In the "Toning down the techniques" thread, a segment of one of Docs replies caught my eye, so rather than sidetrack that thread, I thought I'd start a new one, and pick his brain a bit more. Of course, anyone else is free to comment as well. 
In this post, I asked the following question:
"True. Now, we've all been thru the commercial vs non commercial debates, so I'll ask you this: I'm going to say that Doc is not running a commercial school. Correct me if I'm wrong on this. So, if thats the case, how does his initial instruction compare to a commercial school? Does he have people doing forms for 2-3 yrs before showing an application?"
to which the reply was:
The interpretation of Kenpo I was taught and teach, as well as all of the Ed Parker Lineage, is technique based, not forms based, so the idea of doing forms for years before knowing what they mean is a foreign concept. My teaching is absolutely grounded in a working understanding of hard basic applications. Not only do you need to have a consistent neutral bow as an example, you must know the base associated footwork, and be capable of performing it without being knocked off your axis under extreme pressure. That is a curriculum mandate. Everything that you are taught, you must be able to perform under realistic conditions, and may not move on until you can demonstrate it consistently. There are no "what if" scenarios. "There is no try, you must do." My female students especially appreciate the approach.
Now, the part that caught my eye was towards the end, with the comment: There are no 'what if' scenarios.
Now, we usually hear that we need to get the base techniques down first, and then worry about the what ifs, the "Well, what if the bad guy does this or that, then what?" type of questions. I was taught, and always hear that that is what the extensions were for...to address those situations.
Now, perhaps, and please correct me if I'm reading wrong, but I took that part of Docs post as....the base technique should be all thats needed. The opponent should not be allowed or able to do anything else, and if they can, then the base wasn't done correctly.
So, my question for Doc, his students and everyone else is...did I sum that post up correctly? Do you teach the extensions? Why/why not?

In this post, I asked the following question:
"True. Now, we've all been thru the commercial vs non commercial debates, so I'll ask you this: I'm going to say that Doc is not running a commercial school. Correct me if I'm wrong on this. So, if thats the case, how does his initial instruction compare to a commercial school? Does he have people doing forms for 2-3 yrs before showing an application?"
to which the reply was:
The interpretation of Kenpo I was taught and teach, as well as all of the Ed Parker Lineage, is technique based, not forms based, so the idea of doing forms for years before knowing what they mean is a foreign concept. My teaching is absolutely grounded in a working understanding of hard basic applications. Not only do you need to have a consistent neutral bow as an example, you must know the base associated footwork, and be capable of performing it without being knocked off your axis under extreme pressure. That is a curriculum mandate. Everything that you are taught, you must be able to perform under realistic conditions, and may not move on until you can demonstrate it consistently. There are no "what if" scenarios. "There is no try, you must do." My female students especially appreciate the approach.
Now, the part that caught my eye was towards the end, with the comment: There are no 'what if' scenarios.
Now, we usually hear that we need to get the base techniques down first, and then worry about the what ifs, the "Well, what if the bad guy does this or that, then what?" type of questions. I was taught, and always hear that that is what the extensions were for...to address those situations.
Now, perhaps, and please correct me if I'm reading wrong, but I took that part of Docs post as....the base technique should be all thats needed. The opponent should not be allowed or able to do anything else, and if they can, then the base wasn't done correctly.
So, my question for Doc, his students and everyone else is...did I sum that post up correctly? Do you teach the extensions? Why/why not?