The area of
fighting arts that Gene LeBell calls ”the dark side of the Moon” is in fact not
unknown by most practitioners nor rarely travelled. We’re simply talking about
applications that would be regarded as “dirty” tricks in the world of sport for
the reason that any competition needs to have a rulebook for it; then again
once we start thinking of combat in general we come to understand that such methods
are no less than essential. A real life situation is all too many times a question of the
attacker's serious attempt to hurt you, which may have a lot to do with
his preparations so to speak, like having armed himself, choosing a
easy-appearing victim and so on. There is no “fair” to begin with; therefore we are to feel comfortable with the circumstances we might be forced under and must be
ready to deal with the (non-existing) rules of the game.
I give you
one example, a technique I showed Ricky Vendetta a while ago in order to deepen
his perception of the true “Constrictor” style. It’s a way of moving into double
wrist lock-takedown. First of all, people tend to grab the opponent by the
forearm, right above the wrist that would be. This is because of the
handle-like structure which makes the part feel suitable for a tight grip. The
bad thing is that it’s strong for the opponent as well; he’ll have both the
strength of his muscles and the leverage provided by the bones of his forearm
to fight the hold with. So in catch-as-catch-can we prefer grabbing the hand or
even the fingers (it’s done in many styles of ju-jitsu too). The small
joints work as hinges that would consume some of the kinetic energy of any
counter-move; they may also be dislocated if the opponent tries to pull away in
a very aggressive manner.
The grip
should, especially in this case, be also a twist. As you take a hold of the
back of the opponent’s hand, try to reach over. It’s best if you can get the
base of the thumb to use it as a sort of hilt. Having accomplished that you’ll
be able to put on a powerful twist just as the very first phase of the
technique. I guarantee it’ll be impossible for the opponent to fight it like
he’d normally do. Second, we don’t really want to drag him in but deflect the
horizontal line of his shoulders; twist, pull outwards (from his direction) and
bring the weight down just a little bit – you’ll take him slightly off balance,
which will be the time for the next move.
Pulling an object towards you is the same as pulling yourself towards the object, this is most elementary in science. So when the moment’s come use the force generated for letting yourself step in, or turn slightly sideways I should say. You have the rear leg anchored to the ground and control over the opponent with the hand/arm of that same side, with the same direction. Imbalanced the opponent is probably leaning forwards, not much but sufficiently. Now with the step, swing your free hand up, aiming at the opponent’s face. The movement comes very natural really for the body will try to keep it half-and-half anyway; a manifestation of yin/yang. I would use backhand, the fingers rather, and go for the eyeball: do not focus the energy to hit the surface but drive the whole load inside the socket. It’s not supposed to be a high energy strike of course, but I think of it as lashing someone with a twig instead of bludgeoning a person with a baseball bat – a quick, snappy move. The nose would also be a nice target as the blow comes diagonally from below, hitting the temple would not be bad either. With the eye it’s just that the opponent will instantly have his mind set on the possible damage done to his sight (the most important sense for human being), not any acts of war that might follow from the other person’s side.
Should you choose to do it in a match one useful thing about it is that the referee might not even notice it happen, and if he does you can always say you were just going for the opponent's head. Where's the proof you were not?
From this
set-up it is easy to drop your hand down, grapevine the opponent’s upper arm
(make sure you wind it up tight; the smaller the angle of his elbow the more
unnatural the position for him) and move on to the actual takedown. If you’re
able to reach far enough during the procedure and grab your own wrist – the one
holding that of the opponent – you can lock the forearm by putting pressure on
the radius, already bent across the ulna bone next to it, with the double hold
you have. It is possible to even snap it that way, which would create an
interesting layout for the following situation of you having the upper hand on
the mat from that point on.
The fact
about the "dark" side of the Moon is that day and night follow one another on it,
as they do down here on the planet. The sun does shine there too. What we
can’t see only raises this illusion of darkness before our eyes. Let no such deceit blur your vision,
never stray to allow it to weaken the power of your own perception.
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