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American Kenpo Karate Problems!

The Things That Went Wrong With American Kenpo Karate

Here’s a short article on some of the things that happened Kenpo Karate, and made it less than it could be. If you disagree, leave a comment and detail why. Have a great work out! Al

I walked into my first American Kenpo Karate dojo back in 1967. This was the Rod Martin variation of Tracys Kenpo, which was an offshoot of Ed Parker Kenpo Karate. Therein is the first problem with American Kenpo.

It grew too fast. In the orient teachers didn’t teach until they had a minimum of a decade of experience, had studied under a variety of teachers and had learned a variety of martial arts styles. We were borning senseis every three years, which is how long it took to make a black belt back then.

Of course, there is also the problem of which kenpo is the true kenpo? Ed Parker, you see, developed five different kenpos. If you learned an earlier version, is it now considered…less than kenpo?

And, this bring us to the fact that there are variations on the variations. There are people who have evolved combat kenpo and tournament kenpo and MMA kenpo, and so on. It seems there are as many kenpos as there are people studying it.

I first became aware of this problem, too many variations, while putting together Monkey Boxing, which, in one sense, is my version of kenpo, or at least as close as I can come to a kenpo. I had studied the version of a version of it way back when, then I picked up Larry Tatum Kenpo, and I had some of the kenpo connection material, then I came across rather massive instruction manuals on Olympic kenpo, and I believe I had two other versions of the art.

As I went through the endless techniques I saw how the changes were sometimes small, and sometimes large, but always unique to the person making the changes. Now, to be sure, every art should be an expression of the individual, and kenpo does seem suited to this. Still, it would be nice to have a specific set of concepts, and maybe a list of techniques that would standardize the kenpo field before individual martial arts masters expanded it with their own variations.

In the end, I boiled the techniques of five complete arts, with a couple or three partial arts, down to forty techniques. I am sure there will be some who shake their heads at this. After all, how can one summate over 500 techniques, and all the evolutions thereof, with but 40 techniques?

Well, I offer no excuse, I merely invite you to try your own hand at collecting sufficient variations that you might have a complete overview of the art. Then, start organizing the data. It will be difficult, definitely a number nine headache, but you might find yourself a true master of American Kenpo Karate.

Al Case, the greatest martial arts writer of all time (nearly 2 million words in print), is at Monster Martial Arts. You can examine his 40 technique version of American Kenpo Karate there. Make sure you pick up his free ebook on Matrixing, and sign up for the newsletter.

Fighting Without Fighting!

Newsletter 1049 ~ subscribe on the right…

I want to talk about
fighting without fighting,
but first…

Thanks to everybody for making How to Fix Karate a Success!
It’s on Amazon.

Now then…
Fighting without fighting.
First, you have to learn to fight.
Nothing stops a fellow from trying to mug you
like him knowing you’re going to come out on top.
Get your black belt,
get zen confidence,
nobody is going to bother you.
You learned to fight so you don’t have to fight.

This is the crux of the second amendment,
for those of you who wondered.

So,
somebody STILL wants to fight.
This is the one that it took me years to figure out,
and that nobody knows.
I figured it out while figuring out Neutronics.

In this universe there are only objects that move around.
So you’re sitting there peacefully,
and some guy starts moving towards you
and he wants to conk you.
I simply say,
‘you’re coming towards me.’
And he goes away.
Isn’t that weird?

His body is part of the universe,
and his motion has been detected,
and let me tell give you a little bit of data.
The guy that wants to hit you
doesn’t want to be hit.
Except for the truly insane,
nobody wants to be hit,
and the insane don’t really want to either,
if you dig into them a bit.

So you can defeat anybody
simply by observing that they are coming towards you.
They know you see them,
and they don’t want to get hit,
so they leave.

Now,
here is the truly amazing thing about this,
it works against almost any sentient thing.
I’ve used it when a dog wanted to bite me.
A couple of times.

I’ve used it against salespeople.
Isn’t that a kick in the head?
But salespeople who seek you out,
or are a little too much in their sales pitch,
are trying to bully you into something you don’t want.
you just look at them and say,
“You’re coming towards me.”

I’ve used it against people who were bullies.

I’ve used it against people who simply bugged me.

I’ve even used it against those most dangerous of souls…Karens!

However,
it might not work if you haven’t studied martial arts
and gained that peace of soul
that is the end result of the real martial arts.

And I would be careful in a combat zone.
People in riot are not sentient,
take a look at the Kyle Rittenhouse situation if you doubt.

You can use deviations.
‘I see you’ is good.
And there are others.
But the main thing is to see them,
and let them know they’ve been seen.

Okay,
hope you have fun with this one,
and here’s the obligatory ads,
this for the two two volumes I just published…

How to Fix Karate! (volumes one and two)

volume one is at

And volume two is at…

HAVE A GREAT WORK OUT!

Al

And don’t forget to check out the interview
https://anchor.fm/dale-gillilan/episodes/S1E10—Al-Case-e12e3np

BTW
I’ve got nothing but five star reviews on

The Science of Government.
It’s really nothing more than applying matrixing to politics.

Matrixing + Politics = Sanity

I told you matrixing works with anything.

Here’s the link…