Why Join?
What can studying Karate Jutsu do for you?
There are many sides to karate jutsu and many different benefits that can be gained from it's study:
The philosophy of our self defence training
The club differs from many other martial arts clubs in genuinely pursuing self defence rather than ritual as a priority. One of the strengths of the University of Sussex Karate Jutsu club is its emphasis on effective self-defence principles. When self-defence is the goal in training, there is only one arbiter of the usefulness of techniques: Would it work against a determined and bigger attacker when there are no rules, and against the type of attacks that habitually occur in a street situation? How can a woman defend against not a stylistic lunge punch, but an attempted rape? How can a man deal with, not a jumping spinning whip kick, but a bottle to the head from up close?
The first principle of self-defence training is to train most extensively on the attacks one is statistically most likely to face in a serious confrontation. Home Office statistics, based on both reports to police and analysis of footage of CCTV video, provides us with the most common physical acts of violence perpetrated both against men and against women. In our club we use as the core of our self-defence syllabus the 10 most common attacks of men against men and the (very different) 10 most common attacks of men against women as determined by Home Office statistics (thanks to Jeff Nash for providing these). These scenarios are the ones that must be mastered and drilled until response is habitual.
Consideration of such actual scenarios shows the range of skills that are required in actual self defence. One must be skilled at a range of distances, and at both grappling and striking at those distances. One must know the art of slipperiness (escaping from being held), how to gain positional dominance over another (e.g. "clinch" work) and the art of generating massive impact. One must be comfortable both on one's feet and on the ground. Ground fighting is a vitally important self-defence skill, neglected in most martial arts traditions. In a rape scenario, you are likely to end up on the ground dealing with a bigger aggressor. Male-male confrontations also often end up on the ground if they are not finished in the initial few seconds. Further one must know the vital points, the points of anatomical vulnerability (largely overlapping the set of acupuncture points), that can cause intense pain or unconsciousness with small amounts of force, especially important for a woman to deal with a vastly stronger opponent,.
Self-defence training crucially also involves negotiating the moments before an attack is made. Typically, for some minutes before an assault, a potential victim is being "interviewed" by the assailant for suitability as a victim. The aim is to fail that interview. That is ultimate self defence; you stop the situation from being physical before it has even started. An important part of this is how you form a non-confrontational non-aggressive "fence" between you and the potential attacker.
To work out a self-defence system covering these skills it is best to drop the arbitrary boundaries of martial arts styles but draw on the vast wealth of knowledge transmitted through the different martial art traditions. When combining new moves and principles, however, they must be integrated in a coherent way, to make a system, not an arbitrary collection. Relatedly, there is no point simply having a list of moves to do in different situations. In a real situation you do not know what is coming. You do not have time to think through 100 possibilities. There must be simple effective favourite responses that can deal with uncertainty, and trained using drills that recreate to some extent the uncertainty and chaos of a real situation. Finally, there is only so much time each week to train on different skills. There must be core practices in each skill category that are repeatedly drilled - core strikes, core throws, core locks, etc. The role of the instructor in the long run is to provide a number of different response options; then the student can, after sufficient training, choose their favourite (suited to them as an individual) and then drill their favourite responses repeatedly.
In order to train functional coherent self defence responses, we present students with self defence scenarios which they deal with under conditions of progressive resistance. These drills will encourage thoughts like: "Why did I do that?? I
should have done X!" Or: "That was difficult! How could I deal with
that better in future?". That motivates one to mentally link the
situational cues that immediately preceded one's actions to a better
action (having worked out or been shown what a better action could be). The next
time the situation occurs the response will be better and the new link consolidated. So a repertoire of cues and constraints linked to
responses is established, involving the learning of micro-second timing depending
on subtle changes in balance and feel, that can only be achived in two-man situational drills.
An example is the "clinch" drills we do. In the first instance they teach getting a "tie" position - a
position of contact in which you restrict the options of an opponent.
Just as the non-contact "fence" restricts options and hence often brings the encounter
to a peaceful end, so a tie restricts options and may dissuade -
while you are vocally peaceful and allowing a finish without lost of
face. (We prefer them to traditional sensitivity and trapping drills for the
same ranges because they mimick the positions you are likely to find
yourself in real self defence.) We work on clinch, ground,
stand up drills, and drills for the transitions between these phases of a fight.
Self defence is not pretty, although the effectiveness of techniques can be mind blowing. Karate for self defence does not usually involve long stances or flowery techniques.Minimal effort for maximum effect. Sometimes an opponent hits the deck and you won't have noticed the potential victim had done anything at all, when that "victim" is skilled in self defence. Nonetheless, the better physical condition that you are in, the better you are able to effectively defend yourself, and so training does involve a full conditioning of the body with exercises specific to the fundamental movements required in different self defence situations.
Karate is not only about self defence. Last century it was transformed into a physical exercise program and a sport. The stances were made longer and deeper, engagement distance was made further apart, and fatal and debilitating moves were excluded. We do not practice sport karate. Visual aesthetics and sport must be sharply distinguished from self defence.
People from different styles train with us because nothing we do is style-bound. Self defence training is not about learning abritrary rules, it's not about learning a Japanese tea ceremony. It's about what might save your life one day. The universal nature of human bodies - there are some directions joints do not bend, there are some forces weak anatomical areas cannot withstand - means stylistic background is irrelevant to the usefulness of this training. We cover pre-fight positioning (forming the "fence"), pre-emption, clinch work, unbalancing at various distances, locks and throws, generating impact, pressure points, and groundwork.
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