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THE NEW METAMORPHOSIS
I Think we are
experiencing yet another metamorphosis. We have traveled from
bare-fist to pads; from light or no contact to heavy contact; from
point scoring to continuous sparring; from a little interest in
jiu-jitsu to it being our major interest; from grappling in our
dojos to sponsoring grappling tournaments; and finally to the MMA
style fighting.
I have come to
this conclusion after attending National seminars for the last 12
years with the United States Hall of Fame seminars and the
International Isshin-Ryu Karate seminars done before their
tournaments each year. As well as Karate College with Joe Lewis and
Bill Wallace and Dr. Jerry Beasley. I have gotten feed back from
many Legends : James Ogle, Denny Shaffer, Cas Cox, Joe Laney, Chris
Spruiell, The Gracie family, and with our own very impressive karate
family.
I watched this
last Saturday as last years I.I.K.A. point champion lay helpless on
the mat while attempting to grapple with an unknown black belt.
This black belt is
normally considered a average fighter.
So where are you
guys going to take our system from here? What will the training of
the future look like? Remember, what Bruce Lee once said: All
systems and no systems. Will there be weapons? Will they be the
same weapons or new ones? Will there be katas? Many more questions
could be raised, but the successful martial artist will be
futuristic in their thinking. What if Master Shimabuku had stayed
with the “norm”? Well, there would not have been any Isshin-ryu.
Once again, the
balanced thinker and balanced curriculum will serve us best. Kata
is and always has been the most effective way for a system to train
or communicate with its martial artist. So I think as leaders we
have to pick katas that will teach the basics. You never perform
the techniques on the street as you find them in the kata or form.
But you do take the basics that you have learned and modify them for
combat. From this prospective, the selection of kata is critical.
We have all been
taught the three ranges or distances: Kicking range (4 to 5 feet);
punching range (3 to 4); and the clinch or close in fighting.
Now we need to
consider the three types of fighting: (1) strikers, punch and
kick; (2) ground fighters, judo, jiu-jitsu, and wrestling, (3)
Zone fighters; small circle jiu-jitsu, throws and takedowns starting
in stand up position similar to the DePasquale Yoshitsune-Waza
system..
I have already
chosen katas for all three types of fighting. They have been
integrated into our belt ranks and promotions. Black belts, if you
can’t perform the katas from all three types of fighting, then your
martial arts proficiency may not be what it should be. Old timers
that only learn stand up fighting and katas certainly won’t be as
advanced as those that do train in these areas. This is the problem
I have with junior black belts. It can take up to nine years to get
your San-dan, 3rd degree rating and all of these katas.
As a young sensei I decided that I would like to be a well-rounded
instructor, not just a fighter or kata person. I know this is
different and trust me over the last forty-five years I have had to
redirect my training several times. My new training manual has all
of our requirements and katas in each of the three types of
fighting. Everyone needs this new training manual in order to be
prepared for your next rank in our Universal Isshin-Ryu System.
I am available to
each of our sensei's to teach at your dojo ( free) one night a month
and cover all of the katas in our grappling and zone katas. It
will probably take about a year to get through these katas. Just
let me know what fixed night each month that you want me there! I
do not want this to interfere with our regular Family nights.
May God bless you,
your friend and sensei;
Pete Mills
Grandmaster
10th Degree, Judan
Universal Isshin-ryu System |