Postby John_Clements » Mon Nov 11, 2002 10:23 am
Well, I think this needs considerable qualifying....
When I use to kickbox and box (which I was never particularly good at) I would often talk my sparring partners into fencing with sword & buckler or longsword, and invariably, no matter how good they were unarmed, they always were easily whipped when it came to weapons ---even the ones who had studied kenjutsu or kendo or arnis/escrima (in fact, the more Asian weapons knowledge they had, they worse they often seemed to do in serious weapon sparring with me). On the other hand, if I managed to get a foil/epee/saber fencing student to spar unarmed with me in boxing or kickboxing, no matter how good they were at saber or epee, 90% of the time they couldn't hold up for more than few seconds. Even those I met who did both armed and unarmed arts seemed to have trouble adjusting one to the other in sparring. It was always puzzling. But,
I myself did not make the “connection” between armed and unarmed techniques until the early 1990's.
So, my conclusions are that, unless you really know weapons and really have a serious training program for them that includes lots of contact free-play/sparring, you can't get students studying unarmed fighting to adapt their knowledge to weapons, especially using just infrequent drills and exercises. Similarly, unless your weapon skills and knowledge are exceptional, you will not easily incorporate unarmed principles into your repertoire if you don't understand them well in the first place.
Nowadays, I am surprised how easy it is to teach unarmed skills to novices in the course of our weapon use. They pick things up far faster than I have seen unarmed students trying to learn weapons ---the very opposite of what we often hear in Asian arts --i.e., that weapons are "reserved" for "advanced students", an approach I believe directly at odds with military history.
JC
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