I can only speak for myself...
There is a type of conscious ignorance amoung martial arts types these days. Actually it’s been going on for years, maybe longer. My experience is that most martial artists began their martial journey as a means to a “self defense” end. It was not about glory. It was not about spiritual nonsense. It was not about making money. There was a need to keep oneself and ones family safe (as possible). This is the common thread woven through martialism.
Along the way some hinderences have krpet in unnoticed. Things that side track the original process. Some have certain benifites like grappling. You must know how to grapple. It’s inescapable. Grappling, however, does not solve all problems. The advent of grappling in the early 90’s brought with it “grappling schools and organizations” which profess to solve all self defense needs with grappling. Becoming a “grappler” is like becoming a “hammerer”. You could replace the word grappeler with striker, kicker, trapper, judoka.
Philosophy is another distraction. I’m not speaking of religion here. Many martial arts organizations have attached to themselves a philisophical “go to guy”. Some love to quote Bruce Lee. Others will quote Bruce Lee quoting Krishnamurti (even if they don’t know it). Still others will give you Krishnamurti himself. Flowery talk and circular ideology does not usually stop mean people who want to hurt you. So why is it so constantly entwined with martial arts?
Weaponless warriors. This is the one I just cannot even understand. Some martial artists are still anti-gun. Those who are not think that the gun is magic. It takes just as much time and effort to learn to “fight with a weapon” as it does to fight empty handed. So why do people spend 90% of their martial time on empty hands and 10% on weapons? I think it’s because everyone still thinks that the weapons are going to solve the problems by themselves. Weapons are operator dependant. The best jab in the world does not make you proficient with a 9mm. Just as simply “owning” a weapon does not make you a weapon master. “I’ve been shooting since I was a kid” has nothing to do with weapons combat. The other side of the coin is the “firearm only” crowd. As if. You can have a .45 on your belt but the knife coming at you from 5 feet away is going to require two hands to stop. Remember, you only have two hands.
If it’s about “self preservation” you would want an appropriate level of combat related skill with various weapons. Especially firearms for home defense as well as pepper spray and modern impact devices. I’m a “weapons first” guy in most cases. If it’s really about protecting yourself and your family you’ll go to the highest level of force available (if available) to get the job done fast. That does not mean drawing a gun when someone curses your mother. It means not jumping into every situation with a “hands on approach” as the only options.
In 2003 I saw a tremendous amount of martial vulturism on the internet. This is a good thing. It keeps the status quo under constant attack. The point of concern is the potential emergence of a new status quo. Individuals need evaluate their priorities and see if they want to train to be “great fighters” or train to “STOP DANGEROUS PERSONS DEAD IN THEIR TRACKS”.
Demi
There is a type of conscious ignorance amoung martial arts types these days. Actually it’s been going on for years, maybe longer. My experience is that most martial artists began their martial journey as a means to a “self defense” end. It was not about glory. It was not about spiritual nonsense. It was not about making money. There was a need to keep oneself and ones family safe (as possible). This is the common thread woven through martialism.
Along the way some hinderences have krpet in unnoticed. Things that side track the original process. Some have certain benifites like grappling. You must know how to grapple. It’s inescapable. Grappling, however, does not solve all problems. The advent of grappling in the early 90’s brought with it “grappling schools and organizations” which profess to solve all self defense needs with grappling. Becoming a “grappler” is like becoming a “hammerer”. You could replace the word grappeler with striker, kicker, trapper, judoka.
Philosophy is another distraction. I’m not speaking of religion here. Many martial arts organizations have attached to themselves a philisophical “go to guy”. Some love to quote Bruce Lee. Others will quote Bruce Lee quoting Krishnamurti (even if they don’t know it). Still others will give you Krishnamurti himself. Flowery talk and circular ideology does not usually stop mean people who want to hurt you. So why is it so constantly entwined with martial arts?
Weaponless warriors. This is the one I just cannot even understand. Some martial artists are still anti-gun. Those who are not think that the gun is magic. It takes just as much time and effort to learn to “fight with a weapon” as it does to fight empty handed. So why do people spend 90% of their martial time on empty hands and 10% on weapons? I think it’s because everyone still thinks that the weapons are going to solve the problems by themselves. Weapons are operator dependant. The best jab in the world does not make you proficient with a 9mm. Just as simply “owning” a weapon does not make you a weapon master. “I’ve been shooting since I was a kid” has nothing to do with weapons combat. The other side of the coin is the “firearm only” crowd. As if. You can have a .45 on your belt but the knife coming at you from 5 feet away is going to require two hands to stop. Remember, you only have two hands.
If it’s about “self preservation” you would want an appropriate level of combat related skill with various weapons. Especially firearms for home defense as well as pepper spray and modern impact devices. I’m a “weapons first” guy in most cases. If it’s really about protecting yourself and your family you’ll go to the highest level of force available (if available) to get the job done fast. That does not mean drawing a gun when someone curses your mother. It means not jumping into every situation with a “hands on approach” as the only options.
In 2003 I saw a tremendous amount of martial vulturism on the internet. This is a good thing. It keeps the status quo under constant attack. The point of concern is the potential emergence of a new status quo. Individuals need evaluate their priorities and see if they want to train to be “great fighters” or train to “STOP DANGEROUS PERSONS DEAD IN THEIR TRACKS”.
Demi
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