Collect Concepts, Not Techniques
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Eons ago when I was starting in martial arts, I was so taken up with techniques that I thought in terms of “collecting techniques.” The more techniques I collected, or so I thought, would make me a better martial artist. I’m sure that many martial artists have fallen into this trap. For those of you who have not followed this foolhardy path, you took the wise approach! In any case, the reality was that to paraphrase Bruce Lee, my martial arts was headed toward a “classical mess.”
I had an epiphany after getting a black belt in a martial art that I was studying. This school emphasized learning close to 300 techniques to obtain a black belt, and even worse, the techniques were not connected.
I remember thinking, “How can anybody possibly pick out the right technique under the stress of a self-defence situation?”
While studying this martial art, I fell into the trap of collecting techniques. The problem is that once you have forgotten a technique, you have forgotten that technique. Instead, you should focus on understanding the concept behind the technique. If you absorb the concept, the techniques will come. You might forget a technique but not the concept.
It is much better to have a few concepts rather than remember 100, 200, or 300 techniques.
A technique is a series of specific moves in response to an attack. Yet there are so many conceivable attacks.
A “concept” is a general or abstract idea derived from experience.
In the system above, I mentioned specific discrete techniques for dealing with knife attacks and different ways to deal with club attacks. That didn’t seem practical to me.
Once I got into Modern Arnis and learned about the angles of attack, I realized that, except for minor modifications, attacks could be dealt with according to the angle.
So regardless of whether an angle 1 attack was a stick, knife, or broken bottle, the underlying general concept was to step to the right at a 45-degree angle. Aha, we are dealing with angles of attack instead of methods of attack.
Through my training in Modern Arnis, I’ve gotten into the habit of collecting concepts, not techniques. They are so much easier to remember than techniques. If you know the concept, the techniques will come. Keep it simple!!
The video below is similar to the first video above:
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Over the years, I have gotten into the habit of listening to instructors at Modern Arnis camps and seminars for any concepts they might share. I currently have a list of 20 concepts that I teach. Some are obvious (“Go with the Flow” etc.) and others were acquired over the years. It will likely be refined and tinkered with over the years.
Remembering a few concepts is much easier than remembering multiple techniques.
Thus, the instructor and student alike must remember and understand the concepts of the art.
Example: What are the three main ways you can hit your opponent with your cane? The strike, the thrust, and the punyo (butting). Aha, you can develop techniques based on those methods.
If you’re starting or trying to make sense of what you’ve learned, I HIGHLY recommend that you start listing the martial concepts that you have learned over the years. Instead of a notebook of a thousand techniques you’ve learned, try creating a cheat sheet of concepts that are easy to remember. Your journey in martial arts will take a giant leap forward!
Over to you, do you keep notes on the concepts of your art?
Additional Reading
- Angles of Attack in Filipino Martial Arts
- Simplicity
- Which Technique Is Best?
- “There Are No Superior Styles, Just Superior Fighters.”
- Killer Concepts!
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[…] have mentioned to my students to think in terms of collecting concepts, not techniques. Collecting techniques is useless if you are not aware of the underlying concepts. […]
[…] him introducing us to the first five angles of attack. Further, I remember being amazed at how simple the angles of attack were. The simplicity of it entranced […]
[…] Very few of these techniques are connected with others. How is the average student expected to use the right technique in a self-defence situation at the right time? I don’t think that’s realistic. This is an example of a poorly designed martial art style. […]