Hey Mike! Yes, I do recall you saying that you began training again. I'd certainly be interested in hearing anything else you'd like to share during training with Mr. Sumner!
Agreed!
Hey Mike,
I suspect you are familiar with Headlock, from Tracy's Orange Belt curriculum? We worked that last night and I had the opportunity to relearn the tech. Big eye opener. Just from last night, my understanding of this tech is so much better than it had been before.
In the "A" version of the tech, with the headlock administered from the side. Mr. Sumner commented on the double hammerfists, to the groin and kidneys simultaneously. This not only compacts the force into the torso, but actually compacts a complete bodily system. The kidneys are at the beginning of the urinary system, and the groin, of course, is at the end. The fact that this compaction is on a bodily system, gives the double strike a greater potential for real damage, rather than just compressing a random body part between two hammerfists.
When peeling the bad guy off you, I had always just reached up to grab the hair and yank back and down, while pivoting to a bow and driving a palm heel under his chin. Sure, it works, but Mr. Sumner had us do it by reaching around from behind all the way to the face, and laying a finger (doesn't really matter which one) under his nose. You then use that as a nerve point to drive his head back and peel him off you. The thing is, you need to lift your hand up so it is not resting on his cheek, just the finger under the nose, or you loose a lot of the effect.
But if he turns his head away and you can't get under his nose, you can drive a finger behind his ear, or under the line of his jawbone, or under his cheek bone. I had been aware of the one behind the ear, and under the jawbone, but the cheek was one I was only dimly aware of, and I hadn't put it into the context of a tech like this one.
Years ago, I accidentally kicked a classmate in capoeira, in the cheek. I must have hit that nerve, because I basically knocked her out. She rolled away, and just lay there, and when she came to, she said she could hear everyone around her, but couldn't respond. And she said that the teeth on the top of her mouth, on that side of her face, felt like they were on fire, very very painful. I must have hit that cheek nerve that serves those teeth, and it had a tremendous effect. I felt terrible, but learned something, but wasn't sure exactly how to duplicate that.
I think in class last night, Mr. Sumner pointed out that same one, if you dig around under the cheek bone, it is really sensitive and you can drive someone off you with this.
So this is the kind of thing he is teaching, as this stuff is integrated right in the SD techs we do. It's a real learning experience, I feel like I am learning so much that I missed the first time around.
Lovin' it!