use it this way or that way. You use the technique anyway you want. Wing Chun is the same. It has proper form to a punch or kick to make the technique you use more efficient, but doesnt tell you that you have to do it like this when this punch comes, or use this hand position only when that technique it thrown at you, etc. You are free to use it or do it whatever way you please.
Wing Chun may have this drill we call chi sao, something which some other arts may have or tries to emulate (Kali has hubud, tai chi has push hands). But like the rest of the system, it gives you parameters to help you learn and develop sensitivity skills. But when you develop that sensitivity, in the end, you are free to use it anyway you want. That's why in the thread Are the Best Chunners Chinese? we saw so many different ways to chi sao. In the links, everyone had their own idea on how to chi sao, but it was done several different ways. None of them is right, or wrong, just not the way you, or I, or some other Wing Chun lines might do it.
As for trapping, just because the best MMA fighters dont use it, doesnt mean they wouldnt want to. The comment about MMA fighters not using it tells me coffeerox doesnt know when, or understand how, or why, to use trapping. Anytime you can get an opponents hands immobilized momentarily and hit them at will, wouldnt you want to do that? Ask any MMA fighter, I bet theyd love to get a hit or two on their opponent without getting hit back. MMA fighters dont use trapping most times because they dont know how. Plus, I cant trap you if you wont let me. Trapping happens because you set yourself up for it and I notice the conditions are right for me to trap you. Thats all. You cant force trapping.
Wing Chun is not a restricting art. The only thing restricting about it is you, your idea on how to use it, and that you have to use it this way or that way, you have to do this or have to do that. Nothing could be further from the truth then that statement.
Here is what he said:
Quote 'Without the ties to Wing Chun, I can focus on fighting and become proficient in that. I don't need you telling me that I can only learn sensitivity from a Wing Chun teacher when I've thrown that entire system out the door and instead focus on accurate striking, footwork and evasion. The best MMA fighters don't use any trapping at all and they are successful.' unquote.
The first line tells me he doesnt know or understand the art. The same with a lot of other people, they dont know the truth about the art. Much like JKD, it is a concepts based art, not driven by particular techniques. Once you learn the system, you ARE free to express your martial arts in any way you see fit. It does not bind you or hold you to any one thing, how can it? It is a tool, a means to an end, nothing more. You fight the way you want. It has suggestions with ideas on how to punch, parry, move, ideas that we call concepts (every art does that, even JKD), but you are not bound by it in anyway, shape, or form. Since it is an art form, you can express it anyway you want.
Even Bruce Lee agreed you must have some sort of form, a proper way or proper mechanics for a technique to be executed to be efficient. I see it from JKD practitioners all the time. JKD has an idea of how to throw a proper punch, kick, parry, etc. But it doesn't command that you use the punch in this way or that way, or in a fight use it this way or that way. You use the technique anyway you want. Wing Chun is the same. It has proper form to a punch or kick to make the technique you use more efficient, but doesnt tell you that you have to do it like this when this punch comes, or use this hand position only when that technique it thrown at you, etc. You are free to use it or do it whatever way you please.
Wing Chun may have this drill we call chi sao, something which some other arts may have or tries to emulate (Kali has hubud, tai chi has push hands). But like the rest of the system, it gives you parameters to help you learn and develop sensitivity skills. But when you develop that sensitivity, in the end, you are free to use it anyway you want. That's why in the thread Are the Best Chunners Chinese? we saw so many different ways to chi sao. In the links, everyone had their own idea on how to chi sao, but it was done several different ways. None of them is right, or wrong, just not the way you, or I, or some other Wing Chun lines might do it.
As for trapping, just because the best MMA fighters dont use it, doesnt mean they wouldnt want to. The comment about MMA fighters not using it tells me coffeerox doesnt know when, or understand how, or why, to use trapping. Anytime you can get an opponents hands immobilized momentarily and hit them at will, wouldnt you want to do that? Ask any MMA fighter, I bet theyd love to get a hit or two on their opponent without getting hit back. MMA fighters dont use trapping most times because they dont know how. Plus, I cant trap you if you wont let me. Trapping happens because you set yourself up for it and I notice the conditions are right for me to trap you. Thats all. You cant force trapping.
Wing Chun is not a restricting art. The only thing restricting about it is you, your idea on how to use it, and that you have to use it this way or that way, you have to do this or have to do that. Nothing could be further from the truth then that statement.