tydive wrote:
**My perspective isn’t extreme – its the same perspective of anyone that genuinely trains to increase their fighting skills.
False appeal to authority, 5 yard penalty.
**Bzzzt. Wrong. Appeal to evidence.
kj wrote:
Finally! (and as requested) we cut to the chase. Thank the Lord.
Okay, I’m the first one on the non-fighter list. (Translation of the more common “non-swimmer”* terminology for general convenience and those who didn’t get that part.) I love to lead, especially when there’s no one to follow, LOL. So, who’s next? Let’s stop *****footing around, and get those lists down now, once and for all. You’re either a fighter or non-fighter, and you either practice WCK or you don’t dagnabbit.
**I don’t put anyone on any list. Do you fight as a regular part of your training? Tell me do you skydive? If you don’t skydive, am I labelling you, putting you on some list, to say “you’re not a skydiver”? I’m merely pointing out the blantantly obvious. Truth isn’t a label.
FWIW, I don’t see others who either a) do or b) claim to “genuinely” train to increase their fighting skills behaving toward others in the manner you do, or press points to the extreme as you do. Not even our other pro-active fighting protagonists on the forum. I don’t see anyone trying to draw a “line in the sand” between people as vigorously as you.
**I’ll grant you that I’m consistent and forceful. But what you don’t understand is that I’m not “drawing the line” – it is already there. And many, if not most, of the “theoretician” posts implicitly or expressly present, reinforce, and promote that other-side-of-the-line view. It’s overwhelmingly prevalent. It’s the bad stench of the rotting corpse of WCK. And then you have the nerve to say, “can’t we on that other side of the line, just discuss things as we want? do you always have to interpose your view?” Well, yeah, just to point out, if nothing more, the stink (that underlying prevailing view).
**BTW, I use the terms “nonfighter” and “theoretican” interchangably because in a fighting method, one who isn’t fighting (nonfighter) isn’t actually doing the method (a boxer who doesn’t box isn’t doing the method), they are doing drills and forms and theorizing how what they are doing would “work” in a fight (should I need to get into the ring, then I’d . . . ). As I remember, in one of our discussions you even said something to the effect of how you could “extrapoloate” from the drills (like chi sao) into fighitng. See – that’s being a theoretician. Do fighters theorize too? Sure. But they test rather than rely on those theories. The testing makes them practitioners as they are actually using the method.
KF wrote:
As far as a non-fighting theoretician being able to transcend technique, I think one can. Chi sao is not fighting, but it is a kind of game that includes techniques. If one gets good enough at chi sao, he or she can transcend the techniques.
**Perhaps within the context of a drill she can – that’s not the >>context<< of where transcending technique matters. I suppose someone could say "when I do the pak da drill I no longer think in terms of technique like pak sao or the punch but . . . . " BFD.