Wednesday, November 20, 2013

The Hidden Fist- the true Wisdom of Appearing Average



Strive to appear average and not a threat. It is to our advantage,  Often one seeking a confrontation does so because they ‘know’ they can dominate you. Not being threatening allows you.to work below their event horizon and strike with surprise.

When Charlie Murray was training on Okinawa he was taught to cultivate Tiger Eyes. Your face showing only a calm expression at all times but the eyes having the focus, as does a tiger, of watching everything, waiting for something in the opponent’s demeanor showing when to strike,

Think of it as a Mask hiding your potential.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Early Dan Training Memories 3



Part 3

Last in  1983 I received an invitation to the Bando Association annual summer camp. There were many diverse training opportunities there, Stick training with Dr. Gyi, Stick training in Escrima, Choking drills, Breaking drills, Bo Kata with Bohan Sensei, Bando style fighting training among other varied training. One instructor choose to share a Bando Stick form with me by having two of his students teach it to me for about 2 hours. When I left the camp, I drove home practicing it continually while driving. Years  of practice later I began teaching it to my students.Interesting I recently found this form on the Bob Maxwell Sensei YouTube site as a Kukri form. I presume the stick form was a derivative of this form, and an example of how the form has different dimensions depending on what is in your hands. One of the best two hours I ever spent.





There were visits to many other dojo, such as training with one of Hidy Ochai’s schools and many others alas I can no longer can name. Each of which helped me understand more of Karate’s range.


Except for Tai Chi and the study of Chinese forms with Rothrock Laoshi, my other main study with Sutrisno Sensei occupied much of my time. I was never tempted to leave Isshinryu , yet, learning with everyone was a great learning experience, Each was so generous with their time I only wish I had learned even more.

Early Dan Training Memories 2



Part 2


Then there is Carl Long, who was teaching Shorin Ryu (Shimabuku Ezio lineage). We trained together often, shared Kata to understand each other’s system. Carl had a dynamic Rohai kata. Best remembered were drills like Naifanchi kata as a speed drill or race, trying to see who could go  fastest.  Yet trying to keep each technique distinct. Or practicing front kicks from seated Seiza position.

The time with Carl was so important that I eventually incorporated his kata Annaku (One of the versions of Kyan’s kata).



One of my students attended Ithica University. While there she also studied with Ed Savage in Goju Ryu. He ran his program with what seemed to me as Okinawan standards. When I went to visit he ignored the rest of the class and covered Goju Saifa and Seiunchin with me. On another visit he did the same with Shisochin kata and Sanseru kata, and then provided kata guides for all he had showed me.

This gave me great insight into Goju Ryu,  I am very glad he was so generous.


Early Dan Training Memories 1



From 1979 through 1984 I had opportunity to train with many friends in a variety of systems and I did my best to retain what I learned. Every experience has some place in the gestalt of of our training. There was no Isshinryu in my immediate area, thus my incentive was to find others to train and spar with. What I found was these varied schools didn’t use sparring in a class setting rather other training. Here are a few of those memories.

First among the studies, (77 to 78) when I first moved to Scranton I started to train with Frank Trojanowicz in for two years. For one thing the kicking helped me immensely . The closeness of the forms to Shotokan later would be helpful to learn that system. We did enough breaking to have someone break my finger. The thing I most enjoyed were his makiwara, the regular training did much to develop my striking technique.

Then a new Sho Dan I also had an interest in Tai Chi and I began training with Ernest Rothrock in Yang Long Fist Tai Chi (108) beginning in 1979. After 9 months of tai chi (in a 2 year study) I began to study Chinese forms with him.  Mostly to understand what Chinese forms should be, he then took be on an eclectic study among several systems. First an advanced form in Northern Shaolin, then Northern Preying Mantis, Pai Lum (which he was publically teaching at that time) and even Northern Eagle Claw (which he was studying and which after 25 years did begin teaching too. I gained a great general  knowledge about the Chinese styles from him. I even studied some weapons too. The hard work from this study taught me to become more fluid in my flexibility and in my execution. The tai chi I still practice 35 years later. The full range of my studies can’t be fully expressed.

This is a version of the Mantis form I studied under Rothrock Laoshi.This form is slightly different  from what I studied but closest of the many variations on the internet. 




I was also training with Dave Brojack’s Kempo Goju organization perhaps the most eclectic art I worked with.  Taught me a great deal about not having preconceptions about what works. For a while I even taught a youth class there. Mostly I worked on sparring with them and at times we attended tournaments together .  Good fellowship there. We were together about the entire 5 years.

One of the organizations I trained with was Steve Newman’s  ‘Zen Budo Kai’ a division of  Joe Bragues ‘Goshin Jutsu Kyu Jo’. I found them eclectic  and extremely effective in their art and one technique among their practices was this one.
1.       Right punch attack
                                LFF outside their strike, right middle side ridge hand clockwise parry
                                (Roll the right ridge hand palm press into your left hand (very fluid))
                                Right hand then strikes the neck with a right ridge hand strike to the neck (potential KO)
                                Right hand then flows down and up under their captured wrist (striking into the wrist)
                                  Option 1 Strike into their wrist and then wrap their arm with your right and press down (lock)
                                 Option 2 Strike into their wrist and then wrap their arm with your right, press into their arm to form a “S” curve with their arm, Using the “S” curve press down with your right and  lock them with the pain.

2.       Right punch attack
                                LFF outside their strike, right ridge hand strike into the side of their neck delivered under their right punch.
Alternate –
3.       Right punch attack
                                LFF outside their strike, right hand grabs you left behind their neck and pull in to you.

For those who are old and need a memory assist, here are Sutrisno Black Belt Drills, I believe there are the superior drills I have experienced.
We began with a drill from Tris Sutrisno’s Shotokan Advanced studies, referred to as Kihon Sho Dan.

1.       Ready Stance
2.       Left Foot Forward, Left Low Block
3.       Right Reverse Punch
4.       Right Front Kick (placing the foot down into right front stance)
5.       Left then Right Punch
6.       Left High Block
7.       Right Rising Elbow Strike
8.       Rotate your torso (so it faces 3 o’clock) clockwise 90 degrees and reach out with the left hand to 12 o’clock (as to grab an opponents arm), and then throw a left front kick to the front (again 12 o’clock).
9.       Land in a side (3 o’clock) facing horse stance (left foot forward) and throw a left cross body hook punch.  [note, this is what the Shotokan and Shorin stylists throw in their Nihanchi (Tekki) Sho Dan Kata, where we throw the palm up spear hand.]
10.   Your right foot kicks up to the inside of the left leg (as in the opening of Chinto Kata), then place the right foot down in a left front cat stance (facing 12 o’clock). This concludes with a left hand open knife hand block (similar to Kusnaku’s opening 3 techniques).
11.   Your left foot steps forward into a deeper front stance (Shotokan’s zenkatsu-dachi) as your left palm presses down and you drive a right spear hand forward (across the back of the left hand).
12.   [Now assume somebody grabbed your right arm.] You press your right spear hand down about 6”, somewhat resembling a downward palm press.
13.   Pivoting on your left foot, you spin 360 clockwise to end up in a right cat stance, as both your elbows descend in a double knife hand block (the reverse of no. 10).
14.   You jump up with a double front kick (left then right)
15.   Landing in right Zenkatsu Dachi, (lunging forward) with a double outward knife hand strike.



Kihon Ni-Dan  bonus points for remembering all of this correctly, yes, it has been awhile since we’ve done this.
Beginning LFF Left Front stance and a Left middle double guard

Andy Ware doing Kihon NiDan  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-9fxG8zTos


1.       Right punch attack
                                LFF outside their strike, right middle side ridge hand clockwise parry
                                (Roll the right ridge hand palm press into your left hand (very fluid))
                                Right hand then strikes the neck with a right ridge hand strike to the neck (potential KO)
                                Right hand then flows down and up under their captured wrist (striking into the wrist)
                                  Option 1 Strike into their wrist and then wrap their arm with your right and press down (lock)
                                 Option 2 Strike into their wrist and then wrap their arm with your right, press into their arm to form a “S” curve with their arm, Using the “S” curve press down with your right and  lock them with the pain.

2.       Right punch attack
                                LFF outside their strike, right ridge hand strike into the side of their neck delivered under their right punch.
Alternate –
3.       Right punch attack
                                LFF outside their strike, right hand grabs you left behind their neck and pull in to you.

For those who are old and need a memory assist, here are Sutrisno Black Belt Drills, I believe there are the superior drills I have experienced.
We began with a drill from Tris Sutrisno’s Shotokan Advanced studies, referred to as Kihon Sho Dan.

1.       Ready Stance
2.       Left Foot Forward, Left Low Block
3.       Right Reverse Punch
4.       Right Front Kick (placing the foot down into right front stance)
5.       Left then Right Punch
6.       Left High Block
7.       Right Rising Elbow Strike
8.       Rotate your torso (so it faces 3 o’clock) clockwise 90 degrees and reach out with the left hand to 12 o’clock (as to grab an opponents arm), and then throw a left front kick to the front (again 12 o’clock).
9.       Land in a side (3 o’clock) facing horse stance (left foot forward) and throw a left cross body hook punch.  [note, this is what the Shotokan and Shorin stylists throw in their Nihanchi (Tekki) Sho Dan Kata, where we throw the palm up spear hand.]
10.   Your right foot kicks up to the inside of the left leg (as in the opening of Chinto Kata), then place the right foot down in a left front cat stance (facing 12 o’clock). This concludes with a left hand open knife hand block (similar to Kusnaku’s opening 3 techniques).
11.   Your left foot steps forward into a deeper front stance (Shotokan’s zenkatsu-dachi) as your left palm presses down and you drive a right spear hand forward (across the back of the left hand).
12.   [Now assume somebody grabbed your right arm.] You press your right spear hand down about 6”, somewhat resembling a downward palm press.
13.   Pivoting on your left foot, you spin 360 clockwise to end up in a right cat stance, as both your elbows descend in a double knife hand block (the reverse of no. 10).
14.   You jump up with a double front kick (left then right)
15.   Landing in right Zenkatsu Dachi, (lunging forward) with a double outward knife hand strike.



Kihon Ni-Dan  bonus points for remembering all of this correctly, yes, it has been awhile since we’ve done this.
Beginning LFF Left Front stance and a Left middle double guard
Against a Right  thrust punch attack
·         Step left foot outside their stepping strike, right middle side ridge hand clockwise parry
·         (Roll the right ridge hand palm press into your left hand (very fluid))
·         Right hand then strikes the neck with a right ridge hand strike to the neck (potential KO)
·         Right hand then flows down and up under their captured wrist (striking into the wrist)
·         Option 1 Strike into their wrist and then wrap their arm with your right and press down (lock)
·         Option 2 Strike into their wrist and then wrap their arm with your right, press into their arm to form a “S” curve with their arm, Using the “S” curve press down with your right and lock them with the pain.


Next would be training with Tristan Sutrisno Sensei. We would be together training hard for about 10 years. The arts he then taught were a  unique family version of Shotokan (His father had trained under Funakoshi Ginchin Sensei.), as Aikido of pre-WII training under a Usheiba student, Kobudo (consisting of Bo, Kama and Tanto studies) and a version of the Indonesian Artof Tjimande. Though only the bare bones, but yet extremely effective. The depth of these studies was unique, many of which are incorporated into my program. In a sense as these studies were interrelated.

Among which was how his Shotokan incorporated Bunkai, which I believe may be unique in the world. Kata study at the Dan level consisted using almost each point of the kata as a mnemonic device for an extremely different string of effective techniques. You could not anticipate the Bunkai coming from the kata. The techniques could incorporate Karate, Aikido or Tjimande. Then the Bunkai version of the kata had extra movements and this was not performed publically.

An explanation of the depth of these studies, each Dan level were a study in entirely different Bunkai.  Also each Dan level used different underlying principles for the Bunkai too. He shared but a fraction of these techniques with me, but they were devastating.

Here is Tristan Sutrisno performing Gojushiho, an entirely different kata from his Gojushiho Dai and Gojushiho Sho.





 End of Part 1