Corey,
I'm pretty much a beginner, too.
The one thing that still amazes me is how integrated all of the fighting methods are. Longsword is taught as a foundation, but that does not mean that it's applicable to only longsword. It very naturaly extends to the other weapons, including dagger and unarmed fighting.
I was really amazed at first to discover how "physical" longword is, meaning how many opportunities there are for disarming, throwing, trapping, striking, or otherwise engaging in nasty "hand-to-hand" fighting.
My first sparring opportunity with Casper taught me a very important lesson: the
entire sword is a weapon, not just the cutting part, but the pomel, cross-guard, flat, etc. (He smashed me in the face with the pomel. [I had a helmet.] After I reeled back a moment he said something like, "the whole sword is a weapon." Got it! <img src="/forum/images/icons/grin.gif" alt="" />)
Fighting with longsword is not just a long-distance activity, but fighting with an extra tool, if that makes sense. The first Fechtbuch (fighting manual) that I bought was the Codex Wallerstein. The bulk of that manual is dedicated to unarmed combat. Unarmed combat was a foundational subject back then. (I've barely scratched that part.)
The nice thing is that once the basic concepts are understood, anything at hand can be looked at as an improvised fighting tool. Remember that the human is the weapon; anything else is just a tool that can increase efficiency.
Lastly, for me one of the best books besides JC's great blue book has been David Lindholm's recent publication of
Sigmund Ringeck's Knightly Art of the Longsword. It has helped me understand many of the basic longsword concepts.
My rambling two bits. <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />
James