Scott Shaw's latest book on Hapkido, Hapkido: Articles on Self-Defense: Volume Two, has just been released. Click on the link to find out more information.
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Friday, July 12, 2013
Watching Violence Unfold
By Scott Shaw
I
was sitting around at home watching T.V. last evening when I began to hear a
verbal altercation taking place outside. I didn’t really pay much attention to
it at first but it continued to escalate. Eventually, I looked outside and
there were two Asian males and one lady. They were standing out in front of
their place.
One
of the men was screaming while he pounded on the other man with a golf club. It
was actually a large wood driver-club. The woman appeared to be attempting to
break them up. The man who was being hit whispered in a soft but firm voice as
he continued to be struck by the other man who was screaming.
A
few people were watching this event but nobody said anything. I began to
believe that the one man was going to be killed by the club-wielding other man
so I yelled, “Hey, stop hitting him with that golf club!” He replied with the
basic, “Fuck you,” and called me a few names, which was of no consequence.
My
basic idea in yelling was to cause a distraction in order that the guy being
hit would have the opportunity to get out of there. But, he didn’t leave.
I
exclaimed, “What you’re doing is assault with a deadly weapon! You want me to call
the cops?” “I don’t care, he hits our mother and pulled a knife on her! Call
the cops, fuck you!”
So,
now the story deepens… They are two brothers and one is apparently defending
the honor of the mother.
Initially,
me being who I am, I thought that maybe I should go out there and get in the
mix. Break up the fight. Take the club away from the guy. I mean, a golf club
really isn’t much of a weapon. But, then I rethought my strategy.
In
my lifetime I have been shot, stabbed, cut, hit from behind with a club, and
sucker punched more than a few times. But, I have long ago realized that all
violence equals is more violence and that is never a sound solution, even
though I pretty much workout and train people to defend themselves on a daily
basis.
But,
isn't that the true essence of the martial arts? To be able to fight but choose
NOT to.
The
fact of the matter is, this guy had his point and his mission. If what he was
saying was true, he seemed to be defending his mother’s honor and maybe even
protecting her. So, this was obviously a complicated family matter.
Someone
else had apparently called the police. Which was the right thing to do. Just at
this point they arrived. They immediately cuffed-up the club-wielding brother
and took him into custody. They sat the other brother down on the curb. I
looked and he was a mess. He had big bulging lumps and blood running down his
head, his arms, his legs, and his back. He took one hell of a beating and was
still standing. Tough dude!
The
ambulance arrived but he refused treatment. He exclaimed, “That’s going to cost
$2,000.00 that I don’t have and that bill is never going to be paid.” Which is
true. If you don’t have insurance and you go to an emergency room, you are
pretty much screwed. He even manned up to the degree that when the cops were
talking to him he said his brother had just struck him with his fist and not
the golf club the police officers knew to be in play.
The
cops eventually drove off with the one brother. They told the other brother to
leave and to not come back that evening. The mother cried in fear that the one
banged-up son would return as he apparently said he was going to kill her. As
he walked off he exclaimed, “I just said she was going to die someday.” What!
Who says that to their mother and what else did he really say?
You
see, this is the source of violence. People say bad things and people do bad
things all the time. They do these things based upon what they believe to be
right or as a means of getting whatever revenge they believe they have coming.
But, violence only equals violence.
Plus,
violence has the potential to draw other people in. People want to help. People
want to stop it. People believe in the cause. People care. But, violence never
equals anything positive. Anything based in violence only ends in further
violence.
The
one brother is in jail. For how long, who knows? But, it could have been worse;
he could have killed his brother. The other guy is seriously messed up. What
will happen to him is anybody’s guess? The mother is scared of the son she
raised. Where is the father; who knows? What will happen next in this melodrama?
Only time will tell.
Like
much of life, this situation is a mess. You can choose to get angry, be mad, be
violent in life. Or, you can choose the opposite. Your life. Your choice. But,
the repercussions of violence are obviously always the worse of the two
choices.
Watching
violence unfold is never pretty. Violence is ugly. And who ever wins a
confrontation, is never truly the winner.
Copyright © 2013 –
All Rights Reserved
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Martial Arts on the Spiritual Path
By Scott Shaw
People on the spiritual path commonly ask me how could I be involved in something so seemingly violent as the martial arts. Martial artists continually ask me why do I place such an emphasis on spirituality. Though these two venues seem worlds apart, they are, in fact, closely inter-linked.
For those of us who are old enough to remember the 1970’s television series, “Kung Fu,” where
Kwai Chang Cane, a Shao Lin monk, was living in the Old West and continually
flashing back to the lessons he learned while living at the Shao Lin Temple, we
were presented with a standard whereby the average individual could sense a
correlation and seeming necessity for even the most spiritual of persons using
hand-to-hand combat. Though this television series was a theatrical
presentation and historically inaccurate, it did define that there has long
been martial artists in Asia who have been closely linked to their spirituality.
First of all, however, it must be defined that every individual or martial arts
practitioner who lives or comes from Asia is not necessarily an enlightened
being. This is one of the common pitfalls many westerners fall into believing
when they go to train in the martial arts. They think simply because a
person hails from Asia they somehow know more, are more, and should be
universally revered as such.
Throughout Asia, just as in the West, there are those individuals who are drawn
to the spiritual path and embrace it. And, just like in the West, there
are far more people who only care about self, wealth, personal prestige, and
couldn't care less about spirituality – though due to their geographical
upbringing they oftentimes have picked up more facts about eastern religion
than is commonly possessed by a Westerner.
This being stated, due to the fact that the origin of the martial arts was
based in Asia, eastern religion came to be the philosophy adhered to by the
spiritually inclined practitioner of these systems of self-defense. As
such, it was eastern religion that came to be the defining factor of the
spiritual basis for the martial arts.
An important factor to keep in mind when considering the link between martial
arts and spirituality is that the two predominate religions which came to
directly influence the martial arts are Taoism and Buddhism. Both of these
philosophies are intrinsically defined with a deeply meditative and
metaphysical process of thought. Religions of the West, such as
Christianity and Judaism, though no less viable conduits of faith, are not
delineated by these characteristics. An example of this is that they do
not commonly send the practitioner down the road of attempting to loose the
Personal Self in order to gain a glimpse of the Cosmic Whole.
As the martial arts have continued to evolve throughout the centuries, so too
have the various sects which make up Taoism and Buddhism. To this end, as time
has progress some schools of the Chinese and Japanese martial arts have come to
be keenly linked to their various philosophic traditions. Certainly, such arts
as Tai Chi, through in actually a martial arts based on physical deflections,
punching and kicking, is now seen as an essential form of movement meditation.
This is no less the case with such Japanese systems of martial arts as Iaido,
where a practitioner draws his sword in an exacting manner, delivers a
precisely orchestrated technique, and then returns the sword to its sheath in a
definitively meditative manner.
From these two illustrations we can see the martial arts do not have to solely
be a method to kick butt. They can be a means for the body and mind to move
into a state of exacting harmony, whereby the practitioner is removed from the
constraints of physical existence and may gain a glimpse of meditative
consciousness.
Though the martial arts are based in techniques of physical confrontation, that
does not have to be their ending point. They can become something much-much
more.
One of the key problems embraced by the modern martial artist is the fact that
they are taught in their martial art schools to live their life from a very
competitive perspective. They are taught to believe that their style, their
instructor, and, in fact, they are the best at what they do. What this causes,
as can be noted by anyone who has been involved in the martial arts for any
length of time, is the fact that there is an enormous amount of back stabbing,
criticizing, and a general sense of hypocrisy going on among practitioners from
differing styles or schools. What this leads to is a life embraced by
competition that is completely absent from peace.
If you live your life at the level of constantly seeking confrontation,
attempting to find a reason to battle with the hopes of overpowering or
defeating anyone or everyone, for whatever reason, you are forced to live your
life from a very animistic perspective. And, like I have long said,
just like the gun fighters of the Old West, there will always be somebody
faster. Eventually you will be defeated.
To the person who lives their life at this level, they are constantly being
engaged in confrontations and battles that are finding them out of the blue.
Why? Because they are projecting a sense of confrontation to the universe
– what you sew is what you reap.
Though the modern martial arts commonly breeds this style of aggressive,
competitive mindset, this does not have to be the case. Just as the
practitioners of Tai Chi or Iaido have proven, the martial arts can be a great
source of movement meditation – where there is no need for conflict.
The essential thing to remember is that the essence of movement meditation is
not defined by what style of martial arts you practice – though, obviously,
certain styles are more open to having a students become meditative in their
movements than others. None-the-less, it is you who possess the ability
to raise your martial arts to the level where something more than physical or
mental conflict is embraced.
From the martial arts you learn to protect yourself if the need arises. But,
fighting does not have to be the end point of your training.
If you are not seeking unnecessary conflict, you are not tracked down by it. If
you are living your life embracing the glory of your existence, by whatever
religious or philosophic criteria you choose, you will not be bound by the
limitations of other martial artists you encounter that are hell bend on making
themselves appear to be bigger, better, or more by whatever title, award, lie,
or punch they possess. If you live your life from a focus of consciousness, you
can transcend the limitations of any situation you encounter. This will
naturally occur not by fighting your way out, but by experience all of life
from a state of universal understanding.
Are the martial arts violent? Only if you let them be.
Copyright © 1996 – All Rights Reserved
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Hapkido’s Theory of Circular Self Defense
By Scott Shaw
This article
originally appeared in the July 1993 issue of Black Belt Magazine.
As
a martial artist you are trained to continually develop and refine your self
defense skills. This training often times involves drills that will teach you
how to defend yourself against the onslaught of the various attacks an
adversary may launch against you. The defensive tactics that are generally
taught, by many martial art system, teach you how to defend yourself with
forceful techniques once an opponent has already grabbed a hold of you or has
unleashed an attack such as a kick or a punch. The problem with defending
yourself at this late stage of an attack is that your opponent either already
has a hold of you or he has already unleashed his punch.
Once
an opponent has a powerful hold on you it is much harder to free his grasp from
you then if you encountered him before he has the opportunity to take a firm
hold of you. Additionally, if your attacker has already begun to punch at you,
that punch is in motion, it has power, velocity, and speed, which you can only
hope to beat with a traditional block. The Korean martial art system of Hapkido
teaches its practitioners that it is far better to defend yourself before your
attacker has the opportunity to solidify his attack upon you. To achieve self
defense, in the early stages of an attack, Hapkido uses its Theory of Circular
Self Defense.
The
Hapkido Theory of Circular Self Defense does not mean that you move your body
in elaborate exaggerated circular movements. Instead, Circular Self Defense
training is twofold; first of all, it teaches that the most important element
in any confrontation is to define the range your opponent is attacking from.
How far is he from you? With this knowledge the most appropriate and effective
self defense measure may be put into place before your opponent has launched a
successful attack upon you. Once this range is defined the second level of
Hapkido Theory of Circular Self Defense can be put into place, that of moving
in fluid circular motion.
The
first step we will view is how to conclude the range of your opponent’s attack.
To accomplish this, the Hapkido practitioner utilizes the Three Concentric
Circle Principal.
The
Three Concentric Circle Principal has you visualize three circles of varying
distances encompassing your body. The First or Primary Circle is approximately
three feet around you, or the distance of your outstretched arms. If an
opponent has substantiated an attack this close to you, immediate and
aggressive self defense is necessary.
The
Second Circle ranges from three to six feet around your body. At this level,
your opponent needs to travel to you, to launch an effective attack. To travel
this distance a certain amount of momentum is required. This momentum can be
effectively used against him by deflecting his forward motion attack and using
his expended energy to your own advantage.
If
due to defensive circumstance you must travel to your opponent, crossing this
Second Circle limit, you must do so in a balanced offensive posture. The Second
Circle is in relatively close proximity to you. For this reason, many martial
artist attempt to overly stretch close-in fighting techniques to this three to
six foot distance. This is a mistake. You should not attempt to stretch your
close-in punching or kicking techniques, as this will leave you off balance.
If
these initial techniques do not make successful contact with your attacker, he
can use your lack of balance to his own advantage and strike you with a
powerful attack. To this end, if you realize the necessity to move into his
Second Circle location, you should do so by rapidly sliding your body in
towards him, guided by your lead foot, and then, immediately encounter him with
an appropriate powerful strike such as a Straight Punch followed by a joint
lock and throw.
The
Third or Tertiary Circle extends from six to nine feet around your body. If
your opponent travels this distance to attack you, his oncoming motion is very
obvious and appropriate defensive action can easily be prepared for and
instigated. If, on the other hand, you decide it is in your best interest to
travel this distance and encounter your opponent where he is located, then you
must do so in the most efficient manner possible.
The
only reason to travel this distance is if your opponent possesses a weapon such
as a gun and his using it is inevitable. If this is the case, then such
techniques as a Stepping or Jumping Side Kick are most effective. This is
because of the fact that these offensive techniques close the distance between
yourself and your opponent quickly and you arrive in an offensive posture.
The
Three Concentric Circle Principal does not mean that you must maintain a
stagnate positioning. What it does detail, however, is that these three circles
move as your body moves. They are a method to accurately gauge the distance
between your opponent and yourself and tell you when defensive tactic is most
appropriate.
By
first defining the distance from your attack opponent, you can enter into any
confrontation prepared to successfully defend yourself in the most appropriate
manner. This area of Hapkido ideology is known as Range Effective Fighting.
Once the range of your defensive posture is understood you then can
successfully employee the second area of Hapkido Theory of Circular
Self-Defense, that of Circular Movement.
Hapkido
teaches that by training your body to move in natural patters of circular
motion you can effectively defeat an opponent’s attack with minimal expended
energy and without the potential of unnecessarily injuring yourself. It must be
initially understood that Circular Defense never has you encounter an attack
straight on. This is because of the fact that linear defensive techniques are
forceful, awkward, and often times hold you locked into a single pattern of
movement. This fact can be witnessed in the case of the forceful Forearm Block
against a Straight Punch. This common traditional defensive technique, among
Hard Style Martial Art Systems, witnesses you entering into a Front Stance with
your blocking arm powerfully traveling upwards towards where the attacker’s
punch is expected to travel. If the pathway of his punch has been even slightly
miscalculated or the attacker redirects his offensive assault, you will have expended
excessive energy and your arm will be locked into forcefully moving in the
defensive pattern you have instigated until it reaches its apex. While the
aforementioned linear block is in progress, your opponent possesses the ability
to strike at you with a secondary attack. If, on the other hand, you train your
body to move in fluid circular motions, if your opponent redirects his attack,
you can instantly adapt your defense to his movement as you will not be locked
into a formal forceful blocking pattern.
Hapkido’s
Circular Theory of Self Defense is a style and a pattern of movement. This
understanding teaches that first you remove yourself from the path of an
opponent’s attack, then you deflect it, intercept it, and finally you disable
your attacker from possessing the ability to attempt to injure your further.
This strategy of defense is accomplished by training your body to move in fluid
circular motion, following the path of least resistance. This defensive
ideology, thereby, allows you to immediately follow one defensive technique
with another and another until your opponent is completely disabled.
At
the basis of Hapkido’s Circular Theory of Defense is your moving out of the
path of an attack. Moving from the path of an attack does not witness you
rapidly retreating backwards or sloppily moving to one side in a linear
fashion. This type of random movement leaves you ill-equipped to immediately
follow up with further effective defensive techniques that will disable your
opponent. This is due to the fact that by launching your body rapidly in a
linear retreat, your body's own momentum locks you into one pattern of
movement. Hapkido’s Circular Theory of Self Defense, instead, sees you
calculating the path of your opponent’s attack, and then making only the
minimal movement to remove yourself from the path of that attack. With this
style of movement, you do not have to substantially re-balance yourself, you
use little energy, and you remain in a close proximity to your opponent where
necessary counter attacks can easily and effectively be instigated.
The
most elementary example of moving out of the way of an opponent’s attack can be
witnessed in the circular defense against the Straight Punch. In the case of
the Straight Punch, which is targeted at your head, simply by pivoting on the
ball of your lead foot and circularly moving your rear leg to a forty-five-degree
positioning from where it previously was, your heads positioning has shifted to
the degree that the Straight Punch of your opponent will continue on its linear
path and miss its target. With this you have achieved initial self defense
without ever instigating a formal block.
As
forceful linear attacks are often very powerful in their forward driving
nature, Hapkido’s Circular Theory of Self Defense teaches that deflective
blocking techniques should be used in accordance with your removing yourself
from the path of your opponent’s attack. With this, you maintain control over
the confrontation and your opponent does not possess the ability to unleash a
secondary attack on you. This is due to the fact that by deflecting an attack,
you can leave your arm in place, thus, holding his striking arm in check, as
you instigate additional defensive techniques.
The
most elementary circular deflective technique is the Frontal Circular Knife
Hand Deflection. This block is performed by first forming your hand into a
Knife Hand, bending your elbow, and locating your forearm in front of your
body, parallel to the ground. To deflect the on-coming Straight Punching attack
of your opponent, first pivot out of the path of his attack, (as previously
described), as you do so simultaneously circularly guide your hand upwards
across your body to a vertical positioning. The Straight Punch will have missed
you, you will have deflected your opponent’s arm, and you will be in control of
the altercation.
With
these two simple pivoting and deflection techniques as a basis, you not only
protect your entire upper body from attack, but you deflect the on-coming punch
of your opponent with little or no expended energy. In addition, by deflecting
the attack, as opposed to forcefully blocking it, you do not risk the
possibility of injuring yourself by meeting bone to bone in a traditional
powerful intercepting blocking technique.
Hapkido’s
Circular Theory of Self Defense teaches that you must maintain control over the
altercation and not allow your opponent to possess the ability to strike at you
with a secondary attack once you have achieved initial self defense. Deflecting
is never enough to emerge victorious from a confrontation.
The
point to launch further self defense counter measures is the moment your
opponent’s attack has been deflected. This is due to the fact that in this
rapidly fleeting moment, he is most vulnerable as his balance is somewhat
misalign and his mind is recalculating what move to make next. Therefore, this
is your ideal opportunity to launch a counter attack.
In
the case of the previously described, Circular Deflection Defense against the
Straight Punch, your next line of self defense could be as simple as
immediately reaching in to your opponent’s chin with your lead deflecting hand,
as your other hand rapidly moves in and takes control of the back of his head.
By immediately taking a powerful front and rear hold on his head and locking
his neck unnaturally away from you, he can be effortlessly directed to the
ground, where additional counter attack measures can be unleashed as necessary.
Many
confrontations do not begin in this previously discussed First Circle distance.
Often times an opponent will rush in towards you, crossing through the Third
and Second Circle distances, in order to attack. In this style of forward
driven attack, your opponent’s intentions will become quite evident and you can
use his own forward momentum against himself. For example, if an opponent
rushes in at you and is either preparing to extend his arms to shove you or to
punch you, your first level of defense is to Side Step his forward motion. You
then immediately deflect his out stretched arm, with a Forearm Circle
Deflection. Your opponent, due to his own expended energy, will continue to
travel forward with his own force of motion. At this point he will be
vulnerable to counter attack.
Hapkido’s
Circular Theory of Self Defense is simple in its design and it application. It
teaches that you simply encounter any attack by not encountering it at all.
Instead, it is far better to step away from the path of force, deflect as
necessary, and then counter attack with the most circularly easy technique so
your opponent will not possess the ability to strike at you with a secondary
attack.
Copyright
© 1993 – All Rights Reserved
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
The Forgotten Fists of Taekwondo
By Scott Shaw
This article first
appeared in the June 2009 issue of Black Belt Magazine
Taekwondo
has long been defined by its advanced kicking techniques. But, taekwondo is
much more than simply a martial art that places its primary focus upon the
legs. At the heart of taekwondo is an exacting system of self-defense that
employs all parts of a practitioner’s body. This is done so that the
practitioner can be confident and emerge victorious from whatever type of
physical altercation they may encounter.
Throughout
the early evolution of taekwondo, from the mid 1940s forward, its self-defense
techniques were continually reviewed and redesigned in order to make taekwondo
an exacting science of self-defense. During the latter part of the
twentieth century, however, taekwondo evolved into an Olympic sport. From this
came many rules and regulations that began to alter the evolution of this
self-defense orientated style of martial arts. Most noticeably was the fact
that many of the original hand and arm strikes, that were elemental to the
foundation of the original art of taekwondo, began to be toned down and in many
cases eliminated altogether. This was due to the fact that in Olympic style
taekwondo competitions, the punch is never allowed to be delivered to an
opponent’s face or head. Punching and other hand techniques are
restricted solely to an opponent’s body.
With
the inauguration of the sport of taekwondo, this has caused many modern
taekwondo instructors to veer their curriculum away from the traditional
self-defense aspects of taekwondo and focus their training primarily upon the
sport facets of the art. There has been much controversy associated with
this redefinition – especially among the early practitioners of the art.
This is due to the fact that many believe that by training a taekwondo student
to focus their hand striking techniques solely upon the body of an opponent,
the natural reaction to strike to the more debilitating locations on the
opponent’s neck and head will be hindered if they ever encounter true combat.
Hidden Inside the
Forms of Taekwondo
It
must be understood that taekwondo was developed to utilize all elements of the
practitioner’s body in the most efficient and effective manner possible. Simply
by looking at the forms (poomse) of taekwondo, one immediately sees that there
are low kicks to the legs, punches to the head, knife hands to the throat, and
elbow strikes to the temples.
With
the dawn of Olympic sport taekwondo, some teachers have moved away from
training their students in the actual self-defense applications detailed in
these forms. Instead, they have left the hand and arm strikes only to be
practiced during the forms segment of a taekwondo class. This has caused
speculation on the part of many novice taekwondo students as to how to actually
use the hand and arm techniques detailed in the forms. This has given birth to
a school of thought that there are secret elements, known only to the masters,
hidden within the forms of taekwondo. This is not the case, however. The only
reason this myth persists is based upon the fact that some modern taekwondo
teachers no longer embrace the essential self-defense applications detailed in
the forms of taekwondo. Instead, they have shifted their focus to
training their students solely on the limited applications of sport taekwondo.
It
must be understood that by not embracing the entire system of self-defense,
detailed in the original definition of taekwondo, many students have been left
with a less than adequate understanding of self-defense. To overcome this
problem, the entire system of taekwondo self-defense training must be embraced
– especially that of the hand and arm strikes. Thereby, making all
taekwondo practitioners the most competent and well-rounded self-defense
technicians possible.
For
this reason, this article will detail some of the understandings of how
taekwondo uses the fist, hand, and arm in the most efficient self-defense
manner possible. From this, the taekwondo practitioner can gain a refined
understanding about the techniques in taekwondo’s arsenal of hand and arm
strikes in order to better understand how they are best employed in actual
self-defense applications.
Taekwondo and the Fist
Taekwondo
possesses a plethora of hand and arm striking techniques. The fist, the
knuckles, the knife hand, the circle hand, and the elbows are all part of this
vast system of self-defense. To this end, the true practitioner of taekwondo
never leaves behind all of the tools of his art. Though they may train
extensively in the rules that make up Olympic sport competition, they also
train their body and mind to be prepared to unleash the most devastating hand
and arm strikes if the self-defense situation ever presents itself.
Rapid Penetration
At
the heart of taekwondo’s self-defense arsenal is the understanding of rapid
penetration of an opponent’s defenses. What this means is that taekwondo
uses a very linear and straightforward method in the unleashing of all of its
offensive and defensive attacks. From this, each taekwondo strike becomes very
rapid and is designed to quickly penetrate an opponent’s defenses.
Simplicity
is the second key to the taekwondo arsenal of self-defense. This means that no
unnecessary or over exaggerated movement is ever employed, as this simply slows
down the process of self-defense. Each offensive or defensive strike is
designed to be rapid and precise in its application and is implemented to
debilitate an opponent in the most rapid manner possible. From these two
understandings comes an extremely exacting system of self-defense that uses no
unnecessary movement and quickly debilitates any attacker.
With
these two tenets as a basis of self-defense understanding, taekwondo’s primary
punching technique is the straight punch. By its very design, the straight
punch allows the practitioner to make contact with the intended target in the
most expedient and powerful fashion possible.
The Straight Punch
The
straight punch is one of the essential tools of taekwondo’s punching arsenal.
The straight punch uses the front fist. It is understood that this punch is
generally the first line of defense one should turn to for self-defense
applications, as it is a natural, easy, and very debilitating technique of
self-defense.
The
taekwondo straight punch is driven forward, directly towards your target, in a
linear fashion. Your shoulder muscles and triceps are the bodily tools
used to propel your fist forward. Your fist can make contact with your
opponent in either a vertical or horizontal positioning.
The
taekwondo straight punch is ideally delivered when the elbow of your punching
arm remains slightly bent upon making target impact. This is initially
accomplished by accurately judging the distance between you and your opponent.
You then make striking impact with your opponent before your arm reaches the
point where it must stretch out or extend unnaturally to reach its desired
strike point. By allowing your elbow to remain slightly bent, whenever
you use a straight punching technique, you not only maintain maximum body
balance but you keep your elbow from possible hypertension, as the momentum of
the punch drives it forward.
The
key element that gives the taekwondo straight punch its power is the fact that
you make contact with your target before you have extended your punching arm
fully. The reason for this is so that your straight punch reaches its
target as close to its point of inception as possible. This allows you to
continue forward with the force and power of the punch -- extending it deeply
into your opponent. If, on the other hand, you have to reach to make
contact with your opponent, you will have utilized and wasted a large portion
of the power of your punch before it ever impacts its intended strike point.
The Taekwondo
Straight Punch Verses the Roundhouse Punch
The
reason the practitioner of taekwondo utilizes the straight punch, as the
preferred punching technique, is the fact that it holds several advantages over
the more common roundhouse punch. The roundhouse punch is delivered when the
punching arm initially swings outwards and then in towards its target. Due to
its design, the roundhouse punch is not only much slower than the straight
punch, but it is much more obvious and easy to defend against, as well.
Other Linear Hand
Strike Techniques
Through
the design and application of the straight punch, the practitioner of taekwondo
delivers other linear hand striking techniques in much the same, very direct
manner. By this style of application, these techniques not only become
very fast and powerful but they additionally become very hard to block -- due
to the extremely linear nature of their delivery.
The Knuckle Fist (Jin
Joo Mok)
The
knuckle fist is formed by making your hand into a fist. You then cause your
forward knuckles to extend forward. Offensive delivery is made with this
weapon of the hand by projecting your bent elbow from mid body level. The
forward motion of this punch is driven forward with your shoulder and arm
muscles. As the knuckle fist is a refined and highly specific striking tool,
its impact is ideally delivered to the solar plexus or central throat of an
opponent.
The Circle Hand (Won
Yuk Soo Do)
The
circle hand is formed by separating your thumb from your forefinger, tightening
the muscles and tendons of the hand, and striking, in a linear fashion, to the
frontal region of an attacker’s neck. The circle hand, which strikes an
opponent’s throat, is also immediately delivered in a very linear style of
attack. From this, the opponent is struck and debilitated before he has
the opportunity to block this offensive technique.
The Palm Strike (Chang
Kwon)
The
palm strike, like the straight punch, is delivered in a very linear fashion.
The palm strike has you bend your fingers at your second knuckle, which exposes
the base of your palm. By bending your fingers in this fashion, the
muscle that extends from your thumb across the base of your hand is tightened,
thus providing a powerful striking weapon. Your palm is then brought back to
your shoulder level. It is unleashed by snapping the strike towards its
target with your shoulder muscles.
The
palm strike is most effectively used to target locations on your opponent’s head
such as: underneath the base of his nose, (which can prove deadly), across the
bridge of his nose, his temples, or the side of his jaw.
The Back Fist (Ye
Kwon)
The
use of the back fist, in modern taekwondo, has virtually disappeared. This
offensive technique was, however, an integral part of the original teachings of
this art.
The
back fist is an extremely rapid offensive weapon. To unleash the back
fist, your elbow is bent and your fist is brought back to your chest at shoulder
level in a vertical position. The back fist is then unleashed at its
target by first snapping your elbow out and then extending the distance of the
back fist’s attack from your shoulder. The back fist is generally aimed at your
opponent’s head.
The
back fist is extremely difficult to defend against. This is due to the
fact that it is a very rapid striking weapon and once impact is made, your fist
is rapidly recoiled. The back fist can, therefore, be used multiple times
when additional striking measures are necessary.
The Bottom Fist (Yoo
Kwon)
The
bottom fist is formed in a traditional fist fashion. The striking element
of this weapon is the base of your hand, between your wrist and the base of
your little finger. The bottom fist is delivered in a downward striking
motion. It is ideally targeted at the top of the head, or the bridge of the
nose of your opponent when you are both in a vertical position. In other
instances, this strike can be used to strike downward to any location on your
opponent’s body you find open for immediate attack.
The Knife Hand (Soo
Do)
To
form the knife hand, the fingers are extended and the muscles and tendons in
the hand and wrist are tightened. The initial mistake many novice taekwondo
practitioners make when attempting to use the knife hand as a weapon is to
relax the tension in their hand, either just before or when the knife hand
strikes. This should never be done, for you can easily break bones in
your hand.
The
basic strike weapon of the knife hand is along the base of the hand. This
extends from where the wrist ends to where the little finger begins. This is
along its arched side and is the location where the knife hand develops the
most strength by the aforementioned tightening techniques.
The
extension of the arm and then the snapping of the elbow propel the knife hand
strike. The momentum developed by the snapping out of the elbow should
never be allowed to entirely control your knife hand assault. The elbow should
remain slightly bent when the knife hand technique is delivered, thus
maintaining control over your movement.
The
knife hand is not a randomly effective weapon such as the fist -- which can be
allowed to strike virtually anywhere on an opponent’s body. Instead, the knife
hand is ideally suited to strike very specific locations on an opponent’s body:
the front of his neck, across his nose, to his temples, and the side of his
ribs.
The Inside Knife
Hand (Yuk Soo Do)
The
inside knife hand is formed in much the same way as the traditional knife hand.
Initially, the muscles of the fingers and hand are tensed. The difference
between this offensive technique and that of the traditional knife hand is that
impact is made with the inside ridge of your hand. To this end, the thumb
of the striking hand is pulled tightly into the palm, thereby exposing the
inner ridge of the hand.
Due
to the fact that it is very easy to damage the hand and thumb if the technique
is unleashed improperly, this advanced taekwondo hand striking technique is
only used by the most advanced practitioners who truly understand this hand
technique’s proper usage. The ideal opponent striking techniques to be
impacted by the inside knife hand are the side of an opponent’s neck, the front
of his neck, and across the bridge of his nose. As this technique does
not possess a lot of power, it is not an ideal technique to be used on other,
firmer, bodily locations.
The Elbow Strike (Keum
Chi)
As
can be seen in a number of taekwondo forms, the elbow strike is a commonly
employed tool of offense and defense. To the taekwondo practitioner, the elbow
becomes an exacting weapon in numerous self-defense applications.
The
forward elbow strike witnesses you bending your elbow, exposing the protruding
elbow bone at the base of your forearm. This bone is your striking tool.
This forward elbow strike is ideally targeted at a vital strike point on your
opponent’s head.
To
perform the forward elbow strike, bring your elbow up to shoulder level and
pivot your body at waist level. By stepping in with your lead foot, you make an
extremely powerful impact to your target.
The
forward elbow strike is an ideal weapon to be used in close contact
in-fighting. It is an ideal weapon on your opponent when your opponent is
moving in on you or has taken a powerful forward hold on your body. The
ideal strike points for this type of defense are your opponent’s temples or any
place on his face.
The
rear elbow strike is an ideal weapon to use if an attacker has grabbed a hold
of your body from behind. If you have been grabbed from behind, the rear
elbow strike witnesses you pivoting backwards, unleashing your bent elbow from
shoulder level, making impact to virtually any part of your attacker’s body,
but most ideally to his head and face.
If
you have not yet been grabbed from behind but your attacker is close, you can
add the additional momentum driven movement of your body into the strike by
pivoting at your waist level, as your rear elbow strike is unleashed.
Using the Entire Art
As
can be easily understand, taekwondo utilizes much more in its self-defense
arsenal than simply its feet. It also takes the hands and arms of the
practitioner and turns them into exacting tools of self-defense. Though this
expansive system of self-defense has continued to be refined over the decades,
instead of diminishing its techniques it is essential that the true taekwondo
enthusiasts continue to embrace all aspects of the art, thereby make the
practitioner a more complete and well-rounded martial artist.
Copyright © 2009 –
All Rights Reserved
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Integrating Hapkido and Taekwondo
By Scott Shaw
This article first
appeared in the July 2002 issue of Taekwondo Times.
As
anyone who has studied or researched the Korean martial arts readily
understands, Tae Kwon Do and Hapkido are two very different systems of
self-defense. If one were to compare these systems, the differences would be
overwhelming. Yet, as they were both born in post World War II Korea, there are
many instructors who teach both of these systems in their schools.
How
is this possible? To understand how these systems have come to interact over
the decades, we can begin by defining their origins, their differences, and
then move forward into a discussion on how each system can aid in the
self-defense applications of the other.
The Foundation of Tae Kwon Do
Tae
Kwon Do began its formation at the end of World War II when the Korean
Peninsula was liberated from the occupying forces of Japan. With newly acquired
liberation, the Korean people vowed to never again be overthrown by a foreign
power. Thus, they began to develop not only a powerful military but to focus
upon the realms of personal self-defense as well.
As
the practice of the indigenous Korean martial arts had been banned during the
Japanese occupation, the majority of the ancient manuscripts on these systems
had also been destroyed. The Korean people had very little to link them to
their historic systems of self-defense. In reality, during Japanese occupation,
the only system legally practiced in Korea was Judo.
During
this era, many Koreans relocated to Japan during the occupation. While there,
many studied various systems of Japanese martial arts, most commonly, Shotokan
Karate. Upon Korean independence, several of these practitioners returned to
their native land and began to teach the system of self-defense they had
studied abroad.
Won
Kuk Lee, a Shotokan black belt, opened the first school of self-defense in the
newly liberated Korea. It was known as Chung Do Kwan. Sang Sup Chun, founder of
Yung Moo Kwan, quickly followed him. Chun originally studied Judo in his Korean
homeland and while attending college in Japan, became a Shotokan black belt as
well. Byung In Yoon, a black belt in the Okinawan based system of Shudokan
Karate, taught at Chun's school for approximately one year until he left and
founded his own school, the Chang Moo Kwan.
While
living in China and working on the Southern Manchuria Railroad, Hwang Kee
founded the system that eventually became known as Tan Soo Do Moo Kuk Kwan. Kee
is said to have studied systems of Japanese and Chinese self-defense that laid
the foundations for his art.
Song
Moo Kwan, founded by Shotokan stylist Byung Jick Ro opened a school soon after
Hwang Kee. Ro had earlier attempted to open a school of self-defense in
occupied Korea. He did not succeed due to the repressive conditions laid down
by the occupying Japanese military. He successfully reopened his school post
World War II.
With
these initial kwans, all established by 1946, the birth of Tae Kwon Do was set
in motion. When General Hong Hi Choi, also a Shotokan black belt, began to
unify these varying systems under the banner of Tae Kwon Do, there were more
similarities than differences. This is in no small part due to their common
Japanese heritage.
Tae Kwon Do: The Japanese Connection
At
the root of Tae Kwon Do is Japanese Karate. Though many historians wish to
negate this face, historical Tae Kwon Do began this way. Once the newly born
Korean schools of self-defense began to take hold, however, several of the
founders did reach back into Korean history and integrate any remaining
knowledge of the ancient Korean martial arts into their twentieth century
systems. As with many systems of self-defense, Tae Kwon Do practitioners have
continued to expand upon the roots of the art and have taken Tae Kwon Do to a
new, more expansive level than what can be seen in traditional Japanese Karate.
It is for this reason that only rudimentary similarities remain between the
Japanese and Korean martial arts.
The Foundation of Hapkido
Yong
Sul Choi formalized the art that eventually became known as Hapkido. While
living in Japan for nearly forty years, Choi worked for the patriarch of Daito
Ryu Aikijitsu, Sokaku Takeda. He learned and mastered the art of Daito Ryu from
this source.
After
the death of Takeda, Choi returned to Korea and worked as a roadside rice cake
salesman and hog farmer. As fate would have it, one day he went to a brewery
owned by Dong Jin Suh. His son, Bok Sup Shuh witnessed Choi, then in his
forties, rapidly defeat several young men who attacked him. When Suh inquired
about this style of self-defense, Choi told him that it was Daito Ryu. Choi's
abilities so impressed Suh, who was already a black belt in Judo, that he
became his first student. This set the development of Hapkido in motion.
The
system that Choi initially taught was a very pure form of Daito Ryu. It later
became integrated with the Judo knowledge that Suh possessed. Thus, one can
trace many of the Hapkido sleeve and lapel grab defenses to Suh's mastery of
Judo.
Though
many people wish to falsely date the origin of Hapkido to centuries ago in
Korea, this is not the case. Choi never made that claim. Initially, he called
his system Dae Dong Ryu Yu Sool. This is the Korean translation for Daito Ryu
Jujitsu.
Tae Kwon Do and Hapkido: The
Differences
At
the root of the differences between Tae Kwon Do and Hapkido is their defensive
methodology. Tae Kwon Do, particularly the style practiced by the World
Taekwondo Federation, is essentially an offensive art. its techniques are
devised to encounter an opponent, penetrate his defenses, and offensively
strike him in the most powerful manner possible. Hapkido is just the opposite.
The
basis of Hapkido is founded upon defense. Even at its most elementary level,
Hapkido techniques are designed to teach the student to deflect punches or
remove themselves from the various holds an attacker may have upon his body,
and then send the opponent to the ground with a well-placed joint lock, throw
or a powerful counter strike.
The Stance
The
stance is the next highly differing element that separated Tae Kwon Do from
Hapkido. As detailed, the root of Hapkido is Daito Ryu Aikijitsu. Daito Ryu is
very different from many other forms of the Japanese martial arts, particularly
Shotokan, that influenced the birth of Tae Kwon Do. The fighting stances of
these arts demonstrate the differences. Whereas many hard style schools of
Japanese karate use a very stiff and firm stance, Daito Ryu is just the
opposite, it employs a very free flowing from of movement – with less reliance
upon the firm and locked stance.
To
understand the differences between the stances of the two arts, all one needs
to do is observe the formalized stances practiced in Tae Kwon Do forms. In Tae
Kwon Do, almost every offensive or defensive movement is delivered by first
entering into a very firm front, side, or back stance – only then is the
defensive or offensive movement deployed.
Conversely,
Hapkido allows its practitioner to move in a free flowing, natural stance
pattern. This allows the Hapkido stylist to effortlessly flow from one
technique into the next until an opponent is defeated. This is not to say that
Hapkido uses no stance. This is the mistake many make when attempting to define
Hapkido. Hapkido does use stances – they are simply far less rigid than those
employed by Tae Kwon Do. For example, the Hapkido practitioner does not enter
into a deep front stance before performing a straight punch.
Linear Verses Circular
The
final defining difference between Tae Kwon Do and Hapkido is their style of
movement. Tae Kwon Do uses a linear pattern of movement while Hapkido employs a
circular structure for its defense.
Many
Tae Kwon Do stylists will immediately comment, “We use circular techniques. We
have the roundhouse kick, the spinning kick, and so on.” Though these
techniques are circular in nature, the overall delineation of the art is to
move in a linear, straight-to-the-target pattern. This is especially
illustrated in the way WTF Taekwondo has redefined several of its elementary
kicks. No longer is the sidekick or roundhouse kick swung out and then in
towards its target. Today, it is initially brought up in essentially a front
kick pattern and then it is unleashed from the central axis of the body, making
it more rapid and directly targeted.
Alternatively,
Hapkido embraces a circular pattern of movement as the source-point for its
techniques. What this means is that the Hapkido practitioner is taught to never
encounter an opponent directly. Instead, by circularly pivoting out of the way
of an attack or by side-stepping and then circularly deflecting an attack, the
practitioner of Hapkido maintains control over an opponent by utilizing the
attacker's own expended energy. The Hapkido stylist emerges victorious from a
physical altercation without ever entering into a blow-by-blow fight.
Merging Tae Kwon Do and
Hapkido
Now
that the differences of Tae Kwon Do and Hapkido have been defined, the question
can understandably be asked: How are these two very different systems of
self-defense be taught as one art? The simple answer is by synchronizing the
best of what both of these arts have to offer.
Undoubtedly,
one of the first practitioners to begin the integration of Tae Kwon Do with
Hapkido was notably Grandmaster Han Jae Ji. After studying with Yong Sul Choi
for a number of years at Hapkido's base near Taegu, South Korea, Ji relocated
to Seoul in 1957 where he opened a school. Central to the location where the
various schools of the modern Korean martial arts were congregating under the
banner of Tae Kwon Do, Ji began to integrate the various understandings
utilized by Tae Kwon Do into Hapkido. He was the first to add the advanced
kicking arsenal, commonly associated with Tae Kwon Do, into the Hapkido
curriculum. Keep in mind, Choi never taught this style of elaborate kicking
offense within his schools of Hapkido.
Integrating The Stance
Now
that it is understood how the birth of Tae Kwon Do – Hapkido integration was
set in motion, we can now take a closer look at how certain factors of each art
may aid the other and help the practitioner become a more refined martial
artist. To begin this process, we can view the stance.
As
described, Tae Kwon Do focuses primarily upon a formal “Hard stance” for the
majority of its techniques. The Hapkido practitioner can benefit from this
understanding when entering into certain joint locking, throwing or striking
techniques. The more formalized stances of Tae Kwon Do can be very useful to
the Hapkido stylist because as one enters a firmer stance, a technique, such as
a joint lock or throw, can be delivered in a more substantial and deliberate
manner.
Traditionally,
the Hapkido practitioner executes many of his joint locks or throws from a low,
informal stance or one that has him place one knee upon the ground. Though this
style of stance is very useful for certain types of throwing techniques, there
is a limitation to its usage. First of all, as the Hapkido stylist placed
himself low to the ground, he must raise himself up to his feet in order to
rapidly reestablish himself, if for example, his opponent quickly moves or
releases himself from the impending joint lock or throw. This takes time, which
is not always available in a fight.
If
the Hapkido practitioner locks into a more rigid footing, such as a front
stance, when delivering a strike or a throw, he is then more upwardly mobile as
he has not gone on one knee or positioned himself low to the ground. if he must
rapidly redirect his actions, he can do so in a much simpler pattern of
movement as he has remained standing on his feet.
Though
a rigid stance may help some techniques, just the opposite is true of others.
This is where the Tae Kwon Do stylist may use the Hapkido natural stance. For
example, it is not always necessary for a person to enter into a formal front
stance when delivering several of the more common strikes, such as the straight
punch, front kick or sidekick. The Tae Kwon Do stylist therefore can use the
Hapkido understanding of the loose natural stance for many of these offensive
actions. They will then be able to move in a more rapid and less restricted
pattern.
The Form
Traditional
Hapkido does not possess forms. many modern practitioners of Hapkido exposed to
Tae Kwon Do integrate the practice of teaching a prescribed pattern of movement
into their overall Hapkido curriculum.
There
has been a long-standing debate in the martial arts as to the effectiveness of
form training. It is not the purpose of this article to discuss this
controversy. None-the-less, form training has been proven to be effective in educating,
particularly novice students, in some of the ways defensive actions may precede
offensive techniques. This stated, the Hapkido student may learn the advanced
precision of executing and perfecting fighting techniques that can be mastered
by performing a prescribed set of formalized movements.
Hand-To-Hand Self-Defense
In
the early stages of Tae Kwon Do's development, hand-to-hand combat techniques
were a staple. As time progressed, especially among WTF stylists, joint locks
and throws have virtually disappeared from Tae Kwon Do training. This is where
the traditional Tae Kwon Do student can gain enormous depth in his
understanding of self-defense - integrating the vast knowledge of deflection,
joint locks, ground fighting, and throws inherent to Hapkido into defensive
methodology.
Conversely,
Hapkido possesses a plethora of advanced throwing techniques. Though many of
these techniques are beautiful to watch in a demonstration environment, many of
them are useless in the random kill-or-be-killed confrontations that happen on
the street. For this reason, the Hapkido stylist can learn from the Tae Kwon Do
stylist how to streamline techniques and use only the most rapid and
penetrating of offensive and defensive methodologies by removing any
application that is too slow, too elaborate or too difficult to perform.
The Evolving Korean Martial
Arts
As
you now understand, though Tae Kwon Do and Hapkido are highly developed,
individualized arts, they can each benefit from integrating their defensive
ideologies. As we progress into the twenty-first century, these martial arts
will continue to evolve. However; there will obviously be some controversy
among the traditional hard liners about this fact. Nonetheless, as the
integrating of Tae Kwon Do and Hapkido has already been set in motion, this
pattern will continue with each art learning from the other.
Copyright © 2002 –
All Rights Reserved
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)