
MY THOUGHTS
ON JEET KUNE DO
I
started training in Jeet Kune Do in the year 1967 in the Jun Fan
Gung Fu Institute in Chinatown Los Angeles, Ca. Dan Inasanto,
my friend and fellow Black Belt, under Ed Parker was Bruce Lee's
assistant and protege at this time. I had talked to Dan about
the training before I went down there. I went my first time with
Steve Golden, another Kenpo Black Belt, and friend. At this time
he told me a little about what to expect since I was to be interviewed
by Dan first then Bruce. Dan basically told me what questions
Bruce would be asking .The main thing that Bruce said was that
he didn’t want the Kenpo and the JKD mixed, which I agreed
to, he also made it clear that he didn’t think much of any
other system, the "classical mess" was what he refered
to them as.
Notice
I say SYSTEM ,Bruces own words.
The
first class I went to at the JFGFI, Bruce was demonstrating his
foot and hand speed. I'd seen this demonstrated before at the
Long Beach Internationals where most people tried to block with
their lead hand. When he picked me to demonstrate on, I figured
that I would use the rear or cover hand which was closer since
he said he was going to tap me on the side of the head, he still
caught me ten out of 10, and I never saw him move and found out
later that not only could he hit you at this speed but could also
take your head off.
When
we started, as I said, we were learning Jeet Kune Do at the Jun
Fan Gung Fu Institute. At this time I had never heard the word
concepts used, Bruce's principles yes, concepts no. I was only
in Chinatown for the year 1967, so maybe I missed it?
When
Bruce closed the JKD schools down, Dan got the OK from Bruce to
teach a few students in his garage. I was experiencing some financial
and transportation problems at that time but I was communicating
with Dan on the phone. I believe some of the students that trained
with Dan during the garage period were Jerry Poteet, Steve Golden,
Bob Bremer, Pete Jacob,s and Daniel Lee, who during sparring broke
two of my ribs with hook kicks I never saw (thanks Dan).
When
I started back, the students had built a gym in Dans back yard.
Some of the students I remember training with then were Jerry
Poteet, Tim Tackett, Ted and Tana Lucay, Moses Torres, his friend
Ramon, Joe Poe, and Richard Lee....Richard Lee was also in Chinatown.
Most of the senior or JKD group are in the photo on my JKD page,
I'm in the middle next to Ted Lucay. This same group plus many
others continued on when the Kali Academy opend up. During the
first year of the Kali Academy, I still had never heard the word
concepts.
Some
instructors say only Bruce could do Jeet Kune Do, so you could
learn Jun Fan but not JKD. If this is true, why were all the classes
back then called the JKD class and not the Jun fan class? Some
say that JKD wasn’t a system or style, if so, then why did
Bruce ask me not to mix the two systems Kenpo and JKD ?
I
believe it was a system with a structure to be used as a guide,
even if your individual results were different, because we all
have different attributes. They should be different for each of
us, hence the term "Your JKD is not my JKD". Now if
you go outside the structure by "adding or taking away"
as Jerry Poteet says, don’t call it JKD. For this reason
if I add some thing that I feel is benificial from Kenpo, I call
it Chinese Kick Boxing and I give a separate certificate from
the Lucay Lucay Kali JKD certificate. Ted Lucay Lucay called what
he taught "Kali Jeet Kune Do", meaning the Filipino
Martial Arts with Bruces principles added to it.
These
are my thoughts, there are many thoughts like these thoughts ,but
these are mine.
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