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July
31, 2007
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Table
of Contents:
I. Two Myths of Tactical
Movement
II. Upcoming Street Survival
Seminars


Two
Myths of Tactical Movement
By Jeffrey Brooks Guest Street Survival Newsline Columnist
There are two myths that
prevent people from making the most of their bodies and its ability
to move and deliver power in a combative situation. Both of these
common beliefs come from treating the body as if it were a machine.
Introducing beginners to
DT or to martial arts may require a simplified presentation of body
mechanics. However, we reduce our effectiveness and jeopardize our
safety if we get stuck at that level.
The body moves in a more
sophisticated way than any existing machine. If we learn how to tap
into its potential, we can increase our tactical ability by orders
of magnitude.

Myth
#1
Myth number one is that
the body moves like a set of levers. If that were true, a punch
would look like a straight, linear thrust, like a piston moving in a
fixed path.
In that case the power
of the punch would be limited to the length of the bones of the arm
and the power of the muscles of the arms.
You will be able to
produce much more power if your body pivots in the vertical plane
adding to the thrust of the arms like a camshaft thrusting pistons
forward and pulling them back. Trainees are sometimes told to "put
your shoulder into it" or to "use your hips." That is making use of
the cam and piston model of body mechanics.
But the mechanics of cam
and piston still produces far less power than the human body is
capable of.
The body actually is
designed to convey waves of energy, so that every bone and muscle in
the entire body, from head to toe, is incorporated in producing the
punch (or any other technique.) In this way the punch becomes a
ballistic expression of force instead of a merely mechanical one.
Because the joints of
our body are spanned by connective tissue and muscle, the angles of
relationship between the bones are not like hinged levers. In fact
they produce an analog transmission of energy, a flow, like the wave
of energy that travels through the length of a whip.
If you learn to use your
body to transmit energy in this way, you can increase the power of
your strike or kick enormously. No need to add muscle or aerobic
capacity (although both are good!)--all you have to do in order to
multiply your power right
now is to learn to use this principle.
This is not something
esoteric, limited to one brand of DT, or limited to martial arts
training or combatives.
Using the whole body to
transmit energy is fundamental to moving skillfully in all advanced
athletics. Look at a pitcher or batter in baseball; a tennis player;
a great golfer hitting a ball off the tee; a competitive swimmer
making the most of their stroke. Especially if you can see it in
slow motion, you will see the way they have learned to use waves of
energy moving through their entire body to produce maximum power.
The bodies of those
athletes do not look like mechanical systems made of levers. They do
not look like cam-and-piston systems. They look fluid and whip-like.
That is what we are trying to create in teaching people to punch and
block with maximum effectiveness.
In martial arts and in
defensive tactics we can make the most of the power inherent in our
bodies by using our body as a unified whole system, rather than as a
bunch of parts attached together.
Myth
#2
A second myth that
limits our power is the belief that the lower body is limited to
functioning as a moving platform for the upper body. The lower body
provides mobility, with the power (the strike or kick) then produced
by the limbs.
This is the way a tank
functions on a battlefield. The treads serve to position the tank;
the gun delivers firepower. There is no integral relationship
between the two. (The gun doesn't assist locomotion and the treads
don't contribute to fire.)
This is also the way an
individual rifleman or a battlefield unit of any size will conceive
of their operations: maneuver and firepower are two different
dimensions of action; both important and related, but always
remaining two distinct functions.
In firearms systems the
analogy does hold true to some degree, but for empty hand, knife,
baton and weapons of opportunity it does not.
For humans doing empty
hand, edged weapon, or impact weapon techniques we can take great
advantage of a much more integrated way of moving.
For us, the body
movement that drives locomotion (moving to a more advantageous
position), evasion (avoiding the incoming technique) and power
transmission (for hitting or defense) are all generated
simultaneously, by a single movement generated from the center of
the body.
We are not constructed
like treads and turrets. We are a single integrated power system and
we will fall short of our fighting potential if we fail to make use
of this reality.
About
the author
Jeffrey Brooks is a
police officer, DT Instructor and Firearms Instructor. He has led a
martial arts dojo offering classes daily for 20 years and has
practiced martial arts in Japan and the US for 30 years. Jeffrey
has published a book and dozens of articles about combatives,
training and character that have been widely read and cited. For
more information, please visit his Web
site.
II.
Upcoming Street Survival Seminars
|
Seminar Location |
Dates |
Details |
|
Street
Survival Seminar Phoenix,AZ |
August 6-7,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Chicago,IL |
August 16-17,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Ann
Arbor/Detroit,MI |
September 5-6,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Seattle/Tacoma,WA |
September 13-14,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Pittsburgh,PA |
September 17-18,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Las
Cruces,NM |
October 8-9,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar San
Francisco,CA |
October 17-18,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Milwaukee,WI |
October 22-23,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Dallas/Ft
Worth,TX |
November 1-2,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar for WOMEN Atlantic
City,NJ |
November 5-6,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Street
Survival Seminar Las
Vegas,NV |
December 4-5,
2007 |
Detail
|
|
Not
coming to your area? Please contact
Slavka Younger at
slavka.younger@praetoriangroup.com
to find out how you can bring Street Survival seminar to your
department. |
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