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Yes I agree, lineage is a line of descendants. If a senior rank breaks away from his senior and maintains the systems preset material as learned then his students would be listed under the same system as he is. If he changes the concepts/application of/tactical theory of the preset material then system is not the same as when originally learned. Now you have a new system. The lineage line would still be the same except the break away Instructor students would be listed under another style.
The point being, you do not have to change the material to have a new system, if this is done then a new system has to be added into the lineage.
Some of the politics in the Filipino systems have cracked me up for some simple reasons. They'll all do pretty much the same thing. But there was a time when guys were differentiating their systems over minutae.
One school would train the heck out of an inside line counter to a #1, countering high to the head or neck; another high and inside, but to the wrist; another low and outsode to the knee, while someone else went low and outside to just above or below the knee. And they would argue like heck that they were as different from each other as night and day.
I've never trained in Modern Arnis in my life, but did do Arnis and Esckrima under some guys from the Phillipines. I saw a clip here on MT of I think it was Dan Anderson doing some machete patterns. It could have been an old home movie from my old training; super similar. But the die-hards will argue "different" til the cows come home.
How different are the differences, most often, really?
Some of the politics in the Filipino systems have cracked me up for some simple reasons. They'll all do pretty much the same thing. But there was a time when guys were differentiating their systems over minutae.
One school would train the heck out of an inside line counter to a #1, countering high to the head or neck; another high and inside, but to the wrist; another low and outsode to the knee, while someone else went low and outside to just above or below the knee. And they would argue like heck that they were as different from each other as night and day.
I've never trained in Modern Arnis in my life, but did do Arnis and Esckrima under some guys from the Phillipines. I saw a clip here on MT of I think it was Dan Anderson doing some machete patterns. It could have been an old home movie from my old training; super similar. But the die-hards will argue "different" til the cows come home.
How different are the differences, most often, really?
But yet there are numerous agruements on MT and KT that so and so are no teaching Parker Kenpo. With the reasoning so far, I would say we all are! The basic principles are still there (even when we change the name).![]()
My school is independant, in the sense that I have the final decision of what is in the curriculum along with my wife, Professor Kathy. I don't refer to what I teach as my own style or system per se but like Ed Parker once stated: "Every Kenpo Black Belt is a style within themselves, so it's more my prespective and it is very, very close to what others have taught me in the past with, of course some of my own spin or twist to it with certain additions and modifications.
However, what makes what we do a little unique and interesting is this. Professor Cerio put this idea in my head a long time ago. He and SGM. George Pesare simply refers to it as American Ken/mpo Karate. Mr. Cerio said I was very lucky to have trained under the three men responsible for the founding and/or propagation of the original New England Kenpo/Kempo Karate. I got to expereince, first hand, right from the source the teachings of George Pesare (New England founder), Nick Cerio and Fred Villari (all the same Kenpo/Kempo family or direct lineage, Pesare taught Cerio and Cerio taught Villari).
So, at my school, the students are exposed to all three prespectives, not diluted through generations of black belts but right from the source to me and to them. Professors Bob Nohelty and Jimmy Bryant also share this experience. This is the MAIN difference in my school along with the addition of my extensive training in Police Defensive Tactics as a veteran LEO instructor for a street reality effect. - Joe
Makes a lot of sense.![]()