Tuesday, 18 December 2012
Attack the attack.
Monday, 5 November 2012
NEW CLASS - Monday 7th January 2013
Starting Monday the 7th January 2013 I will be holding a new session for those interested in Combative training from the ground up.
With the information base coming from the internal arts and real combat experience the Fundamentals training will combine innovative body work training, realistic combat drills and combat methods for all ranges and situations.
The aim of this 1 year training is to bring about a good level of skill within a year. I will back up the weekly training sessions with a monthly 4 hour evaluation session to give more detail and see where the group is at any point.
An rough outline of the course is shown below. Please not that although the first few months will be focused primarily on health, fitness and body development the program will always include some 2 person training in all sessions and all work is combat relevant. The sessions will work top to bottom so for the first few months this can be viewed as a health and fitness class in many respects.
At the end of these first sections you can expect to be, stronger, leaner, more co-ordinated and better able to move with purpose.
Please inform anyone that is interested in training from the ground up, be them experienced martial artists looking for a new dimension to training or complete beginners looking for something new.
This going ahead is based on numbers so please let anyone you can know!
Friday, 12 October 2012
Stability in mobility
Monday, 1 October 2012
Fighting predisposition & self defence
Here we are looking to take the mind from a state of calm to a state of reaction without preparing the person for the work.
Thursday, 23 August 2012
Pressure Testing & Internal Martial Arts
- Find where tension builds either under load or from static holds so that you can re-align or relax the area and release the tension.
- Find out how breath and internal pressures are affected under load
- Find gaps or ‘sticking points’ during dynamic movement
- Find movement instability of problems from load or pressure.
- Movement fluidity
- Listening skills
- Reaction and action capabilities
- Our ability to deal with large volumes of force
- Power generation and Power redirection.
- Ability to change
Coaching People
- Recognise & rehabilitate movement or postural deficiencies specific to the individual
- Provide a framework for the individual to use to advance their overall health.
- Provide a ‘Box Free’ Learning Environment and Philosophy.
- Provide practical, proven and honest Combative training methods.
- The danger with structure is that the individual never gets the underlying simplicity behind all the complexity.
- The danger with Freedom is that the individual never grasps the complexity behind the simplicity.
Tuesday, 17 July 2012
FREE seminars on the Internal Arts
Click here
Friday, 2 December 2011
Every day training
One thing that we often see in desk jobs and office work is stresses in the upper back and shoulders. A very simple method you can use to work on relaxation of the shoulders and upper back is:
Ok, your not going to stand in Santi in a Queue in public as it might attract some funny glances. However you can do some very good constructive work on the inside lines of the legs while standing in a natural position
Not an easy time to be thinking about training! However this simple practice can be performed from the moment you go to get up out of bed.
to test your speed!
One for those living in busy cities. It is a very good way to recognise intent, develop smooth movement and all round awareness
A good workout for your stepping and leg power.
This is a good way to develop a certain thing or build a certain strength
This is useful for kick training.
Monday, 14 November 2011
Working in the Recovery Moment
- Moving back or re centring from a failed body movement.
- When retreating back from a strike (either with the striking weapon returning or with the whole body)
- Removing a point of density or tension when in the clinch or grappling (usually to change into another movement or technique)
- After defending a flurry from your opponent where you ‘reset’ and settle down to re attack
- After your failed attack where the mind establishes the next course of action
- After anything unexpected happens that causes the mind to freeze (there are many ways to insight this reaction in an attacking opponent that i will go into at a later time)
Friday, 23 September 2011
Through the Back
- Loop a belt around a pole or tree
- Stand with feet parallel and shoulder width
- Hold each end of the loop in each hand
- Pull with one hand
- The body will rotate around its axis and the opposite side to the pull will go forward
- Remove the rope and try to create the same response to the one hand pulling back
- Receiving with one side while simultaneously projecting with the other.
For instance, I block a strike coming in with my left arm, the force of that strike immediately travels through the back into the right arm which shoots forward to strike. - Power in the back hand
This is useful to hide the source of power from your opponent. When using the back hand to send power to the front you are able to keep the ‘intent’ or weight of force out of the striking side of the body. This is used Extensively in Xing yi and the ‘changing’ strikes it can result in are extremely hard to stop. - Short Range striking
Through the back power also enables very short range striking with a large volume of power. Your closest weapon, that is even in touch with the opponent does not need to load before striking as the power comes from the opposite side of the body. - Twisting throws
When close in you can pull back on one shoulder sending the other forward when combined with stepping to create a powerful twisting throw.
- Infraspinatus
- Rhomboideus Major
- Teres Minor / Major
- Deltoids
- lower trapezius.
Tuesday, 20 September 2011
Fighting a crowd
It has been very rare an occasion when working professionally or being involved in street altercations that i faced just one opponent in a classic ‘fisty cuffs’ dual, rather it would one or a few vs a pair or group of assailants. With this in mind I feel that an often wholly overlooked area of self defence or combative training is the work against multiple opponents. You do see alot of attension paid to this sort of work in Modern combatives systems or systems stemming from people real life experience and training, but in the traditional arts there are very few systems out there that realistically take on the reality of facing a group of determined attackers.
Once system that originally had this very idea as a primary focus is the Chinese IMA of ba gua. However, this idea of fighting several people at once has somewhat fallen out of the Ba gua basic training in favour of 1 on 1 training.
When we look at ba gua’s movement patterns and general dynamic strategy we can see very clearly that one of its great strengths was this ability to take on multiple opponents at once. From its unique stepping and flowing movement to its evasive mindset and constant turning motions the core basis of the system seems to very clearly be about fighting more than one person. Of course Ba gua is an extremely useful method of fighting a single opponent, but what i would like to discuss here are some general principles that i have found in ba gua, other IMAs and from real life encounters that are practical and useful against multiple opponents.
First some general points regarding reality.
1) You will get hit!
I can honestly say that i am very lucky in that during the many multiple opponent encounters i have been in there have only been a few cases where I required some form of hospital treatment for injuries sustained, these occasions were for broken noses and the injuries did not inhibit my ability to end the confrontation. However, As is often the case with certain types of martial arts training, it amazes me how students do not think they will get hit when training. In a 1 on 1 encounter you may well be able to check or block alot of attacks, when facing 10 fists rather than 2 however, the chances are you will get hit a good few times! Once the student accepts this reality they are able to move forward and practice without the mind being too stunned every time a strike lands. Clearly we do not want to allow people to hit us ... but reality is they will ... they may even stab us, but we need to learn to fight through.
2) Do not exhibit pinpoint focus.
One thing that ba gua trains very well is the vision. When walking the circle in basic training, the vision opens up to draw information from the entire scene. After some training you are able to perceive movement and action at the extreme periphery of your vision. This is a vital part of working against multiple attackers. You have to be able to ‘take in the scene’ as a whole rather than simple the guy throwing that first punch!
3) Accept your environment
A lot of times we train in a very comfortable environment, a clean dojo with a matted floor for example. This is, however, not the real environment where we may have to employ these skills. It is important that you are mentally prepared to navigate and more importantly USE your environment to your advantage. Training with obstacles in the way or in an unusual setting is a very good way to help your mind learn to adapt.
4) Treat the group as one
When looking to defend against MOs you need to start to view the entire group as a single opponent, this way the mind and psychi will not be overwhelmed with the information of trying to keep up with 5 individual units.
5) Limit the amount of people that can reach you
All of the principles below are based around this central idea. The ability to limit the amount of weapons heading your way at any one moment. This has very obvious advantages that i am sure i do not need to explain.
Principles of Multiple opponent Defence.
Moving
If there is one thing that i would like to drill home when talking about combat against multiple opponents it is that constant movement is one of the key requirements. You really do not want to be stood in one place for too long ... you may well end up with 2 kicks and three punches all arriving together!
Movement is one of the fundamental requirements of good MO (multiple opponent) defence tactics. If you can move smoothly, efficiently and change direction on a dime, you will have the tools to fool and slide past the opponents.
Specific training methods are present in Ba gua for drilling this idea of constant motion and effective movement. They include:
- Kou Bu Bai bu steps
- Circle walking with Sliding mud and goose steps
- Deer Running and leaping training
- Palm changes
- Changing centres
- Turning skills
One important point is that movement is not simply about footwork, but is equally about the ability to ‘change’. Ba gua is often described as the art of change and this idea of changing direction or motion, line of force or position of centre when the opponents least expect it can help to result in the following methods.
Stacking.
Contrary to some ‘multiple opponent demonstrations’ you see from MAists, this is not about 5 people attacking one after another!
When we talk about stacking in MO situations we are specifically referring to positioning yourself in the first movements to a position where the opponents stack up and will have to fight through their friends to reach you.
The primary idea of stacking is in the strategic first motion of the encounter and in the pack mentality that the opponents will be exhibiting. At the moment of attack you will usually find that all opponents will head straight in your direction, this is the ideal situation to use a stacking tactic.
One of the main initial ways you can achieve this is to ‘stretch out’ the line by moving rapidly out of range while angling your line. This will result in the initial attacker and next closest angling in towards you in order to reach you, blocking the path for the others.
Shielding
Shielding is often used in conjunction with the strategy of stacking and has the same ultimate goal, to limit the amount of opponents able to take you on at any one time. When you use a shield you protect yourself from attack in that direction. In this instance we are talking about using one of the opponents as a shield.
One of the best methods of this is to get to the opponents back gate and follow or control their motion from that potistion. It is often not the person you may be engaging with that you will get to the back of, but the next person who is stacked and trying to move forward. With correct change and footwork you can move past the immediate threat (maybe with a quick slap) then get behind one of the other attackers while they jocky for position at you.
Barriers
This is linked to Shielding but also very much refers to using the environment around you to make it hard for opponents to reach you or to help to stack them. The barrier may be a doorway or a table, or of course it could be an opponent you have put on the ground! Anything that you can get in between you and the opponents that they then have to climb over is a barrier.
Using barriers if very useful in the real world environment where you have bus stops, benches, tables, chairs, walls, doorways, bins etc, all of which you can get behind or move in front of you.
Final thoughts.
As you can see i have not discussed the methods you will use to actually strike or throw or take down your assailants here as i feel those tools are to be trained with a good instructor. What i have discussed are the underlying tactics and principles you will need to employ when a multiple opponent situation presents itself. Although now one of the most common forms of real world requirement the actual physical part of any encounter is just one of many facets of self defence that need to be taken into account, from situational awareness to control of the pre fight build up and the resultant adrenaline dumps.
Here are some videos that show the basic MO work i have been discussing
NOTE: i have no affiliation with these teachers and am not holding these videos up as perfect examples of total method, but as videos that highlight specifics that i have been discussing.
Master Su Dong Chen (movement, stacking and shielding)
Scott Sonnon of ROSS (start of the video shows use of barriers as opponents have to step over each other)
Alex Kostic Systema Expert (This video shows multiple opponent free fighting and highlights the use of turning and movement to decrease the ability of both attackers to strike simultaneously.)
Thursday, 28 July 2011
Mind Training with Pads
One thing we recently worked on was the application of padwork to facilitate an appreciation of the minds reactive abilities when under stress.
The drills are fairly simple and might be worth trying out.
Drill 1:
- Have your partner stand back to the wall.
- Slap the sides of the partner and their head with your focus mitts. It is very important at this stage that the slaps are of a high frequency but not too powerful. The idea is to cause the partners mental capacity to begin to shut down as he is overwhelmed with the strikes.
- After a random amount of time hold both pads up for the partner to strike. They should try to strike with as little gap as possible.
The idea with this drill is to overwhelm then create an open gate. We are not working on punches, or defences here .. but the mental transition from a state of overwhelming attack to the response. The goal is to make the gap smaller and smaller until you are able to take advantage of the smallest gap in the attack instantly. This training helps us get inside the gaps in the opponents motion.
Drill 2:
- Put the partner gently on the ground and have them strike at the pads.
- Drop the pads and move away. The partner should try to get up as quickly as possible.
- Catch the partner as they are midway through getting up and put them down again. Hold the pads out for them to strike and repeat the process.
This ones a good workout! Here we are trying to work on the minds ability to multitask as they deal with falling, getting up and striking targets. Again its the time between the actions that matters in this training not the actions themselves. We are looking to limit the time it takes to react to opportunity.
The video below shows these two drills. Sorry for the poor quality!