Postby david welch » Fri Feb 03, 2006 9:25 am
I don't want to speak for everyone in the Knoxville group, but the general feeling we were getting was that this fencing "technique" thing was starting to get out of hand. Not long ago, stuff that is just fighting was being made so complicated that new people like us couldn't even figure out where to start... and I was making it sound more complicated now than it did when we started not too long ago.
You see examples of the psychology of why this happens in some self defense training today. If only I knew the secret of the "technique" I will be invulnerable. If only I knew the secret "technique" I won't have to work hard. If only I could figure out the technique I won't have to be afraid.
To tell you the truth... finding "the technique" beats the hell out of learning how to use some simple principles through hard work and blood.
We decided we are going to stop doing this, and this is where our group seems to be headed. I would like to get some feedback on it.
This is what I am starting to believe.
First, every real world effective fighting art has one thing in common... it is simple. When people are trying to kill each other you don't have time to be perfect or do complicated things.
Second, offense rules. Even as late as the training in H2H in World War II, they taught to attack, not defend. As a matter of fact, the Fairbairns type military manuals like "Get tough" that spawned what is now known as "WWII Combatatives" didn't even teach any defense because they thought if you are trying to defend yourself you are already dead... the only true defense being to attack and kill your enemy before he can do it to you. Attack first, attack second, and keep attacking until you overwhelm your enemy and kill him. And they taught this for empty hand, knife, and bayonet.
And this seems to us to be Liechtenauer in a nutshell, and the basic premise of all the Liechtenauer tradition teachers up to and including Meyer. All this other stuff, and to tell you the truth we see it a lot more and much worse in other places but it rears it's head here too from time to time, about getting this technique exactly perfect, getting your hands in just exactly the right position, nailing down the terminology "just exactly", strict interpretation that a guard is not right unless your thumb is at exactly a 47.6 degree angle, just doesn't matter. As a matter of fact, I think if you went through the manuals and replaced 99.99% of the word "technique" with the word "example", we would be better off.
Simplified thinking... and why.
Sword fighting is simple.
Liechtenauer's teaching only covers three main things! How to get the first strike and hammer your enemy into submission, how to take back the initiative if your enemy gets the first strike, and what to do if your enemy tries to take your initiative away.
To do this you use four guards, and the five strikes.
As far as the importance of the guards, Doebringer says you should know the four, and ignore all the others. He notes though that "Liechtenauer does not hold the guards in such a high esteem; he is more interested in that you try to win the first strike".
Later, Meyer uses many more guards... but he uses them as frames in a film to describe actions. If you follow him, you could take the "guards" he moves through and make a flip book out of them and watch his actions he describes as an animation in your head. That I believe is his purpose for them, not to "add" to Liechtenauer, but to explain him.
And that is all about the guards I am going to think about.
Striking.
Doebringer says:
"Liechtenauer says that only five strikes with other techniques should you use in real fencing. And he teaches these straight and simple and does them as quickly and as direct as possible. And you will lay under you all the drumming and new inventions by the [Leychmeistere] or play masters since these [five strikes] are the foundation of his [Liechtenauer’s] art."
To get even closer to the heart of the matter, Meyer goes on to say:
"Now from these both come five for further reading, as the Master Strikes will be named, not that one can thus fully use the weapon Rightly, and Master this art so soon, but that from them one can Master all proper artful elements which will be acted on from knowing them here, and thus you can Fence properly at need, and become an artfully striking Fencer, who retains all Master principles at the same time, and against whom nothing can be borne."
Get that? They are master strikes not because with them "one can thus fully use the weapon Rightly, and Master this art so soon" but because "from them one can Master all proper artful elements which will be acted on from knowing them". These five strikes contain all the principles of sword fighting in them.
Doebringer simplifies things so far as saying there are really only two strikes, an unterhaw and an oberhaw. Every strike you do is just doing one of these two, with either the long edge or the short edge, to the left or right upper or lower opening.
Our simplified fencing principles I am thinking about training and studying by:
Everything you do in a swordfight before you come to grips is from one of the four guards.
You cut from one guard to the another.
A hit can be a cut, a thrust, or a slice.
A strike is trying to hit your enemy with your sword before you are in a bind.
If you are in a bind and try to hit your enemy, you are winding.
If you are trying to get past his sword so you can get a hold of him, you are passing through.
Every strike is from the master strikes.
Every "technique" you use is either a form of a master strike, a string of master strikes used together, or parts of master strikes strung together.
Try and get the first strike, and keep the initiative by attacking relentlessly.
Strike in combinations, with three, four, five and six strike combinations.
If in the middle of a combination your enemy gives you an opening, change what you going to do next and make the opening your next target. This is indes.
Almost everything in the manuals is an example of how you could do one of the above.
There are no magic techniques. These work through the application of sweat and blood.
Any thoughts? Can we make it simpler?
"A sword never kills anybody; it is a tool in the killer's hand." Lucius Annaeus Seneca 4BC-65AD.