Lock Flow Drills

ikenpo

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Noticed that a lot of instructors incorporate things that aren't in the base curriculum. Two of those things being lock flow drills and knife disarm drills (the sort of thrust and cut method). Anyone around here incorporate this kind of stuff?

jb:asian:
 

Kempojujutsu

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I use two different drills. First one Lock for Lock. Someone puts a lock on you, You counter it and put a lock on them, and they counter it. The Second Lock flow drill you try to put at lease 3 locks and or put your attacker in a bad postion. We don't just work locks. we put in chokes, throws, and locks.
Bob :asian:
 
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Kirk

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We do lock flow drills, and whobud (sp?) drills a LOT! They're
great for developing speed. We also do a lot of sticky hand
drills (pac sao, lop sao and a few more that I can't remember the
name of) for this purpose also.
 
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Rainman

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Originally posted by Goldendragon7

correct?

:asian:

Hubud lubud and chi sau from jkd? No. You knew that though didn't you:confused:


:asian:
 

Seig

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there are locks in some of the techniques that I have worked in American Kenpo that appear to me to be hidden. They are there if you look for them. Examine Sword of Destruction and see if you can find where there is the potential for a wrist lock that in aikido would be known as the second hand position.
 
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Rainman

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Originally posted by Goldendragon7

:asian:

Chi sau "sticking hands" predates JKD by a few hundred years- I first learned about it from an AK teacher but was reafirmed by a guy who taught Southern Mantis. Which Supposedly was the precurser to Wing Chun. Learned some of their drills way back when. Simular ideas found in push hands. An example of hubud can be found where big circles = big trouble. I can't remeber if its origins were indonesion or filipino or both. It has been a long time since I looked at anything but AK- sheesh I can't make the time to go outside the art anymore- too busy within it.

:asian:
 
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Rainman

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Originally posted by Seig

there are locks in some of the techniques that I have worked in American Kenpo that appear to me to be hidden. They are there if you look for them. Examine Sword of Destruction and see if you can find where there is the potential for a wrist lock that in aikido would be known as the second hand position.

Yes the proper name for this is contact manipulation=applied kenpo;) = the fourth range
 

cdhall

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Originally posted by Goldendragon7

correct?

:asian:

Sir, someone asked about Lockflows on Mr. Trejo's board once and I found a tape/book from Larry Hartsell on his website that seems to have the Lockflow drill 1-12 that was taught to my classmates and I around 1987. We were just taught some of those Lockflows in a special weapons class this week as well. On occasion he will demonstrate how you can insert a flat out lockflow into a technique. I think there is one already in place in Spiraling Twig though for example.

Jonathan also likes the Hubud drill and we did it in his class recently and I noticed that the 3 drills he was doing were very similar to the Rocking Bridge series and more interestingly that one of the drills was basically "Circles of Protection" which he agreed with. I don't know where Jonathan got them but he says the Hubid is an old Filipino drill that children play as a Game! He says it is hundreds of years old.

Thought you might find that interesting. Someone else posted about Sticky Hands I see but that is another concept as well, I think. Tai Chi "Push Hands" look a lot like "Sticky Hands" to me.

In response to the original question, "Yes" we do sometimes stop and "smell the roses" on our Kenpo journey in class. There is a lot of stuff "hidden" in the techniques (like the Hubid drills and Lockflows) as if Mr. Parker put it there so he could come back later and show you how to cultivate it. This stuff is very interesting to me. Mr. Parker seems to have hidden a lot of stuff by putting half of it in somewhere (like half of a wrist lock or strike near a perhaps unknown pressure point) so that it could be more fully appreciated at a later date.

I hope Mr. C will elaborate on this for us.
:)
 

Seig

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but it seems to me that SGM Parker hid a lot of stuff to allow his followers "discovery" of the hidden things. The reason I say this is that the base of the system is Logic. If you start examining things form a logical point of view, a lot of the "hidden" or "half" things seem to appear. Just my $.02, that's $.75 Canadian
 

Michael Billings

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Hmmmm? I know you have Sticky Hands, or Chi Sao in Wing Chun (in all the different spellings) and that is where it came into the Jeet Kune Do sytem, directly from Bruce Lee.

You also have Sticky Hands in Tai Chi Chuan Fa, but it is called Pushing Hands. I rememer getting pushed around a lot in the mid-70's when I was learning Tae Chi (in between Tae-Kwon-Do and Kenpo.)

The Lock-Flow set I was introduced to was at a camp in 1982 or '83, by Gary Swan, NCKKA, and he had gotten it from Wally Jay SMALL CIRCLE JU-JITSU. It is 12 locks with attendant release moves. This was later grafted into Kenpo techniques, with contact manipulations, by Brian Duffy, AKF, and others.

It has been torn apart, analyzed, and redefined in Kenpo terms, since it is all just movement and another expression of principles, concepts, and theories. It utilizes fulcrums, levers, checking height, width, and depth, skeletal and muscular limitations, and small circles, courtesy of Wally Jay, a good friend of Mr. Parker's. His small circles fall nicely into our ECONOMY OF MOTION and OUTER RIM THEORY.

So what is not to love? It is all Kenpo by the fact that none of the moves are not found somewhere within the base or extended techniqes. I like the minimal force application for Law Enforcement, teachers, bouncers, psychiatric hospital workers, etc. If it does not work due to unforseen considerations (like sweat, multiple opponents, environment, etc.), you can always GRAFT into the original technique or another one for the Kenpo Fantasy.

Does this make sense? I hope so. We train the Lock Flows regularly, but they are a "WHAT IF".

-Michael
UKS-Texas
 

cdhall

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Originally posted by Michael Billings

The Lock-Flow set I was introduced to was at a camp in 1982 or '83, by Gary Swan, NCKKA, and he had gotten it from Wally Jay SMALL CIRCLE JU-JITSU. It is 12 locks with attendant release moves. This was later grafted into Kenpo techniques, with contact manipulations, by Brian Duffy, AKF, and others.


Right on sir. I agree with yours and the previous post which was worth .75 Canadian.

But regarding the quoted section above, I distinctly remember Mr. Swan telling us that he got the 12 Lockflows and counters from a weekend or weeklong seminar with Larry Hartsell and he has a picture of himself and Larry Hartsell still hanging in the studio as of the last time I was in there sometime in 2001. This does not mean that you are wrong of course, because I was not at a camp in '83. I had not signed up yet. But I remember when the Lockflows were introduced to us at the studio much later around 1987, maybe as late as '89 even.

The site I mentioned earlier where I seem to have found those particular drills is
http://www.jkdassoc.com/
and the video I think I located is on the Product List now as ""ENTERING TO TRAPPING TO GRAPPLING" VOL. #1 " and features "AS A BONUS!!! A standing lock flow, foot sectoring, takedowns to submissions."

They have changed their site since I was last there, but I'm still interested in this tape if anyone has seen it. I know that after we were introduced to the Lockflows, we got 12 Reversals and my brown belt test was one of if not the first test to require 5 technique be done that each incorporated a Lockflow, Takedown and Restraining hold. Making those up was so cool. That whole process was cool but I digress.

Thank you all for the great thread. :cool:
 
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ikenpo

ikenpo

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Originally posted by cdhall



But regarding the quoted section above, I distinctly remember Mr. Swan telling us that he got the 12 Lockflows and counters from a weekend or weeklong seminar with Larry Hartsell and he has a picture of himself and Larry Hartsell still hanging in the studio as of the last time I was in there sometime in 2001. This does not mean that you are wrong of course, because I was not at a camp in '83. I had not signed up yet. But I remember when the Lockflows were introduced to us at the studio much later around 1987, maybe as late as '89 even.

The site I mentioned earlier where I seem to have found those particular drills is
http://www.jkdassoc.com/
and the video I think I located is on the Product List now as ""ENTERING TO TRAPPING TO GRAPPLING" VOL. #1 " and features "AS A BONUS!!! A standing lock flow, foot sectoring, takedowns to submissions."

Thank you all for the great thread. :cool:


Hey Doug,

Yeah I always thought it was Mr. Hartsell as well, and I've seen that picture you spoke of. I remember when it made it to our side as well. I want to say it was 88 or 89. I remember we were working on an update to "stone warrior" and then Mr. Abedin breaks out with these lock flows.


I do have that video and Mr. Hartsell does a lock flow very similar to the one we did way back when, but the exact same moves are in Wally Jay's Small Circle Jujitsu book (as i look at it). The only reason I would lean toward Hartsell is because the finger lock percision wasn't there when I first learned it. There were finger manipulations that were great, but not small circle jujitsu style (once again from the tape I've seen). Doesn't mean I'm right....may have to go to the well of knowledge (Mr. Swan) to find that one out.

In regards to your brown belt test...still one of my favorite kenpo "home videos" although I have a few that pushed ya down on the list...LOL.

jb:asian:
 

eternalwhitebelt

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Went to a Huk seminar about six years ago, about my tenth time seeing him. I took a jujitsu 2nd degree black belt with me. About a third of the way into the seminar after many questions concerning locks by my friend the seminar just turned into nothing but locks and flows off of kenpo techs. On driving home my friend says something to the effect of wow I had no idea kenpo was so much like jujitsu except your instructor explains everything better. I said yeah I didn't either. After many other classes with Huk I began to see the light. There are now a ton of lock flows being taught with Kenpo. At our school we mix a lot of hubud lubud with lock flows and disarms and kenpo techs. The only problem is it seems to confuse a lot of people early on in there training. Most of the drills are coming out of straight filipino flows, some silat flows, and some jun fan/jkd flows. Huk got a lot of his stuff from dan inosanto himself, which truth be told is the source of a lot of stuff floating around. He tore down a lot of walls.
 

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