TRADITIONAL MARTIAL ARTS

TRADITIONAL MARTIAL ARTS

Monday, December 12, 2022

CATCHING THE MOMENT

 by Phillip Starr

Knowing and “feeling” when the opponent is about to attack. Those who are able to do this are certainly very formidable opponents for obvious reasons. This skill is usually regarded as some sort of mystical skill that may be acquired through the practice of special meditative routines.

Not true.


You can meditate all the livelong day but it will be of no real use to you in developing this special skill. And it is developed through regular, repetitive practice of one of the most basic training exercises...three-step fight! Exactly how this is to be done is shown and discussed in my book, MARTIAL MANEUVERS. There's more to be learned from three-step fight than meets the eye.


We know the brain sends out electrical signals, like a radio. A simple EEG proves this. And a radio can, with a bit of work, be turned into a receiver. The biggest problem is getting your mind to be quiet so that you can “hear” the receiver.


When someone attacks you, it occurs in stages:

  1. First he has the intention to attack in some fashion.

  2. Second, he determines just how he will do it and with what (punch, kick, grab, or whatever).

  3. His brain then signals the muscles (via the nerves) that will be involved in making the attack.

  4. The attack ensues as planned.

Now, the brain sends out signals at each of these stages. Thoughts (on your end) act like static in the receiver and you can't really pick up the opponent's signals. So, over-analyzing the process only gums up the works.


It is crucial to your practice that your partner actually has the intention of striking and harming you. This is usually the biggest stumbling block in training. You must feel his yi (intention). If he really has the intention of hurting you, his yi will be strong and you can detect it; if he's just lobbing his punch out there, there's no danger, no yi, and nothing to detect. There's no real attack. Yi is a vital key to acquiring this skill!


Once developed, you can feel when the opponent's brain gives his body the command to commence the attack. You then strike first! The opponent is momentarily helpless; to defend himself his brain would have to cancel the previous signals, determine what you're doing, where your strike will land, when it will land...and all this takes much too long. He's in an “attack mode” and cannot easily reverse himself and go into a “defense mode.” He's helpless and unable to defend himself.


The progressive training routine for developing this unique skill is tedious and can become rather boring. But you must stay the course and NOT jump ahead; each stage must be mastered before moving on to the next. I recommend getting a copy of MARTIAL MANEUVERS and learning how this is done. Take your time. Find an agreeable partner and begin. Your practice must be regular, not haphazard. You and your partner will find that building up a strong intention to harm each other (when performing as the attacker) is both mentally and physically tiring. But you must do it! Real skill isn't developed quickly...







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