... yes, I originally learned it as a Pheonix Eys fist, but until Mr. Parker or Mr. Conatser showed me (I cannot remember which one), I did not nearly have the structural integrity needed to execute a streight punch with this, while not bending the wrist up as in Clutching Feathers.
I could rake down with it, zipper-like in Short #2, or could rake inward with the hand vertical, as in Leaping Crane or Gathering Clouds (Gathering Clouds is EPAC for Parting the Waves.) The middle knuckle had a bracing angle with the downward vertical rake in Short #2, i.e. the index finger ... yes, I know some people of high rank have changed this to a punch - probably because you can abrade the skin right off the lower tip of the knuckle hitting a Gi or Canves Bag this way. In Leaping Crane or Gathering Clouds, the bracing angle is along the Phalanges into the carpals, and you get some additional backup mass by having the fist behind the weapon, not a lot, but some. In Clutching Feather (Eagle Beak is the closest in Tracyese) you bend the vertical fist upward slightly so the index finger creates a bracing angle.
It seems to me that I saw Mr. Parker punching with a middle knuckle fist, almost any time he wanted to make a point, get it? Like in pinpointing.
1) He extended the middle knuckle forming the striking surface of the weapon;
2) He then opened the index finger slightly, keeping the joint nearest the finger tip streight.
3) He then laid the streightened index finger joint, flat across the middle knuckle, (joint closest to the tip of the middle finger) and just touched the ring finger with the index finger.
4) He then locked the entire fist into a compact unit by squeezing the index finger with the thumb, which also touched the ring finger.
5) This formed a Bracing Angle (there it is again) by not allowing the middle knuckle to be compressed or pushed back into the fist. It was not a weak weapon for direct punching, even when you don't extend it much. The thumb locks down over the extended middle finger and the tip of the thumb actually touches the ring finger.
(YES THIS IS AWKWARD UNTIL YOU LEARN IT, THEN THE FIST FORMS WITHOUT THINKING, TIGHT, AND WITH LESS SURFACE AREA FOR THE STRIKE, UTILIZING THE SAME FORCE, YOU GET MORE POUNDS PER SQUARE INCH, BUT YOU ALSO GET MORE PENETRATION ... IF THE HAND DOES NOT COLLAPSE DUE TO IMPROPER FIST FORMATION.)
My big strong bodybuilder type students are unable to push the middle knuckle into the fist. I can easily push their's in, until I teach them this way of doing it. (Geez this was hard to write - if you don't undersand, I can see why. Maybe Mr. C can explain it better)
I am not taking any credit for this, other than I paid attention to my seniors in the Art.
Oss,
-Michael:asian: