by Phillip
Starr
It
occurs to me that a great many, perhaps most, martial arts
practitioners (including virtually all forms of pugilism and
weaponry, from boxing to fencing) focus most, if not all, of their
attention and practice on developments of technique rather than
focusing on what actually makes them work. Naturally, beginning
students must do this, but if you watch more advanced pupils, you'll
see them obsessing over various minutae of various techniques to the
exclusion of almost everything else. Now,
there's certainly nothing wrong with training to polish and perfect
technique. BUT...of even greater importance is the development of
what makes them actually work. I remember my teacher handing me a
very sharp broadsword while he picked up a wooden replica. “If we
were to actually fight with these weapons, which one of us would
win?”, he asked.
That
was clearly a no-brainer, even for a young teenager. “You would,
sifu”, I replied.
We're
not really gonna do this, are we?
“Yes”,
he answered. “Why is that?”
Another
no-brainer. “Because you know how to use this weapons much better
than I do.”
Heck,
he could have beaten me with a twig or even just a single chopstick.
As time went on, I came to realize that his superiority wasn't
because of his”weapon”...it was because he knew how to win WITH
or WITHOUT a weapon. The condition of a given weapon (whether it was
a chopstick, a sharp or dull broadsword, or whatever) didn't matter.
He knew how to win...how to defeat me with a sword, stick, fist, or
foot.
He'd
mastered what I call the “Three Jewels of Combat”...Distance,
Timing, and Rhythm. I've written extensively on these subjects and
they're discussed in detail in my book, MARTIAL MANEUVERS.” So I'm
not going to repeat myself yet again here. You'll have to go back
and read the material on your own, AND THEN PRACTICE to refine and
perfect them. For the rest of your life.
Currently,
there's an interesting new combative sport called “light saber
fencing” and it has attracted a very large following. There are
numerous videos of competitions wherein players fight with what
amount to expensive plastic swords, which can be used with one or
both hands. For the most part, the players are not practitioners of
any particular martial art; they're civilians” as it were, while
some are actual fencers, kendoists, and so on. And it looks like it.
If
you watch children playing at sword-fighting, you'll quickly notice a
distinct lack of any real technique, and the two combatants are
focused on “fighting the opponent's sword” rather than him. Of
course, it's just children playing, but most adults who engage in
this new sport are doing the same thing.
In
swordsmanship, many people regard the Japanese katana as the best
sword ever used for combat. Others disagree and point to Chinese or
European sword, touting their reasons for their belief. And most of
the time, they're wrong. It isn't about the quality of the sword
that makes the difference, nor is the answer to be found in the
technique(s) of a given weapon. The secret lies in the mastery of
the Three Jewels.
The
reason Japanese swordsmanship is so effective is because of their
ceaseless training with the Three Jewels. Modern kendo bears scant
resemblance to the kendo that was practiced into the 1950's; there is
much less emphasis on the Three Jewels, and more emphasis on
technique for scoring points and winning a match. In the old days
(wherein kendo allowed for numerous grappling techniques), the focus
was on how one would actually engage an opponent in a life or death
struggle. The Three Jewels were empjasized very heavily.

In
contemporary gong-fu/wushu, emphasis is on technique and “posturing”
(posing and looking very beautiful). The truth is that even the best
of such competitors would enjoy very short life-spans in actual
combat, even with one whose technique wasn't nearly as pretty. When
two swordsmen of days long past met to do battle, they faced their
enemy in a relaxed but mentally and spiritually intense condition.
There was nno unnecessary movement, no charging in with swords
flailing...they remained still, focused entirely on the enemy and
“feeling” his mind and spirit, looking for even a slight flaw (an
opening). If one's spirit lagged or focus became distracted for even
a second, the fight would be over.
This
same approach is to be applied to hand-to-hand fighting. Without it,
technique is pointless.