Until I found this board and some of the gentlemen on it, the only real flaw I found with Kenpo, was a whole lot of closed minds. When circumstances forced me 1100 miles away from my instructor, I came across Infinite Insights Vol1. I was utterly delighted with it. It reaffirmed everything my instructor taught me and alot of things I already believed. It also opened my mind back up. The one thing that bothers me to no end is that everyone insists that something be done a certain way, yet no two AK systems can agree on that certain way. Yet, if I interpreted my readings correctly, SGM Parker said to set nothing in stone. EPAK is the science of motion, something set in stone cannot move. Aspects of every art can be found within every other art, some arts may specialize in one particular aspect and become outstanding at it, does that make their art better? No, it means they studied one aspect more thoroughly than someone else did. If one particular fighter wins every event he enters, does that mean his art is superior and every one should study it, or does it mean he is a superior fighter and found a niche within a particular system? The other night, I was examining Raining Lances with a few of my Brown Belts, we went through the technique several ways, and then I started applying other theories and ides to the technique and we came up with something completely different, but we remained true to the Key Moves within the technique. Does that mean I went outside of AK to do something, or that in reality, because I questioned, modified and experimented that I stayed firmly within SGM Parker's framework? What I guess I am getting at, is that if SGM Parker were with us, he would say work, experiment, learn, grow. At least, since I was not priveledged enough to meet him and am translating his works, that's what i think and hope he would say.