 | | "I come to you with only Karate, empty hands, I have no weapons, but should I be forced to defend myself, my principles or my honor; should it be a matter of life or death, of right or wrong; then here are my weapons Karate, my empty hands." - Ed Parker |
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American Kenpo
Techniques
Unlike systems that suggest
you only need a single punch or kick to defend yourself, Kenpo suggests
that there is no "one way" to defend yourself.
On the surface a technique may look like it's teaching you to block,
kick and chop. But in actuality it's teaching you an alphabet of motion
and how to formulate self-defense techniques from this alphabet, so you
can spontaneously create techniques (as needed) for any given situation.
Click on a belt to view techniques

Ed Parker on Techniques: "I teach Kenpo,
not for the sake of teaching the techniques, but for the principles
involved in them. And even then, these principles must be altered to fit
the individual.The reason I give my techniques names is because there
are certain sequences associated with these terms. If I told a student
tomorrow that I was going to teach him a counter version to a double
hand grab, it's not as meaningful as when I say I'm going to teach him
‘Parting Wings.’You’ve got to know how to vary things. A lot of the
techniques I’ve worked with, they’re ideas, they’re not rules. At any
given time, any of my moves can change from defense to offense, offense
to defense."
Martial artists, and Kenpo people especially, become so involved in
doing the techniques exactly right in such and such amount of time, that
they get caught in a pattern that they can’t break. That’s not what
they’re for. Specific moves, specific techniques are based, like the
ABC’s in the English language or standard football plays. You have to
have a point of reference and from there the combinations are endless
and limited only by universal laws, laws that you can’t change.
The Ed Parker system of Kenpo has 154 self defense techniques. Each and
every one of them work. But what is it that they actually do?
The techniques of Kenpo teach you the principles of motion and how to
use these principles to defend yourself. Although the techniques can
work out on the street, any street altercation will change moment by
moment. Therefore, an effective technique is one that has trained you to
adapt to the moment, without relying on any one predetermined sequence.
In class you learn techniques in prearranged sequence, similar to
learning how to speak a language through practicing sample sentences.
However once a language is learned, you no longer depend on sample
sentences to have conversations. We simple converse in the language we
have learned. The same is true in Kenpo Karate.
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