Tuesday, September 24, 2013

How to translate what you hear in Martial arts to the truth!


Bad Sensei says!

How to translate what you hear in Martial arts to the truth!


I have been training in the martial arts since I was six years old one way or the other and with little time off. I have trained in Traditional Japanese arts since I was young and had my shot at eclectic arts, Chinese arts, modern arts, some martial arts from around the world and basically the vocabulary changes, but often the confusion that is left behind after an instructor says something lingers and generates generations of false stories and such…and I am here to clear it up!

A interest and saying can grow into dogma, someone’s quick answer that is meant to put a student aside while an instructor moves onto more “important things” or an answer that is given to give an answer for answers sake can scar the very fabric of our social and intellectual worlds in Karate….Okay, maybe not, but the fact is that some instructors say things and it inspires levels of silliness and stupidity that are truly cringe worthy.

So, in this long overdue Blog entry I am going to translate some very misunderstood terms, some over used terms that mean the opposite or nothing at all and hope to clear up some long held misconceptions that others have generated over the years.

Things you hear that simply make you cringe…or should
Some cringe worthy things are horrible because they make you sick to your stomach, like when I tell people about my many injuries and start getting into the really gory ones. Other cringe worthy things are less about your stomach flipping and more about your sense of “Man that’s just STUPIDLY EMBARASSING TO ANYONE THAT HAS EVER STRAPPED ON A KARATE BELT” kind of cringy! This is a list of those, really what the F were you thinking before you opened your mouth kind of cringe worthy!

I’m a 12th Dan (any Dan after 10th…)
For those that Don’t know…and for those that do know better the original dan rankings that Kano created went to 10th dan. Funakoshi only gave out dan ranks to 5th because he felt that was the highest required rank for mastery of Shotokan, and many of the other masters refused to use anything above three for their students.

To be a 10th dan or above you would need to have a life time of dedication…actually a few! If your instructor or friends instructor or anyone else for that matter says they are higher than 10th Dan laugh a lot and walk away! No, wait…run!...BS stains!

I’m a 7-10th Dan (coming from any instructor under 45)
As a 40 year old and knowing what martial arts are all about I can truly say that if a person in their 20s stated to me that they were a 5-7th Dan I would really think that they were full of it…and if they were my age and said they were a 7-8th Dan I would laugh…and once a guy introduced himself as a 9th Dan in some karate style I did not know and he was 30 years old. I told him it does not count if you give yourself rank advancement and walked away!

The problem with high ranking instructors in north America is most are political or greed driven. They think that rank means they have power and or they feel that it will help pad their wallet, and the issue is that it does to some extent. Younger money hungry instructors tend to “grow” dan ranks to pad their resume when really hard work in the dojo and at home is all they need. Rank is Rank at the best of times!

I hold 3 (or more) high level black belts in different arts!
Can not tell you how often I have been told this. I have a shodan in Judo and Sandan in Karate and it has taken me this long in my life to get this far with family and work ext. If I was to not get married, Who needs school right…and work…well that’s for wimps.. Well, maybe I could get a Rokudan by now in Karate, a Sandan in Judo and add a kendo shodan…but that all takes time.

May favorite is someone that suggests that they have a black belt level in six different arts and they are all vastly different and one is BJJ. BJJ is one of those arts that not everyone is going to get a brown belt in, never mind a black belt. The second that they say that I call BS!

My hands are so deadly that they have to be registered with the local police/federal government!
Probably as a chronic groper (self or other)…but not because you could hurt someone physically with them. First off you don’t need to register your hands with anyone…its BS and an old stack of it at that. Secondly, no police force in Canada (my home country) has any paper work to fill out to say that someone, anyone is a black belt never mind a deadly one at that!

My art form is Ten thousand years old!
Reality is that anyone that says this has never cracked open the history books of Karate or martial arts…or anything for that matter. Read some basic history and stop exaggerating a bit for a second and you will make not that most Karate styles are basically a little more than a hundred years old and not a thousand…and kung fu styles can probably reach back a few hundred years more than that. Ten thousand years ago man had just started practicing sedentary agriculture and stopped wandering about picking berries and hunting small game for the most part.

The fact is that if you say “my Karate is five hundred years old” you basically show how little you care about researching your art and what a moron you are!

I teach a form of Ninjitsu…..
Oh, you do do you! Well, then you may be interested to know that Ninjitsu, as a traditional art form DIED out about the 1500’s and were never really “honorable” arts, they were seen as dishonorable and not some farmers that reved up against the Samurai, but “guns for hire” that went against Bushido!

The Ninja crap that you see today is pure marketing by men that refuse to grow up and live in “adult” pants! They follow self help gurus gone mad and wear black PJ’s with hoods and train in weak Karate/TKD and then say they are the mystic warriors of old…when the “mystic” warriors of old..were nothing more than assassins and soldiers of fortune. Reality…that guy in the black Pj’s is just having issues growing up.

If you don’t (add “tow the line” comment) I will strip you of your black belt!
So, you put your time and effort into training under a instructor and at first they seem nice enough, but then you start to see them demand more and more of your time and effort and…more than likely…your money. You put in as much time as you can and you get your Shodan. You are now a black belt….or are you. Did you earn a black belt or are you being loaned one by the instructor/organization?

I have seen instructors try and punish people by saying “if you (add horrible offence) I will strip you of your black belt, and I even saw a letter that a local guy sent to a student stripping them of their black belt because they were doing other arts and not spending all their time and effort fawning over the instructor and making them more money. Basically the letter said that the black belt in question, who had been teaching at a club set up by ME years ago was “Stripped” of her Shodan for doing Kyokushin on the side. It was very disappointing to say the least!

Here is the way I see it, and the way that Dingman Sensei taught me, and the way that the head instructors have told it…right back to Funakoshi….You as a student work hard at Karate, you train and you test yourself. We grade you and we hand out rank, and once you are ready we announce that you are now Yudansha (fancy word for black belt). For your part you are now at a beginning level of black belt, once you progress and ask to be ranked you test again. We don’t turn around and strip you of a rank we have witnessed you make. What we can do is no longer recognize your rank…different?... You betcha!

An organization or instructor can always say “you ticked me/us off, we don’t recognize your rank anymore” and leave it at that. But they don’t take away your black belt. They would in essence be saying “oops we made a mistake giving you that, you don’t really meet our requirements”, and that would be silly. So, hard work and training will earn you a black belt and you get to keep it for life, but those that recognize it may say they suddenly do recognize you as a Yodansha….but that does not take away from you being one.

I once trained with Bruce Lee/Chuck Norris/add any famous martial arts name here!
Normally followed by “and I beat them up a lot” or “and I am the only one certified to teach his style of fighting, his true style of fighting”. And both are COMPLETE LIES for about 99.9999% of those that use these tag lines to get you in the door.

First off Mr. Norris is still alive and kicking and he has a solid set of black belts that can drive his organization. As small as it is in the states, it’s a Korean art and not some MMA game that others make it out to be.

Secondly, Lee died with a small amount of students, every one of them in a magazine or TEN and easy to verify. I have personally met one, Taki Kimura and he told me that true Bruce Lee students are as rare as it comes. Maybe a handful and we are losing them fast too!

If someone says they are studying Lee’s style…well that means they are reading a book! Anyone can read a book, so don’t put to much water in that one!

Karate came from peasants needing to defend themselves against Samurai!
Horse PUcky! Karate was created by Nobility in Okinawa that learned it from China and other sources and created a way of fighting that was more Chinese than modern Karate looks. It then went through major changes along the way and became what we see today.

I am still trying to track down the creation of that story and find out who made it up, and if at all possible slap them! The truth is far richer than some poor farmer figuring out how to fend off an armed samurai! Now you can argue that the Samurai of the time may have treated the Okinawan royalty as poor back woods gentry, but that is a stretch, they were wealthy government people that had benefited from generations of trading with the Chinese and Japanese and being on a major trade route, they were the wealthy of their time and they needed to protect themselves!

Karate has nothing to do with the poor Japanese farmers, it was created by wealthy nobility in Okinawa.

My Master………
Hold on! Put the Breaks RIGHT on that one…..I have a Sensei, I have a Instructor…I have a chief instructor…but I do NOT have a master (in Karate….my wife does not count here). The fact that some 20 something year old martial arts instructor now wants me to call them master…well that makes me laugh!

I walked into a Kickboxing school that was taught by a TKD black belt, no that is not the funny part of the story, and was visiting and figured I would get a work out in. my friend was training with the guy and he allowed walk ins so I figured why not! The work out was “Okay” and not really to my standards for a conditioning work out but it was enough to get me warmed up and having a bit of fun.

The class was fine but when my friend introduced me to the instructor, he said “Master Joe, this is James”. I said “good to meet you Joe..” to which he said “that’s master Joe” ….to which I said “ you can then call me Sir James”. I have never been knighted…and no one is my master!

I don’t recognize your black belt level, you will have to retest!
This one is legit, but I have to explain the situation! See a Black belt rank is a license in a way and a level in a way. When you test and grade you are assigned or recognized by an instructor as having met the requirements to earn your belt level that you are given. You are presented as a black belt under that instructor and you have his “stamp of approval” for that student.

Once you have earned a Dan Rank under an instructor that’s it, you have met the standard they set out for you and you earned your Dan rank…but that does not mean that everyone is going to see it the same way and or accept your ranking at face value! I have seen plenty of times were people are asked to retest for a rank they earned under a different instructor/organization and while it seems like a formality it is legit.

I have also seen some higher level instructor have to qualify that they have a Shodan under X organization and a Nidan from Y organization and then Z and A gave them a Sandan, but when they go back to X they are still seen as a shodan and need to retest. Also, I have seen people who were a Yondan from the JKA and leave the JKA. They don’t forfeit their rank from the JKA, but any new ranks that are given to them…well they are not recognized by the JKA. That’s not earth shattering as many of them will never return however.

I know of one instructor that graded to sandan under the JKA and left. He then trained with a different Shotokan group and earned not just a Yondan but a Rokudan, but in the JKA he is seen as a Sandan that left…and then he came back. The ensuing political dust storm settled and he accepted his Sandan with a test for Yondan scheduled three months later. Now its important to point out he did not pass his Yondan and left again…

I belong to an international organization that recognizes my every rank from white to 10th Dan!
And! If you are under 90 years old and claiming a 10th dan…you are a bit of a JOKE! The higher ranks are supposed to be about maturity in the arts…how is a 30 year old…training since he/she was 15 supposed to be mature in the arts…that’s only 15 years of training in total. I could see a nidan or even Sandan but really…a Judan!

There are several international belt factories that one can join and get ranking from. They call it recognized time in…but to be frank they are all a joke! I would rather be a lifer at Sandan than a joke at Rokudan.



This is just the first bit of insight I am going to provide, in the next two segments I will go through specific crap…er stuff a instructor can say, and what it really means and what your fellow students say and what it really means.

The most important thing that one should take away from this is that martial arts, like everything else, is filled with people that say and do silly things. The most important thing is to shut up, throw on your gi and obi and get your sorry butt out on the floor and train. Everything else is a distraction and something that you should avoid!

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Hip use in Karate



Koshi Kaiten, Gyaku Kaiten, Jun Kaiten, Shindo Kaiten, Tsukidasu Kaiten! Some of these we hear a lot in class, others we hear nothing about and some we only hear in English (regional language) and never are they really all explained! They are all ways to use the hip to generate power!

Koshi Kaiten means Hip Rotation and it’s a very important and basic part of generating power in karate for both kicking and striking. With proper hip rotation (Jun Kaiten) and reverse rotation (Gyaku Kaiten) you will generate more snap and more power. Jun Kaiten means to rotate with the techniques, this would be similar to rotating the hip into the techniques and Gyaku Kaiten away from a technique. It actually has little to do with position (hanmi, Shomen and Gyaku hanmi).
Jun Kaiten is when your hip rotates with the movement. So when you are performing Gyaku zuki or reverse punch you will rotate your hip into the movement by rotating the back hip along with the arm into the target. This generates a great deal of power as you rotate and also use the back leg to push with off the floor. This power full technique will generate a huge amount of power as you move from position to position.

Some JKA groups suggest that Gyaku zuki will move from Hanmi to Shomen as you punch some groups barely move into Hanmi when they start the punch and others stay Shomen when moving and punching. I advocate a full range of motion from Hanmi to Shomen and finishing in Gyaku Hanmi. This serves multiple purposes from martial power improvement to a more natural movement process and also strengthening and creating flexibility in the hips. This is a great example of un Kaiten, the hip is going the same direction as the technical movement.



Gyaku Kaiten is the opposite of Jun Kaiten in that the movement of the “power hip” goes the opposite direction as the technique being applied. A good example is a Gedan Barai or Uraken with the lead hand while standing still. The rear hip moves away from the front line so your hip/body goes from Shomen to Hanmi position to give snap and power to the front hand. In this case a Hidari Gedan braai Zenkutsu dachi is done ( left side down block in left front stance) the rear power hip rotates away from the down block powerfully and the front hip thrusts into the movement.

Some JKA groups again don’t use a Hanmi position for the Gedan Barai, but most advocate this movement to that position. I also feel that leaving the hips Shomen as long as possible will add rotational power to your techniques and you should remember that this is a thrusting in movement with the hip.

A similar movement is the Uraken done with the left hand when in Left side Zenkutsu Dachi. As your arm extends out you will quickly rotate your back hip away, thus making Gyaku Kaiten, and then as the technique is being whipped back you will rotate the hip back to assist with drawing back the hand.



Shindo Kaiten is the vibration that is used by the hip when executing a technique. Again, many trains of though when doing this power generation and many ways to do it exist. Some will do the “vibration” similar in motion to Gyaku Kaiten or Jun Kaiten, others will wiggle, some move the hand the opposite way from the hip movement then try to catch up to the arm movement with the hip and “piston” the technique.

My thoughts on Shindo Kaiten are that you should launch the arm movement with a hip vibration. This means if you are standing in natural position and punching with your right hand, your right hip will start the small vibration by moving forwards into the target then move back to the Shomen position before impact. Because the movement of the hip is literally a inch or two your arm will not lose any momentum from the reset of the hip to Shomen, or it shouldn’t unless you rotate and don’t vibrate.

Shindo Kaiten also has one other factor that some groups do not focus on. The vibration is not just with the hips, the support leg also pushes into the ground to generate drive, and the arm must punch out fast and focus the whole body on impact.



Tsukidasu Kaiten means Hip Thrust or push forwards and it is actually done with the rear leg pushing in and the pelvis forced forwards so you do not lean in. Some groups do not focus on this at all and you see students leaning when they move forwards or back and you find that its normally the least flexible students that have the biggest issue with this.

Tsukidasu Kaiten is also used in conjunction with shindo Kaiten in Mae Geri, as the back leg transitions into a front leg for the mae geri the rear leg forces into the floor and the hip rotates forwards hard thrusting in. This kind of movement in combination with Atoashi Suiryoku or rear leg thrust will generate a great deal of power. Kicking and striking can benefit from this technique when working for more power.



Shisei or Kata Dachi means general posture. It can mean how your feet set in stance, knees bent or straight, alignment of your spine, shoulders, the way you hold your arms, were your head is tilted or straight ext and so on. For my purposes in this I will be focusing more on the stance itself and spine! Generally I suggest that the ear, shoulder and hip should always be aligned. This way you know your posture is good, some people lean to much front or back when moving and it will throw off your balance as well as your power.

When you are off balance your body will react in a strange way, you lose the ability to direct power away from your body. A good punch or front kick will lose power and will be ineffective if your balance is off. In Judo the use of off balancing or Kuzushi is used to assist in a throw, in karate it is important to have great balance, but when you note that the aggressor is off balance you should be focusing on attacking at that moment.

Kata Dachi includes aligning the body so that the hip is ready for use and the use of the rotations or vibration will be at its maximum efficiency, the use of bad Kata dachi will throw your body off and you can actually harm yourself if you execute a rotation with bad body alignment.







Bushido, the warriors code and modern Karate training



In the west we use terms like Martial Arts, Martial Spirit and concepts like Warriors way…oh, I mean Budo, Bushido and Bujutsu….and to be frank….most of us are giving lip service to old ideals that we don’t follow, don’t understand and most of us don’t benefit from other than using a fancy term that amazes students and makes them think we are some kind of Samurai…which we also only understand from 1950’s movies and movies like the last Samurai!
 
First off….Samurai is the modern version of “Saburai” the correct way to say “one who serves” A samurai was actually a servant to the royal family or nobility…but they were an upper class member of Japanese society! The better term for them perhaps was Bushi or Buke, which means warrior. If you called someone a Samurai, it only meant they were serving their Daimyo or lord, and perhaps they were Bushi or they could have been a rice counting accountant that happened to belong to the upper crust of the serving staff of a noble Daimyo.
 
Anyways the term Bushido comes from the Bushi or warriors and it meant warrior way, or way of the warrior! The code of the warrior included several codified tenents or subjects that the Bushi had to understand. The code was actually an unwritten work prior to this and passed down from one Bushi to another over hundreds of years.
 
During the 17th to 19th Century the island of Japan stopped warring with itself long enough to actually write stuff down. This included the passing on of the code of Bushido in many books such as the Go Rin No Sho by Miyomato Musashi, Budoshoshinshu by Taira Shigesuke and Hagukure by Yamamoto Tsunetomo. All these books kind of skirt the code but outline the way they think and act and how a warrior was expected to act…which by the way is very much different than what we think of these days.
 
Samurai were human just like you and me, they had good ones and they had bad ones. But they also had higher cast Samurai (who were allowed to ride horses) and lower cast (who had to walk). They had Samurai that adhered to the unwritten code…and others that cut down innocent people in the street and got away with it. Like 007 they had a license to kill, but the difference was those that killed just because they could…well their career path was kind of set as warriors and not true Samruai of the higher level.
 
So, in the 19th to 20th century the code was further codified but actually hijacked by the new militant regime that actually did away with the samurai cast. The old third class of people, the rich merchants, took over Japan and cast out the samurai way. But during world war II they grabbed ahold of the code of Bushido and basterized it into a nationalism that met their needs and basically used the code to push their people into fighting a losing battle saying the spirit of Samurai would prevail….the fact is that Samurai in Japan were never more than 8-9% of the population at any given time, even times of war when they recruited rice farmers and gave them titles to bring them up from a lower cast to fight for the royalty or warlord in the area.
 
At that point many “Creative” families suddenly started saying they had ties to famous Samurai or simply said they were descendants of Samurai…so who could tell if they were or were not!
 
 
 
The Code of Bushido boils down to seven virtues of the Bushi and three associated virtues. All of which you can find in the code known as the Dojo Kun and or Niju Kun written by Okinawan warriors on a island run by those that the samurai ruled…its not a far reach to say that the code of the warrior in Japan influenced the code of the warrior of the Ryukyu islands.

Rectitude (gi)- Rectitude means being Righteous or having Righteousness as your theological concept in life. It is a term that has been used to belittle others like saying “Why do you act so self -Righteous”! Rectitude means to act in a justified manor and live a life that would please the gods (God) depending on your belief system. Basically this means to me that you will act in a way that your conscience can live with. Don’t do things that you will feel sorry for later and you are aces!

Courage (Yuki)- Courage means different things to different people. The ability to confront pain, fear, danger and or intimidation and not back away is one definition. Sometimes courage can by physical like confronting an aggressor or going and getting surgery you know is going to hurt. Or it can be mental, like facing depression, loss of loved ones or other psychological pain and challenges. For me the most courageous people are those that face their own death with dignity and sobriety! I also know of a lot of people who face their life this way as well. Physical courage to me is fleeting…you face down the bully and you step up! Its done and its over. Facing a loss or facing your own issues goes on for a long time and those that face these day to day or end of day events…well they are the truly courageous Samurai in my mind!
 
 
 
Benevolence (Jin)- Benevolence is also a very misunderstood concept. Basically it means the practice of charity and voluntary giving of your self to others. In Karate we see seniors that give their time away from family to help teach, promote a club and run the organization. They don’t ask for any consideration other than to see the club grow and be stronger. The instructors work hard to run the club but the seniors often work harder. Its part of Filial Piety, but to be honest their offering of time and work is Jin! A true sine of Bushi is that they offer something of themselves and they don’t ask for anything in return.
 
Samurai used to do lots of work for the Daimyo, but they also fed the poor and injured and took care of war veterans with “jobs” that amounted to them showing up for their pay day! They used to organize food delivery to the poor and help run the country. Our Samurai, or our seniors run fund raisers and often help by giving time they could use with their family or doing other work to help run the organization.
 
The Niju Kun says “Karate wa, gi no tasuke" or Karate stands on the side of Justice!

Respect (rei)- Karate-do wa rei ni hajimari rei ni owaru koto o wasuru na! Or for those that don’t know what this means…..Karate begins and ends with Respect! This goes FAR beyond bowing to each other and placating our fantasy about living in feudal Japan with top knots, Swords and Japanese pajamas! Respect is something that you earn by treating people correctly, not something you ORDER others to give you! You have to give respect to get respect and todays world of Karate do we see far to many people just scare people into fearing them, then feel that its respect they are getting!
 
One way to give respect is the bow, but it also includes the way you treat others, the way you act towards them, address them and treat them in general. Use of Shogu and other titles is secondary. I have seen plenty of people who were incredibly disrespectful of others never miss a beat when using a Shogu for a person and slapping out a sharp bow!
 
For me Karate is ALL about respect and how you earn it, maintain it and encourage others to cultivate it in their daily lives. After all “dojo nomino karate to omou na” or Karate goes beyond the Dojo! (another line from the Niju kun)…..ever try working with someone that does not respect others, has a bad attitude and basically treats everyone like a stepping stone….well I have and its hard to try and respect someone that trys to rule by intimidation and then calls the fear they get back respect! Managers with this issue are horror shows and need to be asking “ would you like fries with that” and not “ would you like your next pay check”.
 
Respect in Karate dojos is one of the most important aspects of a healthy dojo. If you end up with someone that has an ego, has issues with people not BOWING down to them or has a big head…well it’s a cancer that will rip apart a Dojo fast! Respect is earned by your actions, not by your requesting it or ordering others to give it to you!
 
Honesty(Makoto)- Makoto no michi wo mamoru koto! Many people think that this simply means “be faithful” but that is the English version and it only tells part of the story. Makoto means Honesty! A Better interpretation would be to honestly guard the way of loyalty and truth!
 
The term Honesty was important to a bushi that was going into battle. They had to be honest with themselves and also with their Daimyo about their ability and many stories exist about samurai stepping aside for those more skilled at strategy and the war being won, or those that thought better of themselves than was true and or lying to their Daimyo and the war being lost because of them.
 
Makoto in Karate is more a personal thing. I mean its important to be honest with others, but even more so with yourself. Know yourself well and don’t lie to yourself about your ability or your goals and you will go far in Karate. Being honest also allows us to set new goals and to push ourselves to reach them…if we lie and say Black belt is a sign of perfection….I am a black belt…ergo I am perfect…well you will dwindle and die on the vine when you could bloom into a much better Yudansha if you only were honest with yourself!

Honor (Meiyo)- Honor is hard one to grab a hold of, it probably means different things to different people and the concept of honor or Honour is very transient! Honor is accepted as meaning a quality of worthiness and respectability of an individual. A specific “code of honor” needs to be established, or an understanding of what someone feels is honorable before Honor can be understood by an individual.
 
Honor is a hard modern concept as we have endeavored to do away with lots of the old medieval ideals of chivalry and often think of Chivalry and its code as a dated and sexist ideal; however Honor is a big part of that code! The simplest way to conceptualize Honor as an ideal is to throw it against its opposite, Shame! Essentially if you live a life filled with honor then you will never cause Shame to yourself. Again, its not perfect but seeing as we have kicked our medieval ideal of chivalry to the curb generations ago to create a feeling of equality…it’s a good start!
 
The Code of Bushido and the code of Chivalry have a common and important concept in honor! One should live life in such a way as they know they have never done something to shame themselves and they must view all actions with others in this light. Have you shown your instructor and seniors the proper respect? Are you a good parent and child to your parents? Are you a hard worker at work? Do you honor you work by not just working hard but representing the employer who gives you your wages in a justified and positive way? Are you a good friend, are you honest, are you a good person? All of these outline what Honor is in the modern times to me…and I probably missed a bunch!
 
 
 
Loyalty (Chugi)- The Encyclopedia Britannica defines loyalty as “personal devotion and reverence to a sovereign and royal family”. A more specific idea is that a Bushi in the employ of a Daimyo would fight to the death for the lord and would not give up or change sides, they would not turn tail and run unless ordered to do so and many failing campaigns saw huge numbers of dead because the samurai would not leave the battle field unless a Daimyo told them to…and the Daimyo had left a long time ago!
 
In modern Karate terms the ideal of Loyalty is that of a student joining a club and training for a long time, they now owe the club and instructor their loyalty. Once you join a club and rank to Yudansha level you have learned for four or five years from an instructor and shown your dedication to the art, your now given the opportunity to grade for Dan level. Once you pass you now represent that instructor and or organization, your loyalty is fit with them. If you choose to leave, you are leaving your rank at the door and you may join another club, but you should start from scratch or at least with a white belt worn till that instructor offers you a dan level under them.
 
Now a days we see students leave instructors or chase them out of organizations, accept higher rank than they were given to leave, or set up shop for themselves and not show any loyalty to the instructor or the seniors that they once learned from. This kind of ego move shows more than just a lack of loyalty but it really illustrates a sad character in people.
 
We also see instructors showing no loyalty to students. They have a student that works hard in class and helps the organization grow, and the first “champion” that comes along userps the attention of the instructor and they forget about the other students because a specific student will bring them attention. They charge more money than they need to, move clubs 10,000 times and don’t care about students other than as a revenue stream!
 
Myself and several other seniors stuck with our Sensei when he was forced to leave a large organization, we worked hard to maintain our now smaller group and eventually worked our way back to a larger group. We stay with him because he is our Sensei! We treat the students fair and we all train as a family. When someone shows lack of loyalty to that group I get upset and when former students that left my instructor show up with fancy titles, higher ranks they got by prostituting their membership to others, well it reinforces my feeling of loyalty to my instructor!

Filial piety (Ko)- respect for ones parents and ancestors. In Samurai times the respect one paid to the ancestors of the family would bring luck and would show loyalty to ones roots. The act of honoring the parents and grandparents served many purposes. Not only had they been around for some time and offered up knowledge and wisdom to a samurai, they also often retired from active life and raised your children! The saying it takes a village to raise a child, well the Samurai truly believed this…actually this is a very Japanese thing.
 
Filial Piety in society is lacking, we see kids disrespecting parents, elder abuse, grave sites defaced and the youth running around abusing older members of society and the lessons of “take care of those that came before” are lost on most of society. The term “those that came before”….in Japanese…is Sensei!
 
Filial Piety for me means that you will be loyal and treat those that came before you with the respect they deserve! One day, if you are lucky enough…you too will earn that status and I would hope you want the youth (juniors) to treat you well!

Wisdom (Chi)- “the Judicious study and application of knowledge” So, how did they gain Wisdom and Knowledge? Well they trained with martial arts instructors! Sword masters and other martial arts specialists would have schools or clubs and would teach Bushi their trade…then the Bushi would seek out other masters, like Buddhist teachers, Shinto instructors and others that were thought of as knowledgeable and they would study…..and after years and years of training, if they lived through wars and bloody battles, they eventually may become masters themselves and start teaching others.
 
Modern ways to develop knowledge is the same. You find someone that has something to teach you in martial arts and you train with them, grow with them and try to become as knowledgeable at the arts as them, then you move to other training to reinforce or augment your training.
 
I am a big believer that your Karate training should be strictly Karate till you reach about shodan then you can branch out to study, part time, a complementary art. You should also look for things to study that help your Karate. I studied sports med and massage so I could understand the human body as much as I can and I still research and read about things that will help my Karate training!
 
The most unwise thing you can do is take up an art, study it blindly and just keep repeating what you have done year in and year out. Seek out other ideas, while respecting your roots and your Sensei, look to other instructors for their ideas…but look to grow as a individual and eventually you will also get to that level in martial arts that you are now able to be seen as having knowledge and wisdom in your art.

Care of the aged (tei)- Tei is similar to Filial Piety but in this case its more intimate. It means taking care of those who are aging and helping them move to the next life. We should not be good to those that have had a long life, learn from them and respect them. We should also make their last years as easy as we can, and pray that our kindness is repaid in turn if we reach their age.
 
In Japan those that reach an elevated age are respected and treated with revere! Here in the west, well….often not so much! When Funakoshi was an elder statesman of Karate his students bestowed the greatest respect for him and would carry him up stairs, pay his rental on his home, showed respect at every pass and made sure he had new clothing and was fed well. Here in the modern west we house our elders in retirement homes and watch as they decay and die.
 
Bushido stipulates that we have a responsibility to those that paved the way to where we are today and we need to take care of them.
 
 
 
Someone at some point in the scheme of things created an English “Dojo kun” for Bushido that goes like this:

  • Loyalty is the essential duty of the soldier!
  • Courage is essential since the trait of the fighting man is his spirit to win.
  • Valor is a trait to be admired and encouraged in the modern warrior
  • Faithfulness in keeping ones word
  • Simplicity is a Samurai Virtue.
 
 
 
This is fine, but the meaning of Bushido is to act in a specific and Noble way, to bring back Chivalry and to not embarrass yourself by reaching for to much and not earning your way, you must show respect and remember that the only reason you are where you are in life is that those that came before you gave you a helping hand and now not only do you owe them…you have to do the same for the next generation!

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Reply to a comment

“I want to know why there are so many versions of Karate and so many different fancy looking uniforms and if any of your techniques pre date WW2. Are your Kata forms really going to do anything to help me defend myself? Because I took Karate for 4 years and found it useless there was no purpose to throwing a kick for 20 min just to make it faster. Do you do mat crawls? I used to do all those silly push up and sit ups.”




I look through my comments section usually once a week or so, most of the time I see spam like posts and ignore and delete them as quick as I realize they are for buying new flooring or a new kitchen…kind of funny because they forget that we have an international community here and I don’t think I am sending away to England for my new kitchen…I mean really what a waste of time!

On occasion I get challenged…sometimes I laugh them off as they are the kind of challenge that is not mental, they actually want me to fly some place to fight…morons. Yah, you got something to prove and an issue with a blog post or post on a web site and want me to foot the bill to fly to some back woods town in the South to fight with you to prove I am wrong…give your head a shake Bub.

Once and a while I get a email or comment from someone that actually has a few questions, like the one above. I love these, I get to think a bit, write a good reply and hopefully present a solid argument against the persons bias against Karate. But more importantly, he is not asking me to fly some place to do the argument with him. And they are rather polite.! Massive bonus!



So, my answer to your questions about the different kinds of uniforms and the techniques….well all techniques predate WW2, I mean we got our stuff from Okinawa, who got their stuff form China! And lets face it…like Bruce Lee said, “we all have two arms and two legs” so the types of movements we can make are kind of set in stone! As for the Gis, well I could venture a guess about the Gi colors of some groups with 1000000 patches on the damn thing, but really, they just kind of look silly to us. We wear traditional white with one patch or embroidery on the chest and that’s all. Different instructors probably thought that the Black Gis and multi-color gis looked cool or something. To me it more a matter of someone wanting to look a specific way and not caring about techniques over looks.



The next two questions are more about application. First off Kata does teach techniques and how to apply them. You learn different movement sets and hardwire in movement and technical ability by repeating the movements over and over. It helps build up strength and is a great work out to say the least. By repeating Kata not only do you get a great work out but you are also learning proper form and functionality in the kata. A massive benefit which I will get to.



Not only is repeating a kick 20-10,000,000,000 times a great benefit physically but it also helps you keep good form…why is form important. Well here is a perfect example. A friend of mine who trains regularly but has some form issue threw a kick at a partner and broke his toe because he did not pull it back and show good form and technique. Now, you could say that if he had practiced that kick a few million times properly he might have been able to do this without “killing his toe”. Further if he had to use the PROPER form in a self-defense situation he would have been able to execute it and not hurt himself.



Repetition of a technique with form in mind is much better than just sparring with no attention to details like form and functionality in movement. And who could NOT benefit from a faster kick and quicker reaction time? I get such a kick out of the MMA guys, not the real mma guys but the guys that play at mma and how they put down Kata and repetitions and try to tell me that putting on sparring gear and then going at it for a bit is better than learning form and functionality of a technique….then I watch them with their instructors doing drills and working a single technique or series of techniques on a bag or pads…..Dont they realize that is Kata and repetition???



I was also told by a MMA guy that they never do drills or Reps and they just like to fight…they learned Jitsu from an instructor and one day I went and saw the class, the instructor….yah teaching drills that looked a lot like mini Kata to me, and without a partner for the most part.



Kata is essentially a way of memorizing, internalizing and focusing on specific types of movements and skills. Drills do the same thing and they are the only way to go out and learn a movement pattern. If you don’t learn a technique properly it will never be as strong as you need it to be for sport or self-defense it will be awkward and unnatural and when the chips are down you will have to think far to much about what you are doing to be successful in saving your ass.



As for Silly exercises, one of the first thing you learn in Karate is that a certain amount of conditioning is needed to use the skills that you are training in. You have to push to be able to kick higher than your own knee and strength and conditioning will make you more able to train harder and use the skills you have. I often forget this point so I must thank you for reminding me for the silly exercises that we need to do.



An old saying is a skilled fighter vs a moderately skilled fighter comes down to conditioning and mental ability over functional tools. In other words you can be the best fighter in the room technically but if you run out of gas, are slower or have lost flexibility you will lose! Those silly push ups…may save your life some day!

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

The Anatomy of pain!

The Anatomy of pain!
                When I went to massage school I was nick named “the King of Pain” and when I was in University my interest in Neurology and Pathology as well as Biology and physiology really were centered on stimuli and the causes and sensation of pain and not just how to cause it, but how to use it and finally how to cure it.
                I noted that it has a very important roll in our evolution and can be used to really learn how to protect yourself.  My thought was that if I learned how to create pain in others greater than they could create it in me…I win!

Introduction
                In Karate we often avoid specific “non-PC” terms and subjects in the Dojo. The reason is that its not considered “Mainstream” to talk about Karate in terms of protecting yourself. Oh, we say stuff like “Karate can be used to protect yourself” For sure, but we often omit things like teaching the damage that a thumb in the eye socket can do to an aggressor or how a strike to the larynx can kill a rapist.  Why, well its because we want to be the kinder more gentle….Zen like group of people that everyone seems to want to be.  Not me….I want to know how to kill someone that wants to kill me or how to stop someone from hurting my family or even myself!
                Now, like anyone else the thought of taking someone’s life troubles me….granted I have to say probably less than it does someone else as I would without question take the life of anyone that hurt my daughter with intent to cause her any form of damage from a physical assault and I even yell at old ladies that accidentally bump her with a shopping cart…but I think that is “Daddy bear” mentality in my already “violent experienced” mind.
                I would much rather apply a hold or joint lock as it were or grab a nerve bundle and squeeze to inflict the kind of pain that will cause someone to pass out or wince and think about the pain more than me…than take their life.  Actually, I really don’t want to have to deal with the paper work and court issues if I had a choice….so I would probably defer to really hurting someone than “Taking them out” as it were.  So, I started thinking about advanced Karate and how it works, and how even basic self-protection is based on impact training, joint locks and most importantly….Pain creation in your attacker.  

                What is pain?  I mean we all know what pain is, its that very Unpleasant and very attention getting feeling we have when we hurt ourselves or when something is wrong with us physically.  I am not talking about the pain you get when someone close to you dies or when you see your girlfriend/ boyfriend/ spouse kissing someone else…no that is mental pain lasts a lot longer and is not easily healed. 
Physical pain is actually a stimuli that is created when C nerve fibers are unpleasantly stimulated.  Strangely Pain is one of the most studied subjects in medicine and we know its ins and outs and how to cause it and create it very well….thank the American military for that one boys and girls! Studies in Pain and Pain creation stretch back to before the ground breaking French researcher Dr. Albert Schwietzer wrote “pain is a more terrible lord of mankind than even death itself” which he penned in 1931.  Ancient civilizations drew pictures and associated pain with witchcraft, sorcery and the devil…..yah, they did not know much about C nerve bundles back then.
When I went to university over 15 years ago I was acutely interested in biology and physiology and especially in things that could help me explain Karate. At one point I got very interested in Massage therapy as a modality for crating improvements in performance with Karate Athletes, which is a whole other blog entry.  But I also found information and answers to my personal interest in Pain and use of Pain to control subjects, why some people fold like a card table when you do a wrist control and others, like my friend Rob, can resist and make it look like you are doing something wrong…and you know its partially ego…but is their a physiological reason for Pain not to affect some more than others?
I started researching what is pain and how it is caused, classified and can be used in a self-protection kind of way and delved deep into many a Cadaver and experimented on different people to see if it was true that ladies have a higher pain threshold than men…Nope by the way….and I also wanted to know how to be more effective and efficient at using pain to save myself in a dangerous situation and more importantly to research it and make it more acceptable to talk about Pain and inflicting pain in the Dojo without looking like some kind of mean and abusive guy…or less like one!

What is pain
                So, what is pain then, Well pain defined as a unpleasant feeling often caused by intense or damaging stimuli, such as a forced hyperextension of a joint (wrist grab or falling on your arm and forcing it to over straighten), Impact (getting punched in a “soft spot”, or stubbing a toe), a burn, laceration of the skin, or hitting a nerve on a solid object (Striking a nerve with your fist, or hitting your funny bone).  There are other types of pain stimuli but I am going to specifically try and focus on things you can affect with Karate.
                Pain can be as brief as an acute injury (think stubbing your toe or getting a needle) and can spike quickly or it can be a dull, long lasting pain such as a torn ligament or deep bruise/broken bone. But the acute pain that you can create in an opponent is the useful kind of pain.  The kind of pain that will stop someone from focusing on taking your money, your life or raping you and putting them in a situation were they are ONLY thinking of the pain and how to get away from that pain. 
                Pain causes a set of unique physical and psychological reactions that are uncontrollable by your on a conscious level, it causes the fight or flight reaction that fear causes and it also causes your body to recoil from the stimuli without your control. This stimuli and reaction can be controlled if you are ready for it but if you are not then you have no cognitive choice in the matter, you jerk away from pain and move physically further away.

Classifying pain
                Pain is classified into different categories based on the duration and source of the pain. In 1994 the International Association for the Study of Pain or IASP (no I am not a member or the founder) classified pain after finding a need for a more useful system of describing chronic pain.  They came up with Pain based categorization such as Duration pain (Chronic pain caused by long lasting stimuli like Cancers or arthritic pain), Nociceptive ( Acute and instant pain like a burn or cut), Neuropathic pain ( Caused by damage or disease affecting part of the nervous system involved in feeling and sensation), Psychogenic pain (that which the mind has created and is very real to the person experiencing it), Incident pain (Cause by specific activities…think arthritic joint issues or stretching out wounded tissue) and a few others. 
                The classification helped the specialists dealing with the specific injuries and or illnesses to work on standard practices when dealing with these different kinds of pain. For instance Cancer patients on pain medication often experience break through pain, a type of pain that is caused when the body becomes accustomed to the pain medication and will “ignore” the drug and feel the pain regardless of the dosage of pain medication that is given.  This is often treated by changing the type of drug given to cover the pain so the body cannot adjust to the medication.
                For Karate and self-protection however the classification of pain simply gave us a better way to focus on several forms of Pain and how to use it to our advantage when dealing with the attackers and how we are generating pain. It gave us a better understanding of the one tool that most clubs do not provide, how to deal with pain from both a stand point of the defender being attacked…and the defender using pain to defend themselves.

Effect on function
                Why is pain important for our survival?  Will it gets us to stop doing what is hurting us! Most pain is caused when you are doing something that will damage your structure, such as holding your hand over a stove element or fire.  This will damage the skin and can cause permanent damage and or even be life threatening.  So, when we were designed, or evolved special mechanisms for self-protection from these things (Depending on your theoretical back ground) we developed pain to help save us from doing silly things like burning ourselves to death!
                It is also a tool to stop us from re-damaging ourselves while we heal!  How often have you hurt an ankle and not been able to walk on it after….that is your body using pain to let the structure heal!
                But from a self-protection point of view, it is important to note that pain impairs attention control, working memory and mental flexibility, problem solving and information processing speed.  When we are attacked the aggressor is focused on one thing, his goal…be it rape, robbery or murder the attacker is focused, thinking only of the single goal and this is the most dangerous kind of aggressor.  But Pain will cause him to lose that single focus and purpose and bring all of his once focused attention to the source of the pain and away from his single goal. You can use pain to redirect his thinking for a time to the source of the pain. 
                Now that you have impaired his attention and are using pain his ability to process anything other than the pain is gone. His short term memory of why he was attacking you is gone!  He has no flexibility in his thought process to change thinking, problem solve and redirect his resources to finding solutions for tasks…like taking your wallet or choking you. His world and his focus is now on that point of pain…not even on what is causing it! This is as primal and basic a form of thinking mental process and coping as we have as animals/human and it will stop an aggressor for a brief second and redirect his thinking, giving you a moment or two to react and protect yourself.

Pain Thresholds
                In Pain studies a threshold is measured by gradually increasing intensity of a stimulus applied to the body.  The pain perception threshold is the point in which the stimulus begins to “hurt” and pain tolerance threshold is reached when the subject acts on the pain and cannot sustain “taking the pain” as it were.
                So how is this important to your preservation of being?  Well, different people have different gaps in the difference between perception of pain and tolerance of pain and its important to know that! We are all governed by our basic instincts and no one has ever proven, in the hundreds of years of pain study, to ignore pain and allow for permanent damage, not truly!  Some people will force themselves to undergo known pain causing activities for the sake of ego or science…or both. But they can not ignore or stop the other reactions (focus on the pain, short term memory issues ext and so on).
                Different pain perceptions and tolerance thresholds are associated with, among other factors, sex, race, ethnicity, genetics and history of pain.  For instance Italian women tolerate less intense electric “shock” pain than Jewish or Native American women….No idea how they cleared that study past the ethics board but it is what it is! Contrary to popular belief all studies ever done show that women have a lower pain perception and tolerance than men….and age does not matter.  New born boys have a higher pain threshold than new born girls.
                So, what can we take from this….if you are attacked by a man…Hit harder, do a deeper joint lock and do it suddenly so as to not alert the attacker to it and give him time to mentally guard against it!

Anticipation of pain
                Have you ever seen something coming that you just knew was going to hurt, and you started feeling the effects of it before it even happened. Or you watched a movie and saw a actor about to get hurt in a really gruesome way, and you felt that Focus on the pain, the short term complete and queasy focus on the pain that SOMEONE else is about to feel? That’s pain anticipation and you need to know two things about it to use it for yourself and counter it if it’s going to happen to you.
                First thing you need to know is it has the same first affect as the actual pain! You forget what you are doing if you truly believe that the pain is about to happen to you, you focus completely on that pain and in this case potential pain! Your mind is not free or elastic to think about grocery shopping, or taking your dog for a walk….mugging someone, taking their money or worse!
                As an experiment I have done this in a class, I brought a bag full of hammers…yes hammers!....and paired up students.  One student squatting with the hammer in hand and the target…the top of the partner’s foot! I tell the whole class to listen carefully and ONLY react when I tell them clearly what to do. I tell the standing partner that they are to count to 100 by twos…so 2,4,6,8… and not stop. They cannot look at the hammer, and have to continue to count by two’s till they reach 100. In fact they have to have their eyes closed!
  I then instruct the partners to pick up the hammer and get “ready to hit the person in the top of the foot” when I say “GO”. I signal for all of them to put the hammer away and not use it at all, but none of the “counters” Can see this. The “hammer holders” need to slap the top of the other person’s foot with their hand or hit the floor next to the “counter”.
                I then take a second and use a bit of psychology to back up my rouse by saying no matter how much it hurts, even if a bone is broken accidentally to keep counting. Some lose it right there and back out…the others will count and when I finally say “GO” 100% of people will react…differently mind you, some pull their foot away instinctively and others will react as if a hammer just dropped on their foot! They wince and pull away from pain…even when the floor next to the foot is slapped and not the foot at all…and in one case I had someone actually pass out!
                Anticipation of pain is often as useful as actual pain!

The second thing you need to know about this is that it does not work on psychotic people.  Not one bit! Its not that they have more control of themselves, actually they kind of have less, its that they are wired differently and some will even embrace the thrill of he anticipation and wont move. Not that all people that are brave enough to do the experiment are psychotic….but it makes you wonder right!

Causes: Neurology of pain
                To know what the actual mechanism of pain in our body is I am going to get a bit wordy here for a minute…don’t worry I will go back to how to cause pain in a second. First off not all nerves are created equal or have the same duties in our body. We have different kinds of nerves that run around our body like wires, and often run right beside other nerve that do different jobs.
                You have essentially three kinds of nerves; A, B and C neves.  And yes, I am going really basic here!  The C nerves are the ones we are looking at..and no I don’t know who named them or why!  The C fibers however are very unique. They lack the same kind of “Insulation” or Myelination as the other nerves have and this causes a slower conduction velocity…or to put it simpler, the message they send goes slower and it kind of bleeds off its message along the way, which is why acute pain often feels like its coming from a bigger area till you “feel around” for it a bit. Think of it as a situation like a needle being given to you. At first you feel the sharp prick of the needle, then the pain seems to be coming from your whole arm (or butt if that’s where you prefer to get them).
                Anyways, C neves are not as efficient at sending messages to and from the brain, but because of the higher conductive velocity (they feel things quicker) they are responsible for sensations of quick and shallow pain and respond to a different stimuli than A and B fibers, making them perfect for pain sensation. They are also unique in that they can react to multiple stimuli and again makes them perfect as a source for basic information and reactive stimuli. They are also responsible for reactions to things like Hypoxia, hypoglacemia, Hypo-osmolarity and light or touch sensation.  
                Because they are the “bottom feeder” nerve cells in our body and will pick up just about any stimuli and use it they are easy to distract from, so for instance if you stimulate your Delta or A nerve fibers (which are sensory fibers) you can cause your brain to ignore the C nerve fiber message and react instead to the A nerve message.  You can do this with Ice, pressure or even heat, which is why some people react to a pulled muscle with heat and not the proper way with ice!
                To round out the “Nerve fiber” education, the third Kind of Nerve fiber is B nerve fiber or Somatic nerves. They are in charge of things like blood pressure, heart rate and rhythm and other automatic things that you don’t want to have to concentrate on to have happen naturally.

How to truly cause pain and use body mechanics against an attacker
                Pain can be a very useful took in defending yourself and it can be as intricate and artistic as a wrist and elbow control or as basic as striking the face in a specific way as to not just cause damage, but cause pain in a very basic way.  The level of damage will vary depending on your ability when it comes to just a basic strike, depending on skill level, power, ability to set up a punch and a multitude of other factors. This is why its important to understand pain and how to use it, when to use it and the effects and follow up you must have to take the most advantage of the pain.
                First off catastrophic pan has a unique effect on your nervous system. It goes from trying to protect you by causing you to move away to a more focused reaction on catastrophic pain of trying to mentally protect you from the pain.  Your mind shuts out the excessive information and cuts off the pain response knowing that it is now psychologically more important to protect you from the pain than it is getting you away from it…basically your body shuts down and says that it’s a complete wash and you cannot do anything about it…so why bother feeling the pain!  This defeats the purpose of using pain, the effects we are looking for are totally a wash and you have now just basically damaged and attacker and have to hope that your attack has incapacitated them and not just infuriated them.
                So, as a tool for self-preservation, Pain must be administered at the right level and used properly for the situation at hand. In martial arts we often call the use of pain a “Pain Compliance hold” or a “Joint compliance technique” or my favorite “Pain control”.  The use of a “Pain control” is used by applying pressure or torsion to a nerve sensitive area of the body to cause the pain response you want without causing an excessive amount of damage. If the hold is not working as effectively as you want, adjust your grip, pressure or location of the pressure and you should be able to find a “good” spot for the affect to be what you want.
                Police often use pain compliance techniques when they are trying to affect the motion of a suspect or arrest someone to ensure that they are complying with the officers orders. The use of these techniques are on the low end of violence reactions from a peace officer and will escalate to a more aggravated reaction and possibly use of a fire arm to force a aggressor to comply, we however are starting in the middle with less attention to just getting someone to comply, we want them to stop doing what they are doing and force them to rethink the attack completely.
                Pain compliance techniques and body mechanics techniques are similar. Both involved either manipulating a person’s joints or activating the C nerve fibers with a strike or pressure on them, to create sufficient pain to control the person. However, just causing pain may not work against some attackers.  They may be intoxicated, drugged up or just nut jobs that need to be put down and locked up as well as using pain to control them. That is where Mechanical techniques come in handy.
                Mechanical techniques are those that take advantage of both pain and the natural mechanical systems of the body. The techniques do cause pain but rather focus on the natural use of leverage and momentum to guide an aggressor and control their body. (examples such as the fold over, shoulder wrap, head twist, wrist/arm twist and other Aikido like controls) 

Pain is not always as damaging as other forms of self-protection
                When you use Pain compliance and Mechanical control techniques you do not often have to do as much damage as other self-protection techniques. You can address specific situations with the right level of response.  However if you simply learn to kick and punch you are left with just one tool that you have to use….striking.
                Lets put this to the test.  Two situations that may occur and how the proper response may not be a striking response. First situation….you are walking home late at night and you are accosted by a drunk….the guy kind of catches you off guard and is chest to chest with you asking for money, and your back is against a wall!  While he has invaded your space and is actually assaulting you by doing so…it A) may be difficult to generate enough power to actually get away from him and B) it probably will escalate the issue a lot and cause you more hassle than it’s worth.  Set up number two….you are at home/work and your family member/coworker/ student/customer starts to get very upset with something and is not rational. They have taken drugs/lost control of their emotional state or just plain lost it! You can hit them in the face hoping to knock them out but A) you will probably lose your job/freedom (get arrested for domestic violence) and B) you may harm them more than need be.
                Mechanical compliance and pain controls will help you out in these situations by creating a tool to control and disarm the aggressor and control them until you can get assistance or decide if you now have to escalate the reactions you are using to match their level of physical pressure they are putting on you.        
                Mechanical compliance and pain control techniques have been used by police, military and civilians for many years and prove to be very effective.  But the understanding of pain and biomechanics is essential to properly apply these techniques and have them be successful.
               
End notes
Pain and mechanical techniques are often seen as a less damaging alternative in situations where the lethality of a technique is not required. In training for self-preservation you should widen your training to include any techniques that get the job done for you and will bring you out breathing and whole from a violent situation.
As a martial artist you should be training in Atemi waza (Striking), Nage waza (Throwing), Shime Waza (Chokes), Ne waza (groundwork or grappling) and Kansetsu waza (Joint locks) to ensure that you are well rounded and able to handle any attack and any situations.
The understanding of pain and how it can affect an attacker and yourself is a vital component of any training program and should be used to help build your skill levels along with the well rounded approach to training.

Friday, March 15, 2013

Teaching: Content and presentation

Teaching: Content and presentation
                When you teach its important to think of two different things; content and presentation.  No matter how much experience you have teaching if you lose one of these you have lost the whole class!  Now you can come back from the edge and make the class fantastic if you focus on where you lost it, for me its often content…my presentation becomes more important and I get lost…have to regroup and go back to the two points and restart in my head.
                I am going to go over a few points I feel are very important when teaching, not everyone will agree and not everyone will be comfortable with all of these, and some will have other points I don’t even think of.  I have been teaching Karate for about 25 years now and I don’t get it right all the time, I often start off with an idea and kind of meander all over the place mentally and have to pull myself in….Often forgetting I cannot teach everything I want in a one hour class.  I hope that this helps you all realize that what and how you teach are important, but specific points will really give your classes that polish you want.

Introduction
                I have taken the two subjects, split them up and attacked specific bullet points to show my ideas of content vs Presentation…but the truth is it’s not a Vs as much as it is a “AND” kind of situation.  You can be strong in one area and not another and you can be weak in both. The important point is to go over the areas and find your weakness and improve them.
                Everyone has their own way of getting ready for a class, some teach in weekly/monthly themes or others kind of generally always teach one thing.  We all know that the three K’s and testing prep is very important but you need to know when to veer away from teaching this kind of stuff and into more dynamic and complex areas and what group this works best for.
                The fundamental truth however is when you teach you have two areas that you must think of all the time, Content and Presentation.

Content
Selection
                Content selection is based on personal preference, required teaching components (think testing and the three K’s) and personal knowledge/ability and back ground.  An instructor with little back ground in grappling aspects would be foolish to suddenly figure they were going to teach foot sweeps and throws!  Also a instructor who has a horrible time with a specific technique or set of techniques would probably be making a big mistake if they were to decide to teach those techniques in class.
                Your audience is also a major factor in content selection. You are not going to teach a class of children Kanku dai or Jiu Kumite! And you would be losing students if you always selected the same Kata over and over and over again and did not keep it fresh.
                When you select the content be aware of any upcoming tournaments, testing’s or seminars and help your students get ready by focusing on the requirements for each of those upcoming events.
                Lastly, pick something you like, if you hate Empi with a passion or if you really don’t like foot sweeps or are not interested in open hand techniques for some strange reason….dont teach them….your dislike for the subject matter will shine through.

Research
                One of the things I am going to talk about later is “mental/experience regurgitation”. This is the act of just teaching what you learned the last class.  Which is fine if you don’t intend on actually ever teaching unless you have gone to class and you don’t mind being a weaker fabrication of your current instructor.
                What will keep you from being just a carbon copy of your instructor? Research! Go on line, read, Visit video sites to watch Karate and even other arts.  Put some time in to personal development and work and then bring it to your classes.
                Some instructors don’t want students to go outside of them for information, this develops automaton mind sets were you develop a cookie cutter instructor base that boars the hell out people.  Go forth and research, learn new things that even your instructor may not know.  Bring it to the class and even show your instructor.  Growth through research is imperative once you reach black belt, but remember…just because it is different does not make it right or wrong….just different.

Goals and objectives
                Each class you teach you should have a goal in mind, Be it “mae Geri basics” or “ strategy development in Kumite” and some goals may be based on a week or month worth of training.  Strategy in Kumite may be a years’ worth of training!
                You have to have an outcome in mind, and objective of the class and you can build towards it. It’s a process of reverse engineering a class sometimes but you have to figure out what you want the class focus to be on based on the goal, and then how to get to that point in an hour…and in the case of longer term goals you have to find ways to compartmentalize your goals and objectives in steps. 
                Don’t make life complicated by overthinking this one.  My goal for a class may be a stronger front kick or a better front kick. I figure out what stretching has to be done, what strengthening, the steps to a better front kick, what the students have to do each step then we go for it!

Teaching to the lowest common denominator
            The hardest part about teaching is often remembering that some of the lower belts will be lost if you start teaching the intricate hand movements of Kanku Dai…or the use of inside roundhouse kick in a defensive side step! 
                When you are teaching try and keep in mind that you have juniors in the class that have to work on basics and technical work.  Its very important to keep this in mind when planning a class. Now you can have the seniors doing “Mawashi Geri, uraken, Gyaku zuki” as a drill and the Purple and green doing “Mawashi Geri/Gyaku Zuki” while Orange and down do “Mawashi geri” only…this is a great way to split the skills up, but remember…the lost white belt will leave, the black belt can be drilled into the ground doing the basic movements and should love the work out.
                I always advocate lots of basics and fundamental training in a month and one or two seniors classes to push seniors to do homework and improve while still training to the lower students and keeping the shine on seniors techniques.

Keeping it fresh and relevant
                Far to often an instructor gets into a “schtick” and teaches the same thing over and over and over again, normally this happens when a instructor is not seeing improvement or sees deficiencies in a club. For instance if the whole club has issues with a particular move, like a bad round kick, it is normally the instructors fault that they have an issue. A visiting instructor may pick up on this and work the kick to death…but then they come back in three months and see that the same issue exists and work that kick to death again…this becomes “what they teach” when they show up to teach and it gets OLD and the students lose interest in coming.
                Or a instructor just loves doing something, be it a specific Kata….Kata in general, Kumite, bag work or something…And they work that to death!  The students may not like Kata that much and want Kumite, or vice versa. The instructors job is to mix it up, teach things from a new angle and to maintain the “newness” of Karate while dedicating themselves to the testing curricula as well as good training standards.

Making good basics
                A class should start, end and focus the whole time on Good form and good basics.  To often instructors want to teach the fun stuff like sparring and the techniques go in the garbage as they push the students to be in better shape to keep up with sparring, but injuries start to creap in when form is left out of the picture. 
                A good example is kickboxing, students of kick boxing become great at sparring really fast. But they lose form and functional techniques as time goes on. Lots of knee injuries, back injuries and ankle problems come up over time, not because they train harder but because they use poor form and end up hurting themselves while training.
                No matter how advanced you get, no matter what your rank is, your basics are most important and you need to remember that as an instructor, never neglect good form and functional basics.

Regurgitation
                Just teaching exactly what you were taught is a good idea…if you are a brown belt that has no experience teaching! If you however have been around a while and have had your teaching chops tested you should be able to teach freely with out “regurgitation” of the class you just came from or the class you have notes on.
                I have notes from 1980 forwards and often dip into them to try and get and gather ideas for seminars or classes I teach and often go back to the stuff My instructor taught, but I try and put a personal spin on the whole thing and make it easier for me to personalize my classes.

Physical conditioning vs technical improvements.
                Karate training is dynamic and has many different facets that you can look at when training, tones of tools to use and a unlimited number of drills, Kata and twists that you can use when teaching…however what it boils down to is you are either teaching to condition your body or build up technical ability.
                Conditioning is not just running and lifting weights, while it can be, it is the use of drills, calisthenics, impact training and any kind of training that is simply to make you stronger, faster and work on you mostly for physical improvements. Technical improvement is all about the form and function of a movement.  Technical improvement can be Kumite, Kata or Kihon based and it is something that we mostly look at when training.
                Now there are bleed overs, if you work on techniques using Kihon and drills and focus on improving movement and say you are working on Shuto uke/Kokutsu dachi, you will have some conditioning improvements but the class will be more about techniques.
                When you teach juniors the class should be about 60% Technical and 40% conditioning, so mostly building better form and function and using that to condition the body.
                Around Brown belt you should reverse that, more speed and power as well as pushing yourself to do more and letting that improve your form and function.
                When you are teaching keep this in mind and let the class work itself out accordingly.

Making a lesson plan vs winging it.
                Some people live by making lesson plans, and in the beginning it’s a great idea to set up a general lesson plan and stick to it. But you will quickly learn that the lesson plan limits you and is a bit difficult to stick to once you learn to watch while teaching.
                If you have set up a lesson plan for say Juniors and you are working on Oi-zuki but you notice that your plan includes “front knee, stepping while scissoring, punching technical items” but you forgot to say worry about relaxation, back leg or vibration…and you notice that he class is lacking this…will you stick to the lesson plan or throw in an exercise to create relaxation or explain the back leg?
                Also a less often turns from one goal and intent to anther as you are teaching. This allows the flexibility to be creative and to form new class training based on things you just thought up or things you see that are required, you can dig into your memory and find things you worked on with your instructors or find things that you really were fun when you did them and you forgot to throw them into the lesson plan.
                Winging it normally means that you have a basic idea of what you want to do (or not) walk in the door and just start teaching.  Now this is an art form and most people don’t do it very well.  They get nervous and they look unprepared.  This is DIFFERENT from Regurgitation as the subject matter and the content and presentation are all up in the air and not something that you are just running through.  It has its upside and its downside however.  First off you can get lost and have a very disjointed class that has not rhythm and it also gives you freedom to be flexible and address things that need addressing without worry of leaving the written path!
                My suggestion is to write it down and go through it in your head when you first start out teaching, you will know when its time to abandon this approach and get going on winging it and keeping a basic rhythm to your teaching.

Creativity in content
            Creativity is the most important part of content based teaching training.  You can not simply teach the same thing the same way over and over and over again, you have to base your teaching on being flexible, finding new ways to address goals and concepts as well as presenting it differently.  But the other thing that you have to keep in mind other than this is what you are teaching. While you need to be fresh and new, you also have to create and be looking for new things to add to your teaching content other than the three K’s and the curriculum.
                Getting students ready for the next level should be about 60% of your teaching time, 20% should be conditioning stuff to keep them coming back and being fit enough to train…but that last 20% should be fun and new stuff that you are researching and you can introduce to your students. I went to different martial arts to learn things to bring back, I don’t recommend it but with the advent of You Tube you can view different people’s ideas and introduce techniques and training to the club that others are doing.
                I did not have You Tube and the web so I went outside of Karate and learned Joint locks, throws, sweeps and different things to bring to the table to be creative.  For new instructors in this day and age it should be easier to research some unused or unseen training ideas and implement that content into your teaching.
                Remember you are not regurgitating a idea, you are learning a move or principle or something and then presenting it in your way…it’s the new content that will make it fun for students to come out and train. Something I am trying to introduce during seminars.

New stuff vs old stuff.
                When do those students of yours get some new stuff to do and when are they going to be over the basics….well never.  The old stuff or basic teaching of the three K’s is eternal.  Does not matter if you are a Gokyu or a Godan you need to work on basics and basic Kata and three step and 1 step and….well you get the picture.  But you should be teaching new things once and a while to keep them interested.  Other than that the curriculum for testing should show you which basics are needed and when. However, its also important to work with the class and club on building up the curriculum based basics even after they have graduated to a new level. I see many purple belts who abandon doing things they don’t like (yoko geri for example) and they never progress to the next level completely.
                Even a Black belt has to worry about the old stuff!

How much is to much?
                I have been to classes and seen instructors try to get students to do bag work, pad training, kumite, kata, basics, drills, rubber tube training, throws and sweeps, joint locks, partner drills, and Hojo undo (conditioning) all in ONE CLASS….Way way way to much work or one class.  I have also seen instructors try and take a student from white belt to Shodan in two years….Yah, not gonna happen. You need to introduce things in such a way as to enhance the goals and use the training components in a interesting and fun way.
                Also, teaching a whole curriculum level in a month is to much, packing in the essentials in the last month prior to testing is a strain on the student and not fair to them.  Break up the curriculum into three months per level (or more depending on the level).
First month for a white belt is teaching them to Dance through Heian Shodan, learn some “in the air” type things for basics and get down the basics of “this is a kick, this is a punch” and have some fun with them hitting a pad to re-enforce the impact training.
Second month is more dedicated to sharper form in Heian Shodan, more structured and strict basics, some kumite to make it all “seem real” and then some drills and some more impact training.
Third month you need to sharpen up the basics, push the student to know the Kata performance backwards and forwards and be spirited in the basic three and five step kumite.  Add some impact training and Hojo Undo for fun only. Then let them test.
Different levels of course will have different things to work on, but don’t try and cram all their training in to one class, spread it out and introduce a few ideas or techniques every month only.

Use your own ideas and personal experience
                Nothing worse than reading a text book that is flat, dull and “wordy”!  well, one thing is worse…going to a class that is impersonal, the instructor is teaching like they are reading from a textbook and the class is so routine that you get board and your mind starts wandering.
                Use things you learned from your instructor but also add your own subject matter into the mix.  It will make it more fun for you to teach it and much more fun for the students to learn it!

Pick subject matter that interests you!
                I remember one time going to train with a instructor who actually started his class with “I really hate teaching or doing this Kata…but we have to do it”…Wait…what?  Why would you show up to teach something you don’t like teaching?
                Pick subjects you like, not ones you are good at but ones you like. If you hate Heian Sandan get someone else to teach it that likes it!  Bring in instructors that love doing the kicks you hate or the Kumite that you hate teaching.  That is not to say if you cant kick you should not teach kicking, you should be able to coach it and work on improving yourself as well, but you should not teach something you are not passionate about.
                A good instructor likes teaching Karate…period, but a great one knows their limits and what they like to teach and they focus on that stuff and work with others that compliment them. Also, you could be the best instructor in Basics but you really love Kumite…well you know what you will be teaching! Show your passion for sparring and focus on building that into a class, ask others who are much more passionate about other aspects to pick up the slack in those departments.

Presentation
Personality
                Personality is the first thing when presentation of a class comes to mind. I am drawing from Karate and my school day in commenting about this.  The best instructors are those that engage and entertain. They draw you in and before you know it you are pushing yourself to do better and better with out even knowing its work.
                The single worst instructors I have had were impersonal, had a monotone speech pattern because they were board teaching the same things over and over and did not engage you in any way. 
                Now everyone’s personality is different, some people are more introverted than others, you need to realize that you need to draw students into the class and engage them with your personality while pushing yourself to reach out to everyone.  Be personable with your personality, share and push yourself to entertain while building the class….not be a clown, but capture their attention any way you can.
                And to do this you need to relax, nervous instructors become hard to watch, like a train wreck they start off interesting then they just turn to painful to watch as they sink further and further with nervous laughs and long pauses. Remember the students WANT to be there and want to be worked out and entertained mentally and driven physically to improve.

Teaching kids
                Teaching Kids and Adults is going to be the focus of a whole paper coming up so I will make this simple and straight forwards. When you teach kids the most important things to remember are not to talk down to them, bring yourself to their level and teach them with respect! To often I see instructors teach kids and treat them like a burden….who wants to do that. If I had to show up and teach a group of people I did not want to teach…well you can imagine how “entertained” both myself and my students would be!
                Also, respect them. Yes they don’t have your life experience and hey, they are kids. But don’t treat them like dirt and talk down to them or expect them to grovel at the grownups feet.  Show them that you care and you will make this fun and a learning experience and you will have them hooked.  Keep them interested and they will develop a passion that will keep them in Karate a long time.
                Show kids how important and fun Karate can be and you will hook them. Make them feel like they are part of a family and they will stick around, but treat them like a burden, go through boring classes with no “contact” between you two and you will have them skipping off to Soccer or Hockey in seconds.

Teaching adults
                Adults are often way trickier to teach than kids in the beginning because you don’t know their back ground or personality. I say “more Tricky” meaning…”tricky in different ways”. Some people just choose to be cold, easily insulted/offended or have a bad attitude about life in general. Others are happy all the time and can’t seem to be serious even when called for.  Others have attitude issues like issues with authority figures (to much respect or anger towards them) and we have to remember that adults have had a whole life time to color their personalities and we have to figure out how to communicate with them.
                Show respect to them and teach them, encourage them but don’t ever talk down to adults, they are way more likely to pick this up and dislike the approach.  Also, remember that people are more likely to be affected by life cruelty and influences as an adult than a child is. 
The event that most scarred me as an instructor was teaching a self-defense component to a group of students, well mixed and I asked a student to help me demonstrate. I was a 20 year old kid teaching Karate application and the student was a 40 year old women, we were going over “what to do if you are grabbed on the street” and I grabbed my students shoulder to show how to attack…and she flipped biscuits on me.  I totally missed that she was actually not just uncomfortable being in front of class but was starting to recoil and was highly emotionally charged…..she was in fact reliving the night she was RAPED and I had no idea what was going on!
I learned from that to ask permission and find out about students before I assumed I could do things with them. I did not stop demonstrating with ladies….well I did for about two years…but learned from my experience teaching and realized that everyone is different and you have to approach everyone with respect and differently. It was a tough lesson to learn but it really did teach me that you cannot assume you know everyone and how to teach until you learn a bit about them…and in the meantime be respectful of them and consider who you are working with.

Be nervous, but don’t look it!
                Dingman Sensei is my Source for information about Karate and always has been. When I started teaching he was my source for learning how to teach as well.  One thing he told me is being nervous is good, its natural and he had to overcome being a shy and reserved person to teach. Its second hand to him now, but he says that being nervous gives you a bit of an edge! You remember that you have a responsibility and being a bit nervous is your way of showing you take this serious and you will work hard.
                However, its also bad to see the train wreck of a “WAY TO NERVOUS” instructor bumble through things and start to fall apart, hell it can turn from being a bit nervous to being totally lost and shutting down. It can affect your body and I have seen everything from people passing out to people passing gas while teaching because nerves got the best of them.
                Be nervous a little but tell yourself that you have done this before and you would not have been asked to teach if you could not do this.  Then just go out and do it, showing people your confidence…even if you are ready to fall apart. If you start to bumble or get lost, Joke about it and just center yourself and restart!

Use your personality to show your excitement and passion.
                In my life outside of Karate I have had about five teachers that I can say I really really liked and felt that they taught me and reached me on some level.  Two of them were Anthropology teachers, one in high school and one in University.  Both reached out and used their personalities to grab my attention and get me passionate about history and Anthropology. One was a Older Jewish man that was just likeable and fun. The other was a gay lady that was funny and drew you in….nothing in common, different teaching styles, different personalities but both used their skills in communication to bring their personality to the table and used that to teach the often dull and boring subject to a full class and everyone stayed and learned…something strange in university were a large number of students only attend the exams.
                Other instructors were in Biology and other subjects I loved and was interested in, those instructors had an easier time but the fact that they were showing their passion for a subject through their personality made it so much more fun for me to learn it seemed a treat to show up to their classes. 
                It is very important to entertain, bring your personality to the table and make the subject matter, which I love to begin with, even more fun and entertaining. You don’t have to use fun training components like kicking shields and rubber tubes to make Karate interesting, you can use your passion for Karate and make others feel it, then they will start to FEEL passion for Karate on their own.

Don’t let them get lost in the presentation
                Your goal is to teach a subject/idea/technique and that is your goal. I have seen, for good and for bad, people using to much personality in presenting a subject and it is either bitter and useless or way to entertaining and you don’t get the point of the class.
                One class I attended the instructor was “Trying” to teach a set of techniques that were designed to help with movement skills- specifically rotation after a front kick to face a 90 degree angle away from front…..so kick, rotate and reverse punch….and he was failing horribly because it was the world’s best Karate standup comedy act that was interfering with his teaching. It took a full hour of humor and wise cracks that made it impossible to finish he drills and work after the warm up….its was as painful as it was funny and as entertaining as it was completely useless.
                Another class was a guy who is rather well known in the world of Karate teaching with his personality front and center. He was so sour and jaded that all I remember about training with this well-known guy was his insults of Japanese people and culture, his disdain for “Canadian karate” ( and he is from the Toronto area) and his bitterness!  Good lesson, if you are in a bad mood before class….get in a good mood before class!

Importance of respecting your students
                I have trained with people who have not respected students and I have trained with those that do respect students.  You can see a different in the Dojos that have a mutual respect opposed to those that have a fear and placation kind of relationship set up. 
                The most important thing is if you want to keep students learning and you want to keep your dojo thriving you have to respect the fact that for the students this is recreation and they expect to be treated well.  Don’t treat them like cash cows and herds of stupid ‘Deer’ that you use to make a living.  Karate should be a challenge for everyone but they should also feel respected and enjoy their recreation.

Correcting students and motivation
                If you were told you suck, or if you were told you were hopeless/useless or a failure then you would leave a club…or you should leave a club….as soon as you can. That instructor is a clueless moron!  Unfortunately some instructors feel they have to push you down and keep you feeling like you NEED them to be better or they cannot be bothered to waste their time on you…and this is why they fail!
                I have seen Dingman Sensei work with high level black belts to get them ready for testing and seminars and have been on team Manitoba and seen the training he does with them. He has pushed seniors and paid attention to details and brought many of us up to the level we are at…and he also has spent time fixing a down block on a white belt and showing them that he cares. 
                When you correct a student remember that you have to motivate  them to move on and work hard on their own as well. Don’t demoralize them by being flippant or cracking jokes at their expense.  Show them the right way and also the right way to behave!
                Once you have corrected someone go back and see if they corrected it, if not…with a smile and pleasantly…re-correct them.  But if they “got it now” let them know they got it with a comment or a smile…and not a “well finally you got it” kind of comment.  And at the end of class or some point during…every once and a while say the word “GOOD” it can go a long way in letting someone know that they are doing better.  MOTIVATION leads to break through!

Avoid these subjects at all cost!
                No…not sex, religion and politics…or money, sex and how to raise children according to ME!  No avoid the “I used to…”, “Back in the day….”, “In Japan….” Or “When I was training I was a CHAMPION” kind of comments and subjects.  While an instructor should never discuss their personal religion or dislike for a religion or any religion….or any form of politics, Money or their opinion on how to raise a child…especially when you are actually saying “this is how YOU should raise your child”….keep the teaching to more about the student and the here and now! Oh, and it goes without saying that a instructor should never bring up sex, the opposite sex or anything to do with their ideas about sex, Sexuality or…well Keep that private!
                While the 5 Taboo topics can quickly sink a ship, the “historical “ view of things can be as caustic to a Dojo or class as brining up your use of thong underwear……Yes, that falls under “REALLY did not need to know”.  I have trained under instructors that could not let the past go, they held onto it with feverish and unrelenting NEED for it.  But they also forgot that they needed to teach the students they had NOW and they could be so much more than a past sports jock…they could be a Sensei!

Letting the lesson drive itself.
                When I teach I tend to start off with a basic Idea and or goal subject and kind of let the class drive itself based on issues I see, weak points that need to be addressed and I try and fit everything into a frame work and see how far I can get.  Writing everything down is to constrictive and I end up missing things and worrying about the written material more than I do the students.
                The best thing to do is to let the class move at its own pace and not be frantic about going through all your “suggested” written class components. Its not the end of the world if you don’t get to full Kata when you are breaking down a Kata in the class, as long as the students get a good work out and good class full of technical improvement ideas!
                Let the class move as it has to and just direct the thing when you can, let it happen and unravel with as much control as is needed but not much more….its a zen thing!

End notes
                The most important thing to remember is that while you are teaching, you are still a student! You are learning and should continue to do so! Learn about teaching, learn about Karate and get into the deepest parts of Karate.  Take up reviewing Karate on YouTube or other sites to learn more about it and bring that to the table when you have a moment in class.  Discuss it with seniors and figure out using a critical eye what helps you and what is just crap!
                Bring more to the table and focus on presenting the best you can, the things that you feel will benefits students and do it with respect and passion…and you will be a great Sensei!
                Keep the ego at the door and be humble and thankful that people actually show up and want to learn from you and you will learn the most important lessons about being a Sensei…..Passion, respect, Humbleness and love for Karate and your students and your peers.