Postby JeanryChandler » Thu Jan 05, 2006 4:28 pm
We have had a few threads about where to look at your opponent, and I think indeed this is critical. It can help to partially hide your gaze by wearing a fencing mask or a helmet with narrow view slits, but I believe ultimately a good fencer has to have an excellent poker face and especially good eyes. You really have to be able to watch your opponent in his entirety, their face, eyes, shoulders, their feet, their overall stance, and their weapon if any simultaneously, and do so without telegraphing intent or anticipation by your own gaze. This is something I learned street fighting back when I was a kid, and I find it's one of the most difficult but crucial things to teach a new fencer.
If you can't master your gaze, you will do things like telegraph anticipation of a strike by looking at your opponents weapon or where you think it will strike, something an experienced fighter will use to defeat you almost every time.
I happened to be reading a book on Iaido and I noticed this a chapter dealing with this specific issue. According to this book, the concept of eye contact is called chakugan, and while apparently there are dfifferent theories in different schools, the books reccomended gaze is something called enzan no metsuke or "distant mountain sight". I'll quote from the book what this is supposed to mean:
" by viewing the opponent with the same slightly out-of-focus eyesight we use when viewing a panorama of distant scenery, with the eyes directed at about the level of the adversary's solar plexus, your vision encompasses the entire person. In this way, we can watch our adversaries eyes, hands, elbos, hips, and feet all at the same time. This method also prevents us from being duped by an eye-fake or a distracting hand movement, because the positions of the hips, elbows and feet will betray any deception attempted by the rest of the body."
this is actually kind of reminiscent of the gaze you have to use in boot camp when being chewed out by Drill Instructors <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />
Anyway, apologies in advance if anyone has already brought this up, but I was wondering if the Fechtbuchs mention anything specifically about this and if so what they called it.
Jeanry
(The book I'm reading is called Flashing Steel by Masayuki Shimabakuro)
"We can't all be saints"
John Dillinger