Originally posted by thekuntawman
this is not an insult to dutch teachers and FMA teachers who do seminars, i am only drawing the differences. but i believe they are choosing to teach seminar goers the most interesting techniqhes for business purposes, to keep them coming back. to teach the FMA the filipino way, and silat the indonesian way, is not interesting enough for the american seminar goer/student. i do believe this method is bad for the development of the martial arts.
I don't think it's a "Dutch" or "Indo" thing in Silat. I think, as you say, it's a "seminar" thing. No matter who's teaching the seminar. I've trained in seminars and in private/semi-private settings with Willem and Victor de Thouars. What they teach in seminars is very different than what they teach privately/semi-privately. It's the same material in a way, but the presentation is very different. And sometimes, the actual material is different.
In my estimation, seminars are very useful as training supplements. They can accomplish a variety of things:
- get people interested enough in what the instructor does to go train with the instructor
- get people interested enough in the art to find an instructor to train with
- Give practitioners of the art a different perspective on what they do so that they can delve deeper on their own
And there are probably some others that I've neglected in the above list. But I think those are good and valid reasons for teaching/attending seminars.
Seminars
shouldn't be used as primary methods of training, though. On this, I think we all agree completely. I've met people who have only trained in FMA, for instance, at seminars. These people have a very shallow depth of understanding of FMA, if they have any understanding at all. Same with people who've only done Silat at seminars (or, worse yet, from videos). Same with people who've only done anything at seminars.
But, IMO, I don't think this is the fault of the seminar instructor. I think it's the fault of the person who doesn't seek out deeper instruction. People who go to a few seminars, then add some of the material from the seminars into what they regularly teach. Or, worse yet, people who go to a few seminars, then start claiming to know something about what they saw and "teaching" what they know. Personally, I think this is a misuse (on the part of the person) of the seminar experience.
when i say, too much silat, what i am talking about is their desire to make the empty handed "FMA" look like the silat they see in videos, which is so "deadly" in their eyes, so they add what they see there, and innovate new things to tie arnis/eskrima/kali with silat.
Yup. Anytime that someone learns something from a video (or other non-hands on source) then tries to teach it is a bad thing.
However, there are some people, like my instructor, who have trained in-depth in FMA and Silat. And they teach both. And both come out of them. My instructor (and me, because of my training with him) does both FMA and Silat. When he's at largo or medio range, he's probably doing FMA (with or without a weapon in hand). When he gets into corto, more of the Silat starts coming out (again, with or without the weapon). It's not a clear-cut thing and depends on the energy of the moment ... but that's the general delineation.
A few years back, while at one of Willem (Uncle Bill) de Thouars's annual "Family Gatherings," I was talking to a guy who does Kombatan (from Ernesto Presas). The guy asked about my background. I told him that the core of my FMA material is from the Inosanto blend, but I have had some other influences as well. He said, "Yeah. I started in the Inosanto blend and did it for a couple of years, but I didn't feel like it had enough depth for me."
I said, "Huh. I've not founding lacking in depth for me." And the conversation went somewhere else.
Later, we were playing together. I did a knife technique on him and he said, "Wow. That's nice. Some of Uncle Bill's knife work, eh?"
I said, "No, Uncle has knife work similar to that, but that was straight out of the Inosanto blend knife work."
He said, "Huh. Show me some more of your material from Inosanto blend."
I did. After a bit he said, "I've not seen anyone with that kind of depth from Inosanto blend."
I said, "Well, then you probably haven't seen a
Kali man from the Inosanto lineage. You've probably seen
JKD guys who've done some Kali at seminars. There's a big difference between a JKD guy who does some FMA and an FMA guy."
But, again, I don't think this is Dan Inosanto's fault. I think the fault lies on the shoulders of others. Maybe some of the people this guy had worked with simply exaggerated their FMA background. Maybe this guy had misinterpreted what he'd seen presented as "Inosanto lineage." I don't know.
I agree that people who only train at seminars are missing the boat. But I don't personally think that seminars are a bad thing. I think that, if properly used, they can be very good things.
Whew ... that was a long ramble. I hope it made some sense
Mike