Hello all, just wondering what your thoughts on Black dot focus are. Try not to use the "Truck and Bumper" analogy.
Sean
Sean
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kenpo12 said:I don't know, I just hit my opponent repeatedly, don't know nothing 'bout no dots.
Touch'O'Death said:Hello all, just wondering what your thoughts on Black dot focus are. Try not to use the "Truck and Bumper" analogy.
Sean
I suspected as much. :asian:kenpo12 said:I don't know, I just hit my opponent repeatedly, don't know nothing 'bout no dots.
Touch'O'Death said:Hello all, just wondering what your thoughts on Black dot focus are. Try not to use the "Truck and Bumper" analogy.
Sean
I feel that is only one aspect of the cocept, but I'm glad someone seems to have heard of it.kenpo_cory said:Not sure if your just wanting opinions or what. Personally, I think it's a very valuable tool for focusing on the whole picture and not just hitting someone randomly.
Spoken like a true Tracy's man. The Concept of Black dot focus is better described through metaphore but it is not a metaphore. It all has to do with attention and intention. A fifteen year old pays attention to his or her driving only. That person's parent can drive, change the radio station, eat french fries, and yell at their kids in the back seat all at the same time. That is because they have the intention of driving while they pay attention to other pressing matters; they hate that song and her kids won't stop[ singing along!Old Fat Kenpoka said:There are a ton of really cool theories and concepts in EPAK. This one, however, is just plain nonsense. Really, just a silly analogy to apply a name to "paying attention".
No problem, you pay attention to what part of the foot you kick with when you are first learning the knife edge in the studio, and you don't think about it on the street in a real situation. You have the developed the neuromuscular memory to black dot focus caliber. Do I need to tell you about the fights I was in where I used a proper weapon, or are you starting to get the idea?Old Fat Kenpoka said:Sorry, I'm not a Tracy's man either.
And, no matter how many ways you find to apply the BD/WD theory, it is still nonsense. But, feel free to prove me otherwise: provide one example where it made a significant difference in a self-defense situation outside the dojo.
No, Mr. Wortman,Old Fat Kenpoka said:Sean: I understand the basics of the concept. My skepticism is really about the value add of the vocabulary surrounding the concept. Most Kenpo vocabulary adds value by providing a better way to understand and apply Kenpo concepts. I believe that the vocabulary of Black Dot/White Dot adds no value.
For instance, using your example...you are able to use proper foot position because you practiced it and committed the proper position to muscle memory--not because you applied Black Dot / White Dot concept to your training or chose to apply it in a street situation.
When the vocabulary around the concept adds no value, it simply becomes jargon -- or "mumbo jumbo"
Well I think the value is to understand where all these random things you are doing fit. Its the yin and yang I was provided with when I joined Kenpo. You can spar in the intention state or the attention state. You don't learn a whole hell of a lot in the intention state unless of course you get tagged. For me these are old words. They are in plain old english. However, if you haven't had this drilled in your head since you were a kid, I can understand why you might reject the metaphore. Thank you for dicussing this with me; a freind recently asked me what my overall philosophy of Kenpo was, and I thought for a while and said, "Black Dot Focus".Old Fat Kenpoka said:Sean: my instructor left the Tracy's in 1964. The Kenpo system he taught is similar in many ways to Tracy's, but is not Tracy's.
Again, no argument about the importance of proper mental focus. My only argument is about the value of calling it Black Dot / White Dot. You have eloquently explained the concept using terms everyone can understand. What is the value add of the BD WD jargon when plain language can explain the concept just as easily. One of the criticisms of many Oriental martial arts is that you have to learn Japanese, Korean, or Chinese names for the moves. One of the benefits of American Kenpo (for Americans at least) is that it is in English. Yet, American Kenpo has a term like BD WD that is just as obscure to an outsider as a Japanese term would be.
Now your over on the KN calling the universal patern a spirograph drawing(ha ha ha). Have your cornflakes recently been tampered with? :flammad:Old Fat Kenpoka said:There are a ton of really cool theories and concepts in EPAK. This one, however, is just plain nonsense. Really, just a silly analogy to apply a name to "paying attention".