The Arnis Connection

Arnis and Better Hand Technique

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Have you ever attended a tournament and carefully observed the forms competition? You've probably found that Kata and Forms were split into two generic categories, hard and soft. Likely, both categories contained competitors from many diverse styles. Even casual observers can identify the Okinawan forms as something apart from the Chinese or the Korean. A trained observer might observe that a competitor is executing a form that has its origins in Northern China or in a specific style, such as Hap Ki Do, Shotokan or Kenpo.

Later in the day, you check out the Kumite (fighting competition). The differences that were so evident in forms competition are completely gone. If the fighters are wearing protective equipment, you'll note that after a short while each fighter starts looking like the next. It's clear something is happening here. Fighting under tournament rules has resulted in major dilution of the traditional fighting styles, producing a composite "style" common to the point fighting arena.

Though instructors continue to debate the merits of tournament fighting, even the staunchest supporters of tournament competition agree that much of what constitutes the "pure", or "traditional" approach to the martial arts, has eroded in recent years.

There are still instructors who can describe their early training as years spent mastering a handful of stances and techniques. The question that presents itself to the modern practitioner is, "Why is it that so few of the moves and stances found in traditional practice find their way into tournament fighting competition?"

Instructors who have invested the years necessary to master Kata insist that each form is a "filing cabinet" for techniques originating during periods where all fighting, in the countryside or at the training hall was "for real." In that context, a missed block meant a slash from a sword or a bone crunching kick to the rib section. The masters of that era perfected the dynamics of power, movement, balance, timing and coordination. Mistakes meant defeat, injury and perhaps even loss of life. Realizing their "secrets" could be lost in the transmission from teacher to student, or during the course of time, these teachers "packaged" their knowledge into patterns or forms. If practiced with proper attitude, and indomitable spirit, these exercises guaranteed the dedicated student would be able to move freely, while maintaining knockdown power at all times.

In an era where life and death confrontations are rare, and fighting is normally done under a tightly controlled protocol, how does the modern martial artist uncover the "secrets" of the masters? Should he or she commit himself or herself to a spartan program of forms practice? Would it benefit to find some partners who are willing to practice "no holds barred", and perfect their technique through "reality" training?

Though some very fine practitioners have successfully adopted these paths, the vast majority of modern day students cannot make the commitment to practice forms for hours each day, or risk walking into the office with a broken nose or blackened eyes. The challenge for instructors today is to find new approaches which guarantee modern students will have the same level of fighting ability as their historical predecessors. One such approach is the incorporation of Arnis or Filipino stick fighting into the training format.

A spokesman for this approach is Sensei David Bird of Tacoma, Washington. In addition to having mastered Arnis, Sensei Bird holds advanced dan rankings in Shotokan Karate, as well as Tae Kwon Do, and has also spent periods of time working with established Masters throughout the Pacific Northwest. Sensei Bird explained he had taught empty hand fighting for several years before he had opportunity to study Arnis with the late Cui Brocka, a Filipino master living in Tacoma. "I immediately noticed that my empty hand fighting began to have more of a flow. Things like joint locks, throws, trips or breaks which existed in theory but not in the practice of my empty hand fighting became an integral part of my arsenal." Enthusiastic about his discovery, Sensei Bird plunged into the study of Arnis and, after becoming certified as an instructor, incorporated it into the regular training program established for his students.

"It's one thing training for competition," explains Sensei Bird, "but quite another thing to take the concepts or philosophical foundation of a particular style and meld it into a personal approach to self defense." Sensei Bird's students begin class by working the empty hand techniques. Once that is accomplished, they spend up to an hour each class in Arnis training.
 

 


 
Sequence #1:  Attacker strikes at Sensei Bird's left temple.  Bird "flows" to the right, away from the circular power of the strike.  Simultaneously, he "checks" the strike with his own right hand, and counters with a back fist.  The final photograph shows Bird using left hand leverage to pull opponent off balance and into the counter.

According to Sensei Bird, "We've all encountered trapping, blocking, parrying, sweeping and flow in our traditional training, but once people put on the fighting gear, where does it all go?" One of Bird's senior Arnis students observed that, "Concepts such as flow, joint locks, throws, trips and breaks have a place in real world fighting, but the only place most students are exposed to them is at the movies, where fighting scenes are carefully choreographed."

Early in his stickfighting training, Bird learned that trapping, blocking, parrying, sweeping and flow are at the core of Arnis. "The reason is simple. It doesn't work without mastering those concepts and integrating them into your movement. We're not playing tag out there. Being hit with the stick means end of fight! Arnis means that when your opponent attacks, you instantly neutralize the threat, gain control of your opponent, then terminate the encounter."
 

 


 
Sequence #2:  This attack is directed at Sensei Bird's right temple.  Again, he responds by "flowing" away from the attacker's power while he checks the attack with his right hand.  Next, he parries, or redirects the blow with his left hand, as he closes the gap with a right hand counter.

According to Bird, there are many families of movement within Arnis. Foremost among them are Solo Baston, incorporating one stick while the empty hand parries and traps; Sinawali, using two sticks in complex striking patterns; and Espada y Daga, or sword and dagger. A beginning student will learn basic striking patterns, appropriate parries and the most efficient block for each strike. Though there are no stances per se (the student is free to use the foot positioning he or she is most accustomed to), an integral part of early training is mastering flow. Essentially, this means to always be moving away from the opponent's power, and like a wave of water, to engulf the opponent when he is fully extended. The advanced disarms, come later, combining parries, traps and sweeps in dynamic but efficient responses to attacks. As one of Bird's Black Belt students relates, "What can make this art difficult for some people is that it's so direct and simple. Because of the way most of us have trained, we've lost that simplicity and have trained ourselves to always carry a lot of 'excess baggage'. The principles of Arnis help the martial artist to 'unload' and get back to the core of his or her style, whatever that style is."
 

Sequence #3:  Demonstrating just how "direct" Arnis can be, Sensei Bird executes a simultaneous "check" and counter attack to attacker's eyes.

Once several months are spent learning the basics of Arnis, students will learn the empty hand responses to opponents armed with a stick. "For the student interested in perfecting his own fighting style, this is the icing on top of the cake. By this point, the Arnis student has learned enough about flow, trapping, parrying and redirecting the opponent's force to incorporate these concepts into empty hand responses to attacks, in essence effecting a bridge between the study of Arnis and the martial artist's native style."
 

 

  Sequence #4:  Executing a complex sequence, Bird responds to a left temple strike by simultaneously "checking" the attack and stunning the opponent with a driving upward palm to the head.  As opponent is being hit, Bird's left arm "snakes" around opponent's right arm, "trapping" the arm and weapon.  A strike to opponent's arm rips the weapon loose.  Bird lets the weapon drop from under his arm into his left hand, then strikes at opponent's head.

It wasn't long before other martial artists and instructors took notice of what was happening at Bird's studio. Sensei Bird, realizing that training in Arnis could benefit his contemporaries as it had his own students, created the Northwest Arnis Association in August 1984. When this article was first published (September 1987), the organization numbered in excess of 200, representing a virtual cross-section of all martial arts. Sensei Bird conducts seminars at member schools, stressing low cost and bringing the knowledge to as many martial artists as possible. Once the techniques are presented and refined at seminar, they are practiced and further refined under the direction of the respective home school teacher, ensuring they are incorporated into the respective art. All involved testify the study of Arnis has brought deeper understanding to the core concepts of their own style.

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The benefits of the "Arnis Connection" are best summarized by the head of one associate school who states, "My people are doing things they've never done before. They're more fluid but at the same time, are penetrating openings with more authority. As far as we're concerned, Arnis is the 'missing link' in modern martial arts education. We're delighted to have discovered it." 

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