In Martial Arts there is one underlying truth, Martial Arts are not some self-help or spiritual path, that is all an aside based on personal experience and life choices.
The simplest way of putting it, if someone attacks me then they need to regret that decision.
There is no need for added 'woo' nonsense, there is no need for over complicated concepts that force overthinking in order to bolster student retention and revenue come test or seminar time.
Cut out all the bullshit and what is left?
"You cannot do that until such and such a level of understanding" says the person attempting to put on airs of being a wise Sensei or Sifu.
I call bullshit on that.
I've been in fights, I've lived in rough neighborhoods where adherence to this nonsense will get your face rearranged and your lifespan shortened to a matter of seconds.
I've been training in Martial Arts for over thirty years as well and the quickest way towards something applicable can be found in the Boxing Gym, on a Wrestling Mat, in a Brazillian Jujitsu or Kickboxing Gym.
Yes, many still disparage these things in the Traditional World, but mainly because it is true and the results are readily discernable almost from day one.
My Son Garretty was a Regional Wrestling Champion by the time he was nine years old, on the Mat the kid is a phenom, he can lay waste to adults, let alone kids his own age.
I learned the basics of Wrestling when I was about five or six years old from my older brother Frank and it helped me tremendously in dealing with bullies at school.
Am I here to disparage Traditional Karate? Not at all. My knowledge of Traditional Karate, bolstered by the likes of Practical Minded Teachers such as John Roseberry, Kris Wilder, Iain Abernethy, Charles Todd, Michael Dascenzo, and Gene Villa have helped me tremendously and, indeed, helped me coach my Sons on the sidelines at Wrestling Matches when their Coaches failed to provide any sort of Strategic Guidance.
Even a six month exposure to Brazillian Jujitsu has proven far more useful than any sort of exposure to overly complicated 'woo' concepts.
I am, by no means, an undefeated and elite fighter, but I can and have held my own and kept my wits during some pretty extreme situations that could have proven fatal otherwise.
No one can really say what will work and what won't until the rubber hits the road and we are forced to apply what we have learned, if we make it through, then what didn't work really needs to be discarded while we devote ourselves wholeheartedly to what proved useful, even then, it may not prove useful all the time.
Fighters such as Machida, Ruten, and GSP have all proven that Karate is nothing to scoff at.
While they did make modifications to make their respective areas of study more applicable to the Cage, what they do is still Karate at its' core, but they did take what worked and discarded what didn't. Bas Ruten is so dedicated to the art of Karate that he created a fight league based solely on Karate.
The training methodology may change, but the core remains the same, it has just allowed itself to shed all the nonsense that holds it back.
Although mostly focusing on punching and kicking, this is mainly due, primarily, to experience in the Sport Karate arena where stand-up grappling and throws are, for the most part, ignored.
Many of these figures have also given up the study of Kata or relegated it to the realm of being a 'good workout.'
I am a proponent of Kata, but we need to get beyond the bullshit and look at what is there.
Wrestling concepts exist, clinch fighting exist, throwing, takedowns, and defenses against the same exist, these can be found in the realm of Kata, but the approach to Kata needs to change.
Kata is not just a set of prearranged dance moves and should not be trained as such.
Individual Kata routines are more of a modern invention by respective 'founders' of 'styles' and these have become cemented into set routines based around set styles that do not exist.
Jan Dam has opened the way for me to explore my Kata in a way that is more fluid, based around principle and strategy than one will find in any modern Karate school.
However, that being said, there is still much work to be done to break away from a mindset that is overly complicated, overthinking, and, frankly, impractical.
I am not concerned about lines and circles so much as I am with taking the other individual down and putting them out of the fight as quickly as possible.
There are much faster ways of achieving this than moving toward ever more complex concepts.
Fighting/Combat is simple. It has to be, otherwise you won't live through the ordeal to tell your Grandkids about it years down the road.
Warriors and Military would not waste their time with something that is not readily applicable in a short amount of time.
The idea that Soldiers would spend years learning something that they cannot apply in the first five days is laughable because they need to be combat ready at any given moment, the same with Police and Security. They are not going to waste their time.
The idea is to build a Soldier that is battle ready from day one and to make them ever more competent over time, which is usually accomplished by drilling down simplistic basics over and over.
The only complexity comes in greater understanding of said basics and basic strategy that evolves over time.
Endless stances, endless concepts that require ever more complex discussion, these things only detract from actual training that should be aimed at building the Soldier up both mentally and physically into an elite combatant in order to meet the enemy with something truly formidable.
This goes for weapons, this goes for hand-to-hand defense. If we look at the way of war, weapons have been simplified over time, maybe not in design, but in use... It is not necessary for a Soldier to understand how a Missile is built, unless it is their job to apply said knowledge in the upkeep of said Missile, it is only necessary for them to know how to enter codes and push a button.
A far cry from Swords, Axes, and Spears... Even the use of these were not overly complex, just endless variations on strategy that apply pretty much the same basic principles in different ways from different angles.
These were not even ruled by a specific way of doing things, one was trained to think in the moment and apply according to circumstance... The training? They trained by DOING in a controlled environment.
There is zero substitute for this.
One needs to break free of concepts like 'style' or even 'level' within said 'style' and just train.
Forget all the 'woo' bullshit, there is very little of that that is applicable, most of it will get you hurt. Yes, there are some mental aspects of training and some training methods for the mental aspect that are useful, but don't get lost in the rabbit hole of complexity.
Khabib is one of my favorite fighters, a Daghastani Wrestler from a family line who is undefeated in the Cage.
His was more about mindset coupled with physical technique and brutal training in which he wrestled bears, trained with large stones at high altitudes and at the end of the day if he said he was going to Maul you and Rearrange your face HE MEANT IT and he DID IT.
Get in that mindset.
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