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KENPO KARATEI started my training in the martial arts
in the year 1956, in Pasadena California at Ed's first school. It was
a small space rented in another building. Later we moved to a bigger building
that was his primary schooluntil he built his own studio. I trained in
the group classes there and privately with Ed, receiving my first, second,
and third degree black belts from Mr. Parker. After receiving my first
black belt, I opened a Kenpo school in Pomona California, and within the
year, my school became an Ed Parker franchise school. |
What is Reality? Several years ago, young guys started coming into my club asking if I taught grappling. I told them that we taught some techniques that might be considered grappling, but they were not the primary focus of what we taught, and were not introduced until a student was well into the system. When I asked them why they were particularly interested in grappling, they looked at me as if I needed a bit of instruction in the "real" world, and advised me, in that superior tone of voice only the inexperienced have, "Well, 90% of all fights end up on the ground, you know!" The first time this occurred, I just wrote
it off as someone who had been told something by his father, brother or
friend, and repeated it so as to sound knowledgeable. The second time,
I remembered that I had heard this before. About the third time, I realized
that this was a pattern. Thereafter, I told these young fellas that, although
100% of losers end up I had never seen nor heard of the UFC, as
I didn't watch much T.V. or go to fight events. Nor did I read the national
"McMartial Arts" magazines. I still don't. As Jim Harrison says,
"Most are written for the average 12 year old yellow belt."
I had never had an interest in sport fighting, either as a competitor
or a spectator, for the main reason that fighting was never fun for me.
When I was young, I hated it. When I got older, I liked it - but that,
I later realized, was only because I was nuts. For me, fighting was always
potentially life or death, and I was ill-equipped, both mentally and One day, one of my students brought in a
video tape that showed a match of Royce Gracie fighting in one of the
UFCs, so several of us sat down to watch it. The fight went to the ground
pretty quickly, just as my young visitors had advised me that "90%
of all fights" do, but only because Gracie At one point toward the end of the match,
I paused the tape. Gracie had his opponent in a hold that left a number
of vital targets (on Gracie) totally exposed, yet the "striker"
did not even attempt to strike any of these targets. I asked some of my
students who were watching the tape with me to I didn't understand how so many people could
think that what I had just watched was the "ultimate" fighting
system. If Gracie, or anyone else, tried to fight
like that on the street, he would have soon rolled onto something hard,
sharp or both, had a knife stuck up between his ribs or a brick laid If you want reality, start by taking the
padding off the fence. Now make sure that the sharp ends are sticking
up above the top rail, and that the top rail is chest to throat level
and some is torn off the post. A little barb wire on top helps the reality
too. Now cut off most of the lights and throw a bunch of cinderblocks,
gravel, broken bottles, boards and discarded Again, my purpose is not to disparage the
UFC or any other fight game, but to make the point that it is not "reality".
And it shouldn't be. Reality is no fun to watch, or to be a participant
in. Rather, the use of the term Mixed Martial Arts is more appropriate
and more truthful. It acknowledges Competition can bring out the best in people. Reality can bring out the worst. And the difference can be as great as that between life and death.
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