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BLUE
BELT: The Leopard (Wu Chi)
Element:
Mercury, Mirror, Water
The Leopard
is the third animal in the Kenpo system; it marks the final
stage of the student or beginner level. The Leopard combines
the aggression and discipline of the Tiger with the defense
and spontaneity of the Crane. The extremes of fiery day and
purple night resolve into the smooth reflection of the moon
in a simple temple garden pond. The pond is as quiet as a
pool of mercury and perfectly mirrors its surroundings. Padded
feet softly stalk the temple garden and burning blue eyes
reflect the shadows of the night. Cat and bird become a single
creature, fang and claw join talon and wing to become that
composite stylist, the Leopard. Ferocity and rationality are
married by blinding speed.
Image
The intense
gaze of a Leopard reflected into our own as he drinks from
a smooth pool of blue water.
Stance
The Leopard
fights form a close-cat stance with hands in half-fist forms.
He is concave in the torso with the hands circling out and
back over one another, with the palms facing down.
Commentary
The
physical characteristics of the Leopard embody elements of
extreme acceleration, physical power, and balance. Without
extreme speed and acceleration, the Leopard stylist would
be unable to synthesize the aggressive power of the Tiger
with the rationality of the Crane. The Leopard requires time
to evaluate, but at the same time, literally, must be able
to intentionally move and develop a situation. Both aggressive
speed and appropriate response are required of the Leopard;
these are the separate attributes of the Tiger and Crane,
respectively. The way in which the Leopard combines these
apparently antithetical elements of unconscious aggression
and thoughtful analysis is varied. First, the leopard makes
use of body-braking. Body-braking is a technique in which
the Leopard uses his own or his opponent's body (or limbs)
as a springboard for his next movement. Rather than locking
a block out, the blocking hand (arm, etc.) rebounds into the
next motion.
Time
is saved by not having to first extend a strike or block,
lock the muscles to stop it and focus, and then relax the
locked muscles in order to recover the striking of blocking
limb. Ideally, the motion is continuous and without any one
lockout focus, continuously rebounding from opponent and himself
in a flurry of continuously pressuring strikes. While no one
single strike may be intended to stop the opponent, the cumulative
effect of such a jack-hammer pressure accomplishes this. In
order to maintain such a style of attack, an extremely strong
physical constitution is necessary. And, without an intuitive
sense of balance, no such attacking flurries could be long
maintained. The Leopard obtains his power from the speed of
his strike more than from its total committed weight. Remember
that impact, power, or momentum is the product of mass and
speed. Since the Leopard tends not to massively commit whole
body weight to his strikes, he must make up for this potential
loss in power by increasing the speed of the strike. The Leopard's
favorite phrase is: "Speed kills."
In general,
the movements of the Leopard are short and choppy, with only
a few low kicks. The Leopard stylist works on getting a "snap"
feeling to all motions regardless of whether or not body-braking
is being used. Shoulder rolls, torso twists, and wrist snaps
all contribute to that last significant bit of acceleration
which distinguishes the strikes of the Leopard from those
of the Crane and Tiger. In combat the Leopard also works the
angles, front left and right forty-five degree angles being
preferred; evading, rather than confronting the attack while
maintaining constant pressure gain both time and security
for the Leopard. Also, the Leopard makes extreme use of "Sticking-Hands"
(Chi Sao) techniques of trapping. Tactile awareness is another
aspect of the Leopard's tremendous speed. Rather than relying
solely on visual perceptual clues, the Leopard begins to "listen"
with his other senses. Touch awareness, tactile sensitivity,
is the first of these to be developed after visual. As the
Leopard is almost necessarily an in-fighter, physical contact
is unavoidable. And, the Leopard learns to read the status
of his opponent by retaining this contact, sticking and running
with the opponent. Not only may shifts in balance be read
through this touch awareness, but changes in intent as well.
No amount
of verbalization convey the lessons to be learned in close
sparring and simple sticking hands exercises. Attacking or
defending limbs are briefly immobilized or trapped by the
Leopard and actually augment the power base of his response.
Onslaughts are redirected utilizing defensive sticking hand
skills which have this potential offensive result. The Leopard
stalks his opponent on the basis of these perceptual clues,
and when the listening indicates an opening, this stalk is
at an end. Overall, the Leopard combines the rigidly predetermined
conceptualization of the Tiger (who sees everything as "black"
or "white") with the rationality of the Crane. Where the Crane
might hesitate, and be lost, through over thinking, the Leopard
cannot; his rationality allows only for a spontaneous response
to an unexpected development with a rigidly pre-determined
technique. Both the pure robot-mechanics of the Tiger and
the Pure rationalism of the Crane are dangerous by themselves;
each may lead to one sort of destruction or futility, respectively.
But the
Leopard combines discipline with a creative intelligence.
Such a combination allows him to respond with the speed acquired
from disciplined practice, but his intelligence allows him
to pick the appropriate technique and then improvise as necessary.
Improvise with speed because the Leopard does not make utterly
new techniques, but only recombines those he already knows.
The Leopard is the smartest of the cats, but is still a cat,
which means aggression and agile power. The intangible components
of the Leopard's style are several, some of which have already
shown their tangible sides in the preceding paragraph. Listening,
Mind-Like-Water, and the Specious-Present comprise these interrelated
intangible elements. Listening means to sense with more than
any one or two senses (eyes and ears being the most common);
listening means to hear with more even that all the five senses.
Listening is the mental counterpart of the whole body commitment
ideal of the physical level.
The listening
sense is the product of the mind and all the senses, visceral,
somatic, and external. Only when the listening mind is like
a perfectly smooth pool of clear water can it accurately reflect
the world as it is. Any bit of anxiety or anticipation causes
ripples in our pool, and the reflection is distorted. Mind-Like-Water
means that the ideal listener has so mastered his fear that
there are no perceptual distortions; he is calm under fire.
Such a calm in the midst of strife provides no room for anxious
anticipation and an incorrect reading of a developing situation.
For example, many on the sidelines see others sparring, and
say to themselves: "Why that person is not fast at all; I
could easily defeat him." Then they find themselves sparring
with that same person and find that his speed and skill have
dramatically increased over that which they observed from
the sidelines.
The point
is that this is the same person with the same speed and skill,
the only difference is that rather than calmly observing,
he who was the spectator is now engaged and his anxiety causes
his previously perceived slow opponent to now appear to be
more effective than he really is. There are ripples in the
water. While the Leopard gains speed by the methods of body-braking,
snap-striking, angles, pressuring, and accurately listening,
there is yet another factor accounting for his speed. This
can be called the Leopard's sense of a "Specious-Present".
This is a difficult and a somewhat mysterious concept to develop.
This is a time sense which incorporates the intensity of the
Tiger with the presentness of the Crane. The present may be
thought of as that dimensionless instant of time which separates
past and future.
The Leopard,
as an ideal, seeks to add dimension to this instantaneous
present , to stretch his time sense such that the conventions
of past, present, and future come to be seen as naive abstractions.
All there is is the NOW;there is no reality to the rest. An
entire life is more than the accumulation of an infinite series
of NOWS, it is a single NOW. Accurate listening allows the
Leopard to actually respond to strike before his opponent
initiates it. The more that the NOW can be stretched to encompass,
the more mystical and effective the Leopard stylist. Even
on a less eerie level, the better the Leopard can predict
and subsequently frustrate possible future events, attacks...whatever,
the more it will appear that he has moved impossibly fast.
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