You might want to browse Sigung LaBounty's site at
The Sigung.com.
Tiger = Ironworker
Dragon = Watchmaker
This is a very simplistic response, but starts you thinking. There should be both in our training, sometimes one of more, or the other, at different times in our martial arts careers. If we ignore one, then that is a true "hole" in our Kenpo.
In the first part of my career, I was definitly in the Ironworker catagory, for 7 years we did low training horse stances, survival drills, guts training, our training was over 2 hours per class, and all of it physical. The few classes that were theoretical ... well, there just weren't any, but I am from the LaBounty lineage originally.
The second half of my career, I was fortunate enough to train under or with students that were active with Mr. Parker in the late 1980's. They introduced me to the Principles, Concepts and Theories as we know them in EPAK. Knowing the why's and having the knowledge base shared with me helped me immensely and I give full credit to those I trained under, both as an Ironworker and a Watchmaker.
Think about the Orange Belt saying:
Condition and guts take over where knowledge and skill end.
It would not have been included at this level had it not been important for the beginning students to know that training the body is a priority. At this level it is easier to forget techniques, or correct targets. What you don't forget is to keep on fighting, even with just elbows and knees, until they fall down. It is about survival, not winning per se.
You have to have been in a physical, mental, and emotional place where you know you can push past your limits and still "turn it on" if needed. This is an extreme example of what I see as two continuums, running parallel, side by side, sometimes you are more advanced in one than the other, but the goal is to train both sides.
NOTE: It is a lot easier to read it and talk it on the internet, than to lay it down on the mat. You have to Walk the Walk if you are going to Talk the Talk ... or you have to have done it sometime in your career. As we get older, we appreciate the Ironworkers we used to be, while the Watchmaker can continue to grow. Hopefully we train others to be Ironworkers first, and Watchmakers second. It is easier for me to train you to punch and kick, throw elbows and knees, than it is to explain it. Of course I do both, but the body usually learns first.
Oss,
-Michael