When I began studying the martial arts, it was a brand of karate much like shotokan, I was taken by the concept of one punch one kill. The idea that you could stop an attacker with one punch was absolutely fabulous! And that you could actually kill somebody with a karate strike, well, that was more than just a birthday party, you know?
Then, along came kung fu and the concept of dim mak, the idea of killing with a simple touch of the fingers. Man, now this was something, and I know it doesn't speak well of my maturity, but, man! To actually just touch someone, with a fingertip, and have them drop dead, cowabunga!
We trained hard in our desire to attain these killing philosophies. We did kata and handstands and techniques and spent endless hours punching the makiwara. Oddly, the more violent we got in the training hall, the more peaceful we were outside of the dojo.
Finally, age caught up with me, over forty years in the arts, and, finally, I began to understand some of this one punch, or even one touch, kill ability. I discovered that it wasn't in the fiber of muscularity. No matter how hard, strong and fast my body became, you see, there was something missing.
The missing element was Intention. Intention is the will to do something, the desire to accomplish something. Consider it an invisible line between the thought of an action, and the accomplishment of that action.
Watch a fight between two MMA fighters, they bash each other for a few rounds, and nobody falls down. The moment one hits the canvas, however, you have seen the first real punch of the fight. The other punches were just trying but not achieving. They were generated by thought, but they never had sufficient oomph to reach completion, reality, actuality.
So, how do you train for the one punch one kill dim mak death touch of karate legend and kung fu mysticism? Don't tighten the arm, for tense muscles lock up the intention, stop the intention from flowing. Forget that the opponent is there, and thrust your fist, or finger, through the space of his body.
Now, this is the truth, what I have told you here, and perhaps you can find training methods that will help you implement this truth. The odd thing is that when you finally gain the ability of this strike, you will not have the lack of compassion to use it, and you will find that the ability you earned translates into methods of living that are far superior than just killing. In the martial arts it is the knowledge behind the technique that is valuable, the technique is merely a part of the journey to your true self.
Then, along came kung fu and the concept of dim mak, the idea of killing with a simple touch of the fingers. Man, now this was something, and I know it doesn't speak well of my maturity, but, man! To actually just touch someone, with a fingertip, and have them drop dead, cowabunga!
We trained hard in our desire to attain these killing philosophies. We did kata and handstands and techniques and spent endless hours punching the makiwara. Oddly, the more violent we got in the training hall, the more peaceful we were outside of the dojo.
Finally, age caught up with me, over forty years in the arts, and, finally, I began to understand some of this one punch, or even one touch, kill ability. I discovered that it wasn't in the fiber of muscularity. No matter how hard, strong and fast my body became, you see, there was something missing.
The missing element was Intention. Intention is the will to do something, the desire to accomplish something. Consider it an invisible line between the thought of an action, and the accomplishment of that action.
Watch a fight between two MMA fighters, they bash each other for a few rounds, and nobody falls down. The moment one hits the canvas, however, you have seen the first real punch of the fight. The other punches were just trying but not achieving. They were generated by thought, but they never had sufficient oomph to reach completion, reality, actuality.
So, how do you train for the one punch one kill dim mak death touch of karate legend and kung fu mysticism? Don't tighten the arm, for tense muscles lock up the intention, stop the intention from flowing. Forget that the opponent is there, and thrust your fist, or finger, through the space of his body.
Now, this is the truth, what I have told you here, and perhaps you can find training methods that will help you implement this truth. The odd thing is that when you finally gain the ability of this strike, you will not have the lack of compassion to use it, and you will find that the ability you earned translates into methods of living that are far superior than just killing. In the martial arts it is the knowledge behind the technique that is valuable, the technique is merely a part of the journey to your true self.
About the Author:
Al Case has taught martial arts for forty++ years. A writer for the magazines, he has his own column in Inside Karate. You can find out about Intention and death punches at Punch Em Out, and a free ebook is available at Monster Martial Arts.
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