Originally posted by jubaji
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Shorinji Kempo Video
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Originally posted by jubajiLook at yourself. You're an open, festering wound of insecurity. What the hell happened to make you so pathetic?
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Originally posted by jubajiNo, the issue has become (just as you begged it to be) all about you.
Originally posted by jubajiI'm not joking. You need help.
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Originally posted by jubajiThere is nothing at all on any forum you have ever visited that you did not want to be about you.
Even now, as I try to turn this conversation back to the issues, it is YOU who keep harping on about ME and my supposed defects. As well, you have yet to rebut a single fact I have pointed out here. Why this obsession with me? Are you Sebastian Love?
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Originally posted by jubajiDon't add dishonesty to your list of faults.
1. It is a FACT that there are no ninja today.
2. It is a FACT that the ninja died out during the Meiji era.
Now, let's see if you can stay on-topic for once...
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Originally posted by jubaji?????????????????
What's that? "failign"?
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Focus
Back to the topic: Kenpo
I thought the Parker Kenpo demonstration with sophisticated basics show that its a reliable system. Sure they did the techniques slowly, but this is more for educational purposes.
The multi strike-defend drill (1st drill shown - attacker is throwing hook slaps and straight palms - defender is parrying) was good, because the defenses were not "hard" over commited defenses that you see in typical karate & TKD styles. Rather, it was loose and dynamic.
Why is that good? Not everyone is going to attack with one committed swing and just stop. People fake or feint. This shows that kenpo is system that flows (apparently at higher levels). Other stand up arts (boxing, muay thai) flow similarly.
One of the punch defenses seen in the video (inner hand parries, catches inside wrist while outter hand simultaneously slaps against the elbow) looks like a reliable stand-up grappling technique.
It doesn't over commit the defender and if the attacker pulls his arm back, he can flow to another technique or still be in a position to defend. If done quickly enough with enough impact, he can snap the elbow.
My additional $0.02
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Premiere Member
- Sep 2005
- 505
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[" And although we may do our best to avoid trouble, sometimes trouble insists on finding us. When that happens......when the time for talk is over, warriors act. They flip the switch and act decisively - ruthlessly if necessary - to preserve and defend the things that they hold dear."
Michael D. Janiich Why being a warrior starts with accepting the limitations of peace.
Originally posted by Tom YumBack to the topic: Kenpo
I thought the Parker Kenpo demonstration with sophisticated basics show that its a reliable system. Sure they did the techniques slowly, but this is more for educational purposes.
The multi strike-defend drill (1st drill shown - attacker is throwing hook slaps and straight palms - defender is parrying) was good, because the defenses were not "hard" over commited defenses that you see in typical karate & TKD styles. Rather, it was loose and dynamic.
Why is that good? Not everyone is going to attack with one committed swing and just stop. People fake or feint. This shows that kenpo is system that flows (apparently at higher levels). Other stand up arts (boxing, muay thai) flow similarly.
One of the punch defenses seen in the video (inner hand parries, catches inside wrist while outter hand simultaneously slaps against the elbow) looks like a reliable stand-up grappling technique.
It doesn't over commit the defender and if the attacker pulls his arm back, he can flow to another technique or still be in a position to defend. If done quickly enough with enough impact, he can snap the elbow.
My additional $0.02
do you study kempo? That was a real good analogy.
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