Category Archives: shotokan

Learn Kung Fu: Five Methods Including Reversing The Matrix

Learn Kung Fu by Reversing the Matrix!

Tto learn Kung Fu or Karate, or to learn any martial art there are many methods. Unfortunately, most of these methods have limited workability. There is one method, however, that can be used in any art, and improves the learning curve drastically.


Most methods, you see, are based on monkey see monkey do, which is pretty much the oldest, and most inefficient, martial arts training method in existence, in history, and ever. The modern, state of the art method for learning a martial art is matrixing. No offense, but if you live in some backwoods place and haven’t heard of matrixing, you could probably do a quick google on matrix karate, or matrix kung fu, and find out what it is.

At any rate, there are some rather simple methods one can use if one decides to learn by Kung videos, learn taekwondo online, or whatever. The first method, though it is still of the monkey see monkey do variety, is to learn a form or martial arts kata. The learning curve starts to take off, however, when one realizes that they can practice the form facing in any of the four directions of the compass.

learn Kung Fu diagram

All Arts Are Part of the Same Puzzle--If You Can solve Them!

One faces in a certain direction when learning a form, maybe because they are watching a martial arts video, gets used to the direction, even uses key things in the environment to orient themselves. So to start facing north instead of south is actually a good thing. One quickly discards environmental cues and starts inputting the form without need for external reference points.

A second way to learn forms and self defense techniques is to simply do them on both the right and the left side. Everybody figures this one out pretty quickly in their training. To do Karate forms, or Kenpo techniques on both the right side and the left side of the body tends to ‘wake up the brain,’ and the student quickly considers martial arts moves in new ways.

The third way of studying martial arts forms is to perform them backwards. Do your Karate kata backwards-not just the sequence of blocks and strikes in reverse order, but to reverse motion the moves themselves-and you will find the mental capacity expanding geometrically. Not many people have seen this method, it is difficult to do, but man…does it work!

Now, we have actually left most people behind with the last method, and that’s too bad, because it is about to get juicy. Once one learns how to write a matrix on a martial arts, kung fu, karate, or whatever, they think they have opened up wide new vistas of martial arts techniques. They have only scratched the surface, however, for there are two other things one can do that are simple and easy and yet have profound impact.

First, one can put matrixes together; just as the matrixes use basic techniques to open up other techniques, one can use whole matrixes to open up other matrixes. Second, one can actually flip, or reverse, matrixes, and this one opens up the mind and causes massive amounts of data to unfold. Of course, one has to learn how to write a matrix first, and then do a few of them, but once they have done this they will be able to reverse the matrix and learn martial arts faster; they will be able to learn Kung Fu or taekwondo or any martial art they want faster than Neo can play hop scotch.

Learn Martial Arts, learn Karate or Kenpo or whatever, by using the fastest and most efficient training method in existence. Mouse to Monster Martial Arts.

Free Martial Arts Book Merry Christmas!

Got a great Martial Arts Book Offer for you.

It’s my way of wishing Merry Christmas to every Christian, Muslim, Jew, Hindu, Buddhist, Atheist, Scientologist, or whatever religion you happen to be. This is a special day for somebody somewhere, so we should all party, we should all be glad that somebody has found an excuse to be kind on this war torn, economically deprived, stupid planet.

It’s not your particular special day? Tough. Party anyway, and pray, chant, light a candle for world peace.

Screw the politicians…let’s have fun!

Click here for my Xmas gift…

Your Martial Art Doesn’t Work, And Then The Hells Angel Showed Me

A Martial Art and a Hells Angel

outlaw martial art

I had studied Chinese Kenpo Karate for two years. I was an instructor, and I had written the training manual for my school.Then I ran into a Hells Angel.

The story actually started when the restaurant I was working at hired a geeky looking kid. I didn’t like him much, but then one day I saw him kick a wall. The wall shook like the 1906 earthquake, and I knew that he knew something I didn’t.

So I got to know him, and he said he studied Kang Duk Won Korean Karate. He said he didn’t know it well, which I found hard to believe because I had seen him kick a wall harder than a donkey kicks a pervert. He said, however, that his brother knew a lot more than him, and let’s go talk to him.

So that night we drove to Sunnyvale to meet his brother. As we pulled up Alex turned to me and said, “I should tell you that my brother is a Hells Angel.” I blinked, but, heck…I knew Chinese Kenpo Karate, right?

His brother was just under six feet tall, a little shorter than me, but he had the outlaw look in his piercing eyes. We talked about Karate for a while, and then he stated, “Your Martial Art doesn’t work.” He twisted two of the gnarliest fists I had ever seen into my shirt and told me to work my best technique on him.

I went into action. I locked his fists with one hand and brought my other hand up to break his elbows, I struck his wrists with my radial paralyzing downward chop, and when I went to chop him in the throat he threw me through a wall. Yep, all the way through a wall.

He laughed and gave me a hand up, and then he told me to grab his shirt front. I did, and he showed me the self defense technique that he learned at the Kang Duk Won. He reached over and popped a fist into my chest so hard that…that’s right, I went through the wall.

This is a true story, and being tossed through a wall twice changed my life, definitely changed the way I was learning martial arts, and prompted me down the road to other martial arts and how to really make them work. I spent over a half dozen years at the Kang Duk Won Korean Karate school, worked alongside all manner of people, including hells angels and other outlaw bikers. Included in my education was why a martial art doesn’t work.

The things that martial arts instructors add to their martial art, the slant towards tournaments and making money, there’s no end to the gimmicks that have messed up the art. That’s why I came up with Matrixing, so martial arts instructors could fix all that kind of stuff. Click to Monster Martial Arts and see what I came up with.

The Hard Punch Of Flux Theory Is The Secret Of An Empty Strike

Hardest punch

A Tight Fist is a Heavy Fist!

If martial artists really want to know how to punch hard they have to study Flux Theory. Flux Theory is the study of the flow of energy, and is specific to the martial arts. Except for a few mystical concepts, Flux Theory is rarely understood.

The Flow of Energy has two directions, and these would be positive or negative. Of course, this is a matter of viewpoint. For the transfer of energy from one person to the next is a flow and the viewpoint of positive or negative will change depending on who is looking at it.

When energy flows towards somebody it is generally referred to as positive. When energy flows away from somebody it is generally referred to as negative. To create the hard punch of Flux Theory one must strike with negative energy.

What this means is that the strike is flowing towards someone in a positive manner, but the energy in the arm flows away from the fist. I know this sounds contrary, but it isn’t, it is the idea of relaxing until the arm is limp and relaxed, and that while striking. Thus, you are striking somebody with an arm in which the concept of life has been removed.

I know that sounds bizarre, but it isn’t. The whole notion occurs in your head, you see. You take the consideration of life out of the limb when striking.

What occurs is that when you take the consideration for life out of your punching limb, you make your arm into an ‘inanimate object.’ Thus, you are not throwing a fist at another human being, you are throwing a ‘stick,’ a lump, an object with no consideration for what it hits.

And that means you are punching the other person without consideration for him as a human being. You don’t worry about the sanctity of life, you just throw an inanimate object at them. This works better and better as you become more able to move your awareness back out of your body.

The reason this works is because people normally don’t want to hurt other people, so they put energy in the arm so that shock can be absorbed by the arm. Hit, hit, hit…and there is no damage because the arm absorbs it all. When the arm is an empty stick, however, and you have lost the desire to ‘not hurt’ your fellow man, the energy is transmitted purely and the effect on the opponent is the hard punch of Flux Theory.

the hardest punch

Man Steals Own TV Set And Asks Why Didn’t He Learn Kung Fu!

Don’t Help Criminals! Learn Kung Fu!

This fellow had to be asking why didn’t he learn Kung Fu. He lived in Wilmington, Delaware, and he was sauntering down the sidewalk, approaching his own home. Seeing a fellow carrying a TV set, and seeing that the fellow was struggling, he quickly jumped in and offered to help.

You can imagine his surprise, maybe when he grabbed the falling remote, or maybe saw a glass stain on the top, or whatever, that he was holding his own TV set. He looked down the street and realized that his front door was open! That’s right, he was helping a thief steal his own TV set!

Now, what do you do in such a predicament? Do you let go of the TV set, breaking it, and throw a front kick? Do you ask the fellow to put it on the ground for a second, pretending you are tired or need to regrip it, and then scream bloody murder?

After all, the thief has broken into your house. He has gone through your stuff, selected what he thought he would like, and treated your home like a supermarket! Is there any reason to think he hasn’t been in prison, doesn’t know how to fight, isn’t willing to kill you over a TV set?

That’s the point at which you wished you had studied a good system of Kung Fu. A Martial Art like Wing Chun or Hsing i, or maybe even a bit of Tai Chi Chuan! After all, if you want to get in a war with a criminal, you need to be in tip top physical shape, and you need to know how to inflict a little damage while not getting a little damage.

Your best chance is just to scream for all you are worth. After all, criminals don’t want to meet the police, they want to get away! That’s why they call them criminals, right?

Your second best bet, in the event that he decides to take you out and continue with his shopping of your property, is to maintain distance and try a kick for the gonads. You should do this while screaming as loud as you can, of course. Kicks to the groin, taking out the knees, all while staying out of range of his criminal fists is a good idea.

Your last bet, and this is last chance, is to slug it out, grapple, do anything you can to take him out, all while screaming, all while trying to make sure he doesn’t get to you. You know, if you study something like Tai Chi Chuan, a Shaolin Kung fu, anything like that, you are going to have a tremendous advantage. A hardened criminal doesn’t have the strength of discipline to learn Kung Fu, so if you have learned, you will definitely have a better chance of surviving.

get black belt now

What is a Karate Sensei Trying to Teach?

Not many people understand what a real Karate sensei is trying to teach. Too often people sign up for a karate lesson, learn to bow and call the teacher Sensei, and don’t even know what the word means. This is true not just of karate, but of other martial arts, such as Kenpo or Kung Fu. To understand what the word sensei means, however, is to change the student’s mind about what the martial arts are all about.

In Japan there is a three year ‘task’ for monks during their training. During this time they must live by the kindness of their fellow man. They sit in places where people pass by and hold their cups out and beg without speaking.

One of the places for these monks is at crossroads. People travel by, flip a coin in the cup, and walk on. And, occasionally, people ask where a destination is.

The monk, who after a time of living in such a manner looks rather shabby, merely extends his finger and points down the road. Thus, the word sensei means: ‘He who points the way.’ And this term has been taken and used by people who are guiding others to a specific destination.

Now, the unfortunate fact is that many martial arts instructors don’t understand this. Martial Arts have exploded across civilization so fast that proper teachings have been all but forgotten. Thus, many karate sensei are in it solely for the ‘domination factor.’

Thus, real teachings are put aside, and the teaching method has been geared for the person who wishes to control people. But a real martial arts teacher doesn’t control people; he teaches martial arts. And there is a huge and vast difference between these two things.

The fellow who teaches people is looking for money, to dominate, to make sure he is the leader of the pack. The fellow who teaches martial arts doesn’t care about being leader of the pack, he just wants to give information that will lead the student down the correct path. The question is…what is the correct path?

A martial art teacher who lacks understanding will point to trophies, to being in charge, to winning no matter what the cost is. A martial art instructor who has not journeyed upon the way himself will push people, call for discipline, and make people monkey see monkey do what he is showing them, no matter that he doesn’t understand it himself. A true Karate sensei gives the teachings, then removes himself from the path of the student.

Fortunately, there is a course that is not monkey see monkey do, but actually works the way old time martial arts instruction. Karate sensei everywhere, if they want to be true to the art, should look to the Martial Arts Instructor Course at Free Martial Arts Online.

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DISCOUNT MARTIAL ARTS SUPPLIES!
I made a deal with Denny over at Karate Supply. He gave me a code to pass on. Order anything you want, put this code in when you check out, and you get a percent off! I’m not sure how much, but it is worth looking into. So if you need a new uniform, weapons, anything at all…go to KarateSupply.com and type in the code AC789, and get your discount. On anything…on everything…NO LIMIT!

Martial Arts or Martial Science, the Choice Whose time Has Come

 They call it Martial Arts, but is it?

matrix martial artsArt is self expression, and I suppose that once one gets past the fighting stage they do express themselves.

The problem is that in this mess of self expression there is no science.

Isn’t that interesting? A massive body of knowledge dealing with striking, throwing, energy, even spirituality, and there is no science.

I know, some people say there is science in the martial arts, but look at one simple fact: a science has to have rules and principles which apply to everything. To the degree that things aren’t encompassed by the principles–to that degree something isn’t a science.

You don’t believe me? Let’s consider a few examples.

Bruce Lee said, “Absorb what is useful, Discard what is not, Add what is uniquely your own.”

But that is not a scientific principle! That is just an advice to look everywhere.

Looking closer at Bruce’s work one realizes that it is a collection of things he learned from other arts. An arrangement of drills.

And it is all incredibly beautiful, and quite genius…but it is not a science.

Math is a science. You can include all numbers in math, and they all do what they are supposed and they all make sense.

martial science

Logic...Karate Style...Resolves All Body Motion!

Ed Parker built Kenpo with dozens of forms and hundreds of techniques, but can you give me a scientific rule that he stated? He said “principles of motion take precedence over sequence of motion.” But where are the ‘principles of motion’ that he is referring to?

And, again, look closer, his series of books, ‘Infinite Insights,’ is supposed to be based on things written by students for their black belt essay! Not scientific rules.

Physics is a science. Physics is the fact of measuring the universe, and as long as all measurements are accurate, everything in the universe makes sense.

Morihei Ueshiba based his art on one principle: blend with the attack. Everything grows from that, and there is a huge wealth of information, even spiritual growth, but there is no scientific principle stated.

His arts came from a variety of Japanese arts, but predominately sword strikes and Daito Ryu Aiki Jujitsu, which is a collection of some 3200 techniques from a 1000 years previous.

A collection, not a science. Boiled down to the select techniques which ‘blend with the attack.’

martial arts diagram

All Arts Are Part of the Same Puzzle--If You Can solve Them!

Go on, name an art, you will find a principle or two, usually a strategy, but no science. And, what happens when one learns a martial art with no science is that they learn slower. They take longer. They are not as efficient.

Let me explain it as simply as I can.

If somebody gave you a couple of baskets of parts that contained a motorcycle, how long would it take you to put that motorbike together? And, when it was together, if you didn’t understand such things as what the correct tolerances and timing should be…what it ever really run?

That is what the martial arts look like.

Now, suppose somebody gave you a couple of baskets of parts…and a manual telling you the exact sequence for putting the motorcycle together, and the correct tolerances and timing and such, how long would it take you to get that puppy running? And, it would run good, too!

That is what matrixing does.

The unfortunate fact is that most people, holding the baskets of parts, think they have the whole thing, but they are only holding a few of the parts, and there is no manual offering scientific instruction.

The truth is this: people who do the martial arts are quite brilliant…they have just been sold a bill of goods.

matrixing martial artThey have been convinced that the method for learning the martial arts is sacred, no form should ever be changed, it is part of what makes the martial arts so fantastic!

And, in truth, they have been sold on the most inefficient teaching method in the history of man.

They have been sold on ‘monkey see monkey do,’ which is designed for children.

They have been convinced to memorize large sequences of random motions, and told that there are mysteries to be found.

Well, yeah, there are mysteries all right, but the mysteries are because of the method, and the method does nothing to reveal the mysteries. In truth, the mysteries just perpetuate more mysteries. And I say this because the people who have the biggest wins from doing Matrixing are the people who have the most arts under their belts.

The more they study, you see, the deeper they immerse themselves in the mystery, and without solving it.

Heck, when they finally see the science, and everything, absolutely everything, slides into the right slot, they are blown out!

real karateMatrixing solves the mystery, and the student who studies matrixing invariably experiences a huge sigh of relief. He has, finally, been rescued form the mystery.

A mystery, you see, is merely a word for something that you don’t know. Study matrixing, get the real reasons, and the mystery disappears.

Voila…enlightenment.

Enlightenment, which may people think is a lightening bolt from the sky, is really just getting all the information. It is competence. And it doesn’t have to take years and decades and lifetimes…it can happen just as soon as one gets all the information–and if the information is in order, as in Matrixing, then one can get it that much sooner.

At this point I want to go over some of the Matrixing courses. This will give you an overview of the science.

I began my studies of the Martial Arts in 1967 at a Chinese Kenpo school. I quickly became an instructor, and then wrote the instructional manual for the school.

I gave up Kenpo when I was introduced to the Kang Duk Won.

The Kang Duk Won was a form of Karate which predated Funakoshi, and thereby avoided all the teaching methods developed for children, for training masses of people who spoke different languages (monkey see monkey do), and other such traps.

Kang Duk Won was one of the more important of the Martial Arts ‘houses’ that gave birth to Taekwondo. It was also the art of choice for the Imperial Bodyguards of three different countries: Okinawa, Japan, and Korea.

I studied the Kang Duk Won under Bob Babich.

After several years of studying I went off on my own to teach. In taking people to Black Belt I found an item of particular interest…there were two arts in the Kang Duk Won; there was the official art of the Kang Duk Won, and then there was the art created by Bob Babich and lumped in with the Kang Duk Won.

I separated the two arts, naming the one created by Bob as Kwon Bup, or ‘Fist Method.’

Having done this I began considering the martial arts in new lights; I began to see that the arts were ‘put togethers’ of other arts.

Kenpo turned out to be a combination of hard karate (see Parker’s first book) and the Kung Fu developed by a fellow named Woo. The result of these two arts was so unmanageable that Kenpo is taught as an art separate from freestyle.

grand terminus tai chi

The Grand Terminus

Think about it: a martial art that has nothing to do with fighting.

But don’t think about it too long, for too many arts are built that way.

So I had, at that time, several different arts. I had versions of Funakoshi’s Karate, the Kang Duk Won, Kwon Bup, Kung Fu Kenpo style, and a bit of training in Wing Chun and Aikido and Tai Chi Chuan.

And they didn’t fit together.

Yet, I had a sense that they did, or that they were supposed to.

And, before I go on, let me say that I wrote books on Kang Duk Won and Kwon Bup, and I put them, along with another book I had written on Pan Gai Noon, in the course I called ‘Evolution of an Art.’ you can find more info on that course on my website.

I wrote my first matrix, it was just a list of techniques probably about 1980. I called it the 16 Step Self Defense. It was a logical put together of Karate, Kung Fu, Tai Chi Chuan, and Aikido.

And, it didn’t work.

Interestingly, the 16 Step Self Defense worked like a charm, worked faster than anything I had ever done, but it didn’t make martial artists. It wasn’t a big enough piece of art, you see, and the result was that it was more like a gimmick.

martial arts teacher

You can learn hundreds of techniques within an hour!

Sort of like Sticky Hands…teach it without an art, and it doesn’t work as well. It works okay, but a person needs more training in how to control the body before they start learning how to fight.

I moved to Los Angeles, became a writer for the martial arts magazines, studied more arts, and kept thinking about Matrixing. This was decades before the movie, and I was using Matrixing for the name of my concepts and arts.

And, I taught. When I learned something I always turned around and taught it, for that was how I found what was right and wrong with an art.

One day I decided to put together a video series based on the matrxing concepts. There were three segments in the series, and they were called:

The Infinite Fist

Pa Kua Chang

Pa Kua Chang and The Infinite Fist

There was actually a fourth course, and I’ll put that out some day, but the real essence of Matrixing was contained in those three courses.

In the Infinite Fist I created an art from the ground up.

bagwa zhangIn Pa Kua Chang I applied Matrixing Principles, and made the world’s first perfect Pa Kua.

In Pa Kua Chang and The Infinite Fist I combined the two arts, revealing two man exercises that nobody had ever thought of.

In truth, nobody had ever thought of any of this stuff.

While certain arts had influenced me, in the end, I tossed them all out and concentrate on just the true and exact science of body and motion.

Interestingly, years later, while filming segments for the various matrixing courses, my partner (Mike) was asking me about the ‘old matrixing arts.’ I answered some questions, got bored, and tossed out the remark: ‘Well, if you’re so interested, you should just look at the videos.’

Man, there was a moment of profound shock. He went blank. His mouth actually dropped open.

Matrix symbol

...to the simplicity of Matrixing.

“You have…videos?”

I was made curious by his reaction. “Yeah.”

“You have films? You actually shot videos? And you still have them?”

I said, “I have boxes of stuff. I used to sell the videos in the mags. They’re in a box in my closet.”

For a long second my partner (Mike) didn’t say anything, then he turns to my work out partner and says, “He’s got stuff that would give Bruce Lee an orgasm, and he just puts it in boxes and forgets about it.” (Yeah, he actually said that.)

I was honestly a little confused. I didn’t think about the stuff I was doing, you see. I just kept working out, teaching, figuring things out and having a good time.

Anyway, those three videos are on the ‘Create Your Own Art’ course. They are grainy, the video technology of the day was real caveman, but they are understandable.

And, perhaps of interest is the win from the first student who ever ordered the ‘Create Your Own Art’ course. It is at the bottom of this report.

One day my son came to me, wanted to learn Martial Arts, and I decided to teach him Outlaw Karate.

Outlaw Karate was what I had developed and begun teaching when my first teaching method had failed. And, brother, it worked.

Well, of course it worked, it was a put together of the best techniques and moves from Kang Duk Won and Kwan Bup, and it was influenced by Matrixing. It was also the toughest class I ever taught. Poke around my websites and you will find things I wrote about that adventure. You will also find the actual Outlaw Karate course itself.

Bagua ZhangInterestingly, it was my first real success on combining arts. I didn’t use the 16 step self defense, but I did use things that were the direct result of the 16 step self defense and the matrxing concepts that I was working with. So the course, like Evolution of an Art, is not Matrixing, but it is the result of Matrixing.

Time went on, I opened a few schools, closed a few schools, wrote more, wrote a lot, and one day one of my students (Mike) asked me if I wanted to sell martial arts videos on this new fangled thing called the internet.

So we built a studio, he bought a camera, and we filmed the bulk of the matrixing courses. Matrix Karate, Matrix Kung Fu, we had Matrix Aikido from a seminar, Five Army Tai Chi Chuan, and so on.

And, we went into business…and flopped.

Simply, we didn’t know anything about marketing. It was frustrating, because the few people who did buy courses were sending us unbelievable wins, but we couldn’t sell enough courses to make a profit.

In the end, Mike turned everything over to me and told me to go into business for myself. And that was the birth of Monster Martial Arts.

Monster turned out to be a Monster. I was suddenly besieged by people asking questions and wanting to know about this Matrixing thing. I have students in near every country of the world.

martial arts illustrations

Martial Arts Book technology back in the 1960s

Eventually I wrote some more books and filmed some more videos. Chief amongst the books was ‘The Punch,’ and ‘Matrixing Chi.’

The Punch is a doctoral dissertation on what exactly has to go into a punch. It is loaded with drills and the exact information necessary to one punch anybody. Nobody has ever written a more comprehensive book on the punch than this one.

Matrixing Chi details the workings of the body and how to generate Chi. It is rather unwieldy to read, as I left my normal style to better flow the information as teacher to student. But it is very, very good. It is the only time in history that somebody has written about chi as a science, using scientific principles.

And, amongst the videos was the Three Month Black Belt Course.

The thing I was precisely trying to do, when I taught the Three Month Black Belt course, was get rid of reaction time, to make a person intuitive. No more think about, think, think and do…just do.

This getting rid of reaction time is called ‘Mushin no shin,’ or mind of no mind,’ in the Japanese. The Japanese say it takes decades of intense, dedicated practice to achieve Mushin No Shin. Using Matrixing I got a fellow to an intuitive state of mind within three months.

snake martial artsAnd that is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to matrixing.

Now, that is the history of Matrixing. It is a quick history, and there is a lot more written on my website, in my blogs and articles and so on. If you haven’t subscribed to the Monster Martial Arts Newsletter you probably should, because that is where I get into this stuff.

The important thing is that Matrixing is a science. This is something people realize as soon as they pop one of my courses into the video player. This is the thing that elevates the martial arts and blows people away: the actual and scientific reasons for how the body works. It is a level of knowledge that nobody has ever written about in the entire history of the Martial Arts. Not Bruce, not Parker, not Morihei Ueshiba…nobody.

 

The thing I want to say at this point has to do with the order of courses one should study.

One could take it from the ground up, and follow the exact course I took. But it would be better to start with Matrix Karate. That is the art which has the most matrixing on it; that is the course which establishes the science.

Then I would recommend one study the courses in the order I present them on the Monster website.

Though, to be honest, one should select the course which interests them the most. People are more prone to studying what interests them, and I would hate to see Matrix Karate gathering dust on a shelf just because somebody should have gotten a different course for their initial studies. Further, people have an intuitive feel for these things, and they will know what art they should study, when they should study The Punch, or go into Blinding Steel (weapons), or whatever else.

martial arts knowledgeIn closing I want to say something:

Matrixing is a science.

It is not a sampling of principles, it is not a strategy of some sort; it is a science.

It contains all the scientific rules which make a science out of the martial arts.

Done properly it will enable a person to fix any martial art. They will be able to separate arts that have been combined, create the best order for learning, and understand all the parts that have gone missing over the millennia.

In short, Matrixing will create better martial arts, and it will create better martial artists. The person who knows everything about his art, and even knows how it fits into the greater scheme of all martial arts, is going to be a better martial artist. Period.

And, icing on the cake, the person who learns  Matrixing is going to be learning faster, much faster.

So the question is this: are you going to be learning Matrixing?

Are you going to learn the most important developments in the martial arts in the history of this planet?

To do otherwise would be to flog the horse while jets are flying over head. For Matrixing is taking off. In a hundred years there won’t be any martial art that isn’t matrixed. In a hundred years…but you don’t have to wait that long.

WIN FROM FIRST STUDENT TO EVER BUY A MATRIXING COURSE

Dear Al,

I actually came upon your work in 1986…In the very beginning I knew you had the True Art and that is exactly why I have followed you all these years. I have had the benefit of having studied from at least a dozen masters and I can tell you that no one contributed more to my martial arts education than you. So when I am asked who is my Grandmaster, without hesitation you are first and foremost.

In the eighties when I was young I was invited to leave most of the schools I tried to train at. When it came time to spar I humbly put on my white belt and proceeded to practice what I knew, and to everyones amazement the black belts in these schools just couldn’t handle what I was doing.

I will be the first to admit I am not a superior martial artist, but what I did do was study everything I could get from you and practice till I could apply it. I am a living testimony to your work as I have effectively survived 100 street fights, and I spent over 4 years working the County Jail as a  Deputy and fighting there on a daily basis with hardened criminals (I only worked maximum security.)

Now I am not blowing my own horn here, I am just telling you the facts, and further trying to make the point that I am still alive because of what I have learned from you. So just know that through your teachings you bring us the skills to live and survive. I am sure you already knew that, so just know that this student appreciates all you do and again want to say thanks for all you contributed to my life and my art. Sincerely, Charles Cashmere MD,Phd. Founder Chung Moo Kwan System.

Martial Arts, Rowing from Cuba, and an Invention Whose Time Has Come!

learn karate onlineFree Martial Arts. A lot of people want something for nothing, and that ain’t good, but then, a lot of people want to be free, and that’s where the martial arts comes in. A study of an art like Karate, or Aikido, or some type of Kung fu, breeds the desire for freedom in the human spirit.
My first real glimmer of this came about when I taught a fellow from Eastern Europe. He came to America, I taught him Karate and other martial arts, and one day I asked him about life behind the Iron Curtain.
‘You can’t study Karate unless you are police, or son of politician.’
Really?
‘That’s why I come to United States! I want study Karate!’
That certainly blew Mrs’ Case’s son’s socks right off his little tootsies. Humbled me, it fair did.
My second brush up against this idea of the desire for freedom in the hearts and souls of men was not connected with the martial arts. I was doing some work for a gal, she had a slight accent, and I found out she was Cuban, and then she told me the story of her father.
He wanted freedom, so he took the inner tube from an airplane tire, which was a capital offense in Cuba at the time.
He then ripped a plank off a fence, packed a punch, and rowed ninety miles from Cuba to the US, just to be free.
She told me that midway to Florida he took a break, reached into his sack for a sandwich, chewed on it slowly and watched the sharks circling his inner tube.
Now he would have made a good Karate student!
The thing about freedom is that you are free to do what you want. Ignore the government, make a plan, and do what you want.
For instance, speaking of rowing from Cuba, I always wanted to make a car that could drive on water. A few of these contraptions have actually been made, and there have been plans published in such mags as Popular Mechanics and such, but I think about something easier to construct, easy enough for people to make with a few tools and a couple of days off.
I thought about a raft. You drive the car on, placing the rear tires between some rollers that are connected to the screw.
And, if you have to make a long voyage, say to Hawaii, you simply make a few inflatable canoes and fill them with gas and whatever supplies you need.
Anyway, that’s my cockamammie idea, and I don’t think it’s a bad one. Just hasn’t been done yet. Well, perhaps I should stick to my ‘free martial arts,’ eh?

A List Of Jackie Chan Stunts In Which He Nearly Lost His Life

In the list of Jackie Chan stunts the star has come close to death more times than you can count. Still, he keeps going, making some of the best martial arts movies in the history of cinema. Here are seven Jackie Chan Films in which he nearly died, or at least suffered serious injuries.

One of his early starring efforts was a movie called Snake in the Eagle’s Shadow. During the filming of this movie he failed to evade a sword which should have had a blunt edge. The result was a thick spray of his blood, and the screams you hear in the scene are of his real and actual pain.

In the filming of Police Story he was almost paralyzed for life. He slid down a pole in one action packed stunt, exploding all the hanging lights and ripping electrical wires and falling through a glass cover. In this scene he broke the seventh and eighth vertebra in his backbone, and managed to dislocate his hip.

During Crime Story Jackie had a scene in which he was between two cars which were slamming together. Either his timing, or the drivers’ of the cars timing was off. The result was one Jackie Chan Stunt with two crushed legs.

He has injured his knees numerous times, and doubts that he has much cartilage left. One of the worst knee injuries happened during, of all things, a skateboard scene. The movie was City Hunter.

One of his most famous injuries was while filming a scene while filming Rumble in the Bronx. He leaped and broke his ankle when attempting to land on a moving hovercraft. You can see, if you look carefully, the cast they put on his leg so he could keep filming.

He nearly broke his neck on the set of Project A. In this instance he fell from a very tall clock tower, bounced from awning to awning, before landing on his head on the ground. You can see this scene, and other out takes of him being injured, at the end of the movie.

The worst injury he ever received, however, was during the filming of Armour of God. He leaped to a tree, missed, and bashed his head on the ground. The star is a trooper however, for within two days of nearly dying from a broken skull and hemorrhaging brain, he was back filming and making more of his incredible Jackie Chan Stunts.