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Jake_Norwood wrote:Disapprove of sparring, eh? Yup, you'll probably start something.
The ARMA rabidly endorses sparring with intent, as no other activity will hone the reflexes and solidify technique like using against someone who doesn't want it to work in a chaotic environment.
And I'll fight anyone who diagrees, and beat them...because if you don't spar, you can't fight well. With 6 months of ARMA sparring experience I was able to beat an advanced Shin-Ken-Do student with minimal effort--not because he wasn't skilled (he was very skillful), but he had never had to use his skills under that kind of pressure, in that sort of environment. After a few weeks of sparring he got quite good.
Sparring is absolutely necessary to be a fighter of any kind. Anything else is dancing.
You wrote, "In today’s world people can’t except that level of hostility and therefore the sparring becomes half hearted and useless. " I assume you meant "accept that level of hostility." I think you have a valid point, but recognizing this simply reinforces the principle of training with intent, in earnest, instead of simply "play fighting." Play fighting will build your reflexes, but it's also true that a certain degree of, um, violence is necessary. I've broken a bone and bled lots training and sparring. This degree of intent, as you point out, if absent reduces the value of sparring considerably. So you need that degree of intent and friendly hostility. You see it in Dojos, all over military training camps, and amongst serious ARMA practicioners. Just ask anyone on this board that's fought me, John C., Shane Smith, Tim Sheetz, or Stew Feil if we don't hit like we mean it.
Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater on sparring just because you haven't seen it done right yet. Unless, of course you can't accept that level of "hostility," though I'd call it agression, not hostility per se. If you can't, however, you're not studying a killing art...you're studying dancing modeled after a killing art.
Make sense?
Jake
antonyjcummins wrote:And sparring is not match in any way to real combat (again in my opinion) a fight is totally different when you are snapping peoples knees (or as my instructor has had to do on two occasions take out somebody’s eye). I was one set upon by 8 men and then once buy 6. And too be truthful I feel that sparring is a good exercise in combat awareness but it does not measure your skill in reality. Psychological effects change reality. In a controlled environment people can stop and they know there is control. However, a man with a knife who wants to kill you in the reality of it will break the best sparring partner in the world unless he has the psychological means to defeat his fear.
So to go back to your argument you are saying that people can’t be good if they don’t spar. Well I have to split agree with you, maybe I should have been clearer. In the beginning you should spar and deal with the hard external principles of martial arts. I totally agree, I did this for years and it does help build combat knowledge. But I think there is a point, for people with combat experience where sparring becomes a game and is almost useless ( in my opinion) when you know you can fight then I think its time to move away from sparring and concentrate on body mechanics, natural movement and the true development of subconscious reaction.
Furthermore, when people say win in sparring, what does that men? Getting a hit? The human body can sustain massive damage, it is possible to die after three days of having your stomach spilt.
[snip]
...in the end I had to get into a car to drive away (at which point bricks came flying) but the point is I technically won, but I would have had to kill him to stop him, now go to medieval England and give that same man a sword and training and the right to kill? A change from the sparring situation!
As for the dancer comments, I understand what you mean. I see where you are coming from but I think people have to realize that the people who learn in this method today are usually non fighters and go to that because there is no sparring. However they art itself is still deadly, I have moved to one of these dancing arts and I no longer spar. But out of the mountains of people 95% of them are non fighters but the 5% who are and use these dancing style are unbelievably dangerous. I trained with a bone doctor in England who does dot spar in any way (after 30 years of karate sparring) and what he could do was sick. I didn’t know pain came in so many shapes! (any body who disbelieves in pressure points, look no further)
Ok I think I have made my point, my apologies if any of the language is strong in here, it is only my intent to state that the deadly arts we all love are truly deadly and that building ego and self confidence (which I hope people don’t have)is dangerous through sparring, it’s a dangerous world, in truth, and I think we are all here to learn chivalry and the arts for benefit, but there will always be idiots out there. So good luck everybody with your chosen method.
Jeremiah Backhaus wrote:Your concept of zen fighting is interesting. I have heard that an empty mind is good to fight on.
LafayetteCCurtis wrote:Er...I studied aikido before I began to learn WMA (and am still studying it right now), and one thing the sensei makes clear is that there is no way of fighting with an "empty mind" except if you have trained so frequently and so strenuously that the movement patterns of the martial arts become ingrained in the subconscious and in muscle memory. So even this thing is impossible to achieve without at least controlled sparring.
(And despite the fact that most branches of aikido don't hold competitions, all of them do involve controled sparring and what can be said to be free-play with the exception that the practitioner is not supposed to be the one attacking first. Counterattacking, though, is perfectly legitimate.)
Ok I think we are barking up the same tree but on different sides. let me state, I do agree with sparring, as a beginning gesture and as long as its seen as only sparing then yes all is well. I was talking more about people who get false confidence from said hostilities. And further more I have not attacked your system in any way, I don’t know your system that’s why im asking?
“I return to the studies of Dr. Grossman and others, however, which confirm that if you pretend to cut off an arm on a regular basis, with intent, then your training will kick in and you will do so automatically” this comment is what I mean exactly, if I train it will happen, but in sparring, or in my training, you can’t do the techniques as they would kill, maim or disable someone, there is no half hearted maybe this would snap, maybe not, it would snap, and we learn to understand the bodies natural response. And in sparring the response to a supposed break, stab, whatever is not correct and therefore not realistic.
I gave up kata a long time ago.. subconscious reaction is a simple concept. When we enter to true danger our subconscious reactions take over. Have you been driving and someone jumps in the road. The next thing you realise is that you swerved out of the way and then you remember the events after. This is the reaction im talking about. It works much faster then conscious, so anyone who says they have had a true fight in the conscious form has not had a real fight, its quick, un comprehendible, you only remember doing things after and its over quick, the events come later when you remember them. If you train your subconscious, like the car you act accordingly.
The comment about my ‘eye fight’ that was in my days of sparring lots, and to be honest he was too easy to beat, I just had to decide not to blind him, its not about number of people or boasting, he was easy to beat and the training I had worked. But if I was doing the training im doing now I could have done other things and restrained and controlled the person
Dear jake, my non fighters comment was not for your organisation at all my friend. This was aimed at the lumps of flesh called humans that I had to train with. Some people are poets, some mathematicians, artists and some are fighters etc, some blend. Did you know dante went to war? I bet he was mint. And when I commented on your dancers thing, again I meant people I know, not you good folk. People go to a club twice a week and think they are warriors. Sad. People trained all there life, and they knew how to do it.
Jake I have to completely disagree with you here, completely, that cage fighting malarkey is a waste of time, its set up for commercial gain. The evidence that you are talking about, martial artists verses sparring. No go. These ‘martial artists’ are not experts not matter what the credentials (which I may add is a load of rubbish anyway) cage fighting is big men hitting each other till one falls down. That’s why martial arts were invented to stop people like that. If you introduced a knife into the cage watch the difference, and all martial arts deal with weapons. That’s war. Cage fighting is a mock semi ruled sport that does not imitate real fights in anyway what so ever. I have watched these ‘fights’ and in reality with weapons, they would be dead in second, they leave all the armour weak points open nearly all the time, they have no awareness of where the hands of there opponents are. You can’t take out eyes hit the throat, all the area that change fight dynamics. And I have seen many martial ‘arts masters’ and met only four that were truly masters. These people wouldn’t entertain going into a cage fight, they no its hype and they would be enable to meet them strength for strength (which is all it is) , if they weren’t allowed to use all the aspects of a fight they would be doing a sport. I wont go more into this. In my opinion cage fighting is the furthest thing from a real fight, it’s a dangerous sport and nothing more (again in my opinion)
Jake_Norwood wrote:Re: Pressure points. Uh-huh. Does ki come with that?
An equally accurate (but far more succinct) way to explain it would be by saying that the real traditional Eastern schools (as opposed to the flashier ones) teach it just the same way European masters would have taught about Nach und Vor. I still don't understand why lots of people still think it's something mysterious and mystical.
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