Our long awaited Jeet Kune Do Online program will be launching this week. A lot of care and hard work has gone into making this the most effective and comprehensive Jeet Kune Do online program available. Jeet Kune Do videos and books are essential resources for training but in order for them to be useful they must be used in conjunction with actual classes. Knowing how difficult it is to find original JKD classes, I've put together an online Jeet Kune Do program that serves to bridge the gap between traditional instruction videos and physical classes. Our lessons are modeled after actual classes and combine detailed technical instruction with interactive drills. Using a virtual training partner system, Phase I of the online JKD can be complete without a partner. Keep in mind that instruction with certified, or at least experienced, Jeet Kune Do instructors is still absolutely necessary, however online training will ensure steady progress when going to a class is not easy. Check it out here: Jeet Kune Do Online
New JKD article exposing the myths and misconceptions of Jeet Kune Do. The Tao, or "the Way", of Jeet Kune Do as become muddled and confounded as rumors and misunderstandings powered out-of-control-egos spread and generate for of the same. Let's get back to the roots of Bruce Lee's Jeet Kune Do and help preserve and promote what the founder started. Check it out here: Tao of Jeet Kune Do
New blog! Join me at True Self Martial Arts for articles and discussion on health, fitness, martial arts, and personal development.
Thanks!
-Nhan http://www.TrueSelfMartialArts.com
San Gabriel Valley Jeet Kune Do is sponsoring the Los Angeles Jeet Kune Do Meetup Group.
Join us in Pasadena and Covina every Saturday and Sunday morning for training and other JKD related events. Check us out and RSVP here:
http://www.meetup.com/Los-Angeles-Jeet-Kune-Do/
In Health, -Nhan http://www.TrueSelfMartialArts.com
Ted Wong, is one of two living people who received Jeet Kune Do rank certifications directly from the founder, and was Bruce Lee's last private student.
Sifu Wong rarely makes appearances, except for JKD workshops and the occasional Bruce Lee Educational Foundation event.
Lately it seems, he has been focused working to restore authentic Jeet Kune Do. Here is a recent documentary.
Dan Inosanto holds the highest of the two Jeet Kune Do certifications that were ever awarded by Bruce Lee.
Why then, does it appear that most of Sifu Inosanto’s certified instructors do not teach Jeet Kune Do as Bruce Lee taught it . . . the “original” stuff? Yet, they still call their material Jeet Kune Do? This was extraordinarily perplexing.
Is Sifu Inosanto teaching the actual “Jun Fan” Jeet Kune Do in all its simplicity and biomechanically efficient glory?
From what I have seen in his videos and the videos of some his top students like Paul Vunak and Ron Balicki, they just seem to be teaching a mixture of wing chun, kickboxing, grappling, stick fighting, and knife fighting without emphasizing the core principles of simplicity, directness, and efficiency.
I don’t know about you, but this phenomenon was very confusing for me in my early training days. It was not easy to separate the supposed “concepts” material from the concrete historical stuff. I was being taught one way in class, while the material that was publicly available from the JKD Concepts clan was showing something else.
Applying the JKD concepts to other martial arts is fantastic, and I would like to see more of that (especially in sport fighting) but I am not seeing this in much of the "Concepts" material that I come across.
Also, I understand that it was Bruce Lee’s wish that commercial jeet kune do schools not exist and that jkd training only be conducted privately and in a low numbers but high quality format. Could it be that sifu Inosanto is still honoring that request after all these years?
If this is the case, I can certainly understand. Yet I feel that most the Concepts people are doing Jeet Kune Do a terrible disservice by not giving students a chance to learn what Bruce Lee originally taught and evolve their own personal expression from there.
Other martial arts are great, I have studied and continue to respect all martial systems, but to teach something other than JKD yet claim it as authentic Jeet Kune Do is a shame.
If anyone has some information regarding this matter, let me know!
In Health,
– Nhan-Esteban Khuong, L.Ac. http://www.TrueSelfMartialArts.com
“How can I hit harder?”
This is perhaps one of the most common questions I am asked after a new student begins training. In Jeet Kune Do, the lead weapons (attacks thrown from the front arm/leg), are the primary weapons. Unlike the boxing jab or the kickboxing lead roundhouse kick which are setup attacks, the JKD frontal attacks are power strikes designed to deliver stunning or even knockout force. As simple as these techniques are, cultivation of adequate power can be challenging. First off, let me elaborate on a few important distinctions:
1. Force
2. Velocity
3. Power
In the world of physics , force is equal to mass multiplied by acceleration. For our purposes, I will simply force as what causes our fists or feet to move. In order to increase the amount of striking force you can generate you will have to work on increasing your strength, which is accomplished via resistance exercises. There are martial arts specific strength training methods that will really crank up your functional strength, but I will touch on these in Part II of this series.
Velocity is essentially speed and direction, the distance traveled in a specific amount of time in a specific direction. Increasing your perceived speed will generally be related to your level of explosiveness (the rapid acceleration) along with your ability to reduce telegraphic motion. This is important because although speed is simply moving fast, the quickness that is perceived by an observer will actually be influenced by multiple factors including preparation (telegraphing).
Power, on the other hand, is the amount of work done or energy transferred in a specific amount of time. For our purposes, power is what determines the amount of compression our kicks or punches generate on a target. In terms of real world application, compression is the amount of damage caused. A high powered punch will deliver high force at high velocity to compress a target (assuming whatever you are hitting is not more durable than your hand), while a low power punch applies force at lower velocity and will simply push it back. Power therefore, is equal to the force you produce multiplied by the velocity at which yourhand or foot is moving.
Although these distinctions aren’t exactly adhering to actual textbook physics definitions, they describe athletic attributes in applicable terms that can be broken down, observed, trained and improved.
So, my point is that if you want a punch or kick that really packs some sting you’re basically going to have to hit hard AND fast.
This is obviously a very simplified breakdown of some of the important elements that determine a "powerful blow". I'll cover more in future articles.
Next I’ll touch on some specific training techniques that will help you cultivate serious strikes.
Happy training!
– Nhan-Esteban Khuong, L.Ac. http://www.TrueSelfMartialArts.com
I have been practicing Jeet Kune Do for years, yet I still find myself wondering, at times, "What exactly is Jeet Kune Do?"
It might seem a little odd for someone who teaches JKD to be asking this question, yet this phenomenon has become rather usual in the present JKD era. Whether on YouTube or the latest martial arts forum, there tends to be an atmosphere of "This is JKD," with "That's not JKD." I won't go into all the details as this is easily researchable, but suffice it to say that the details are numerous and varied.
Jeet Kune Do has as many meanings and interpretations as there are people asking about it. To add to the confusion, there is truth to all the different accounts. Yes, there are concrete, historically verifiable techniques and methods in Jeet Kune Do yet there is also an element of change and fluidity.
I suppose the reason why I still ask myself the question of "What is JKD?", is because Jeet Kune Do is a journey. It is a journey of personal development and discovery. A journey of self evolution. I change, grow, and adapt with my experiences and so my understanding and perception of JKD also changes.
I am reminded of a well known Bruce Lee quote, "Empty your mind, be formless. Shapeless, like water. If you put water into a cup, it becomes the cup. You put water into a bottle and it becomes the bottle. You put it in a teapot it becomes the teapot. Now, water can flow or it can crash. Be water my friend."
Perhaps this was the founder's master plan. To introduce an element that would fuel our desire to search for and know the truth.
-- Nhan-Esteban Khuong, L.Ac. http://www.TrueSelfMartialArts.com
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