Everyone has their own martial arts journey. Some people encounter a teacher/school/style and circumstances allow them to follow that single path for a life time.
My own path has been somewhat more circuitous. Tae Kwon Do in high school (when Kung Fu the original series was on TV), then Yoshinkan Aikido as a young man. The Cheng Man Ching style of Taijiquan. Dabbling in Gao Style Baguazhang, an offshoot of Yiquan, a different school of Gao Style Baguazhang, Xingyiquan, Wu family style of Taijiquan, BJJ and finally back to my original CMC Taijiquan teacher until she retired and now with her senior student; while also working on a variation of CMC's Taijiquan on the side.
Today we have a guest post from Jeremy Thomas, who trains and teaches Pak Mei in Arkansas and has had his own journey. Enjoy.
*Lam Hung Pak Mei: The Precarious Path from Koryu Bujutsu to Hakka Kung Fu*
My step-father was an avid golfer. As a matter of course, I was to be as
well. When I got my first set of (plastic) clubs, I immediately grabbed
the driver, and struck a sword-pose akin to one of "Leonardo" from
TMNT. We have a poloroid photo of it, hidden
away in the attic. Needless to say, I don't golf.
That said, mechanically, a golf swing and a katana swing aren't terribly dissimilar..
Coming from a rough-and-tumble mining town, Joplin, Missouri, fighting
was as normal as brushing our teeth. In fact, at one time, Joplin was
known as "Little Chicago", due to the high rate of violent crime. Mom
took the initiative; and she found Mid-American
Taekwondo, under Instructor Steve Atkinson, where I trained until
reaching 2nd stripe green belt. I still have the belts, certificates and
patches. To this day, I credit my TKD experience for my "clean" kicks.
But, with no weapons program, I eventually lost
interest.
And, I knew my mother's finances were limited. I'm a "Momma's Boy", and proud of it.
In 8th grade, bullying issues led me to start lifting free-weights; I
was the 4th person in a school of around 600, to break 200lbs on the
bench press. The next step was the wrestling team. I had learned in TKD
sparring, catching kicks works; really well for
me, personally. Turns out, I was more inclined toward grappling.. or so
I thought.
I lost every, single match that year. "Discouraged" doesn't cover it.
And then the clouds parted. The last meet of the year was an Ozark
regional tournament; I pinned 3 opponents that day, and took 3rd place
bronze in my weight-class. What changed in my approach?
I got angry.
We all know "The best fighter is never angry". I wonder about that; it really hasn't held water in my experience.
After graduating, I obtained a construction job on the road, "storm
chasing". This is when I started looking at Budo, kenjutsu and Iai.
After a particularly nasty job at a chemical plant, I resigned my
position, drive 9 hours home, hugged my mom, and slammed
open the phone book to the yellow-pages. I knew as soon as I read it;
"Butokuden West Aikikai". The first phone call with Mr. Karriman was
fantastically awkward:
"Hello?"
"Mr. Karriman?"
"Hi, "Mr. Karriman", my name's John."
"Apologies, sir, my name is Jeremy Thomas and I'm curious if you teach kenjutsu?"
"Yes. We're a sword school. Why do you want to learn it?"
(Awkward pause, as I hadn't considered the "why" for one second)
"Well, for knowledge and the discipline.."
"Better answer than most. Class starts at 7pm. I appreciate punctuality."
"Y-yes, sir!"
Mr. Karriman is a life-long martial artist, ex-LEO, and taught
P.T./Defensive Tactics to Academy recruits at MSSU (Joplin, MO). He was,
by far, my strictest teacher to date. He had trained with likes of
Risuke Otake-Sensei and Obata-Soke. He was a no non-sense
teacher, austere and authoritarian.
Just what I needed at the time.
Karriman-Sensei did not give "atta-boy's". Mistakes were ruthlessly
exposed. If you were the first one in the gym, you BETTER have it swept.
When asked a question, there was no "yeah". It was "yes, sir" or "yes,
sensei". He has seen the very worst of humanity
in his LEO/Security/Other career, and, in his own words, around 2008,
"I'm just now starting to feel a touch of compassion again".
There were times, simply being in his presence was mentally and
physically taxing. If you ask any of Karriman-Sensei's students about
him, one word will be a common thread: "Intense"
And the quality of martial-education I received under Karriman-Sensei
was equivalent to a "Master's in Violence and Defensive-Tactics", from a
"Martial Harvard". Everything for use. Economy-of-motion. Tac-con's
(tactical considerations). Blades and sticks,
galore. OOAD loop. Situational awareness. We even had CPR and
Phlebotomy classes. Everything was meant for real-world application.
Daito-ryu is a style founded on the concept of law enforcement and
security. The original techniques, the "Oshikiuchi" (secret inner palace
art) had been kept within the Takeda clan for centuries, with oral
traditions stating the system was codified in the
early 1100's by Minamoto no Yoshimitsu (源 義光) who dissected corpses
brought back from the battle-field. The musculature was studied for the
purpose of learning kyusho-jutsu (vital-point strikes) and joint-lock
techniques. This deep understanding of anatomy
lends the art well to Law Enforcement and Security, as many techniques
are nuetralizations rather than direct-damage blows, though atemi-waza
(striking techniques) are frequently used to set-up, "soften" or
follow-up to a throw or pin.
Some of my best memories, are of my Kendo bouts with Karriman-Sensei, in
the dark gymnasium, after the rest of the class had went home.
Talk about an "eye-opening" experience.
I rarely deal in absolutes, but if I can impart anything I learned from
those years of Daito-ryu, it's this: blades are NO JOKE. And I can say
that, absolutely. If you are not familiar with the "21ft. Rule", I
highly suggest using some "google-fu", and getting
familiar.
I'm looking at you, shooters.
In 2014, I learned about this mysterious and, apparently violent, art of
"Bak Mei' through a roommate who had already been training with Sigung a
couple years. My daughter had just been born, and eventually, Daito-ryu
fell out of my budget. Pak Mei was available
and convenient; I had ZERO experience with Traditional Chinese Martial
Arts. I just wanted to train.
Calling the transition "rough", is an understatement. Budo and Kung Fu
have very different approaches to, often, similar concepts. Now, at this
point, I want to explain, what, for me, was the hardest "transition"
between a Japanese Koryu and a Hakka Kung Fu
style:
Generally, Koryu is heirarchal, based on rank and seniority. That said,
in my dojo, I could make a friendly challenge to spar/roll with a peer
of any rank; right up to Sensei, if I wanted to lay in a bathtub full of
ice the next day.
TCMA is familial; literally fathers, uncles, older brothers, younger
brothers, etc. In my experience, who it is acceptable to "cross-hands"
with, as the saying goes, is often unclear, and it seems that there is
little desire to increase the transparency of
what etiquette is appropriate, in regards to hard-sparring. As one
example, a 9th generation student would not be allowed to engage an 8th
generation student to a sparring match.
I'm not saying this familial system is "wrong"; how could it be, to
survive this long? What I am saying is it is very different from Koryu
ettiquete and protocol. To me, Japanese dojo ettiquete seems fairly
straight-forward; respect for instructors and peers,
self-control, appropriate language, appropriate attire. To myself,
pretty simple. The ettiquete of the Chinese kwoon is, to me, extremely
complex, if not convoluted at times. I've noticed in my own pai,
individuals are confused about who is there senior or
junior. Confusion about being a general student, lineaged student, or
closed-door disciple.
In my opinion, this confusion leads to a fair amount of, at best
embarrassment, and at worst, real problems between individuals or even
other styles.
This is something that I am making great effort to research and
understand. In time, I hope to be able to contribute to solving these
confusions and misunderstandings. Thus, severely limiting the amount of
related issues. Unity and solidarity is something I
think we should all be striving for.
Now, to the "good oil"; my first meeting with Lam Hung Pak Mei Master Simon Lui Long Chun.
My first meeting with Lui-Sigung was amazing; he showed up after an
all-night drive, hugged me and gave me a saber and a staff. He explained
the basic movement of the waxwood gwun (staff) with a clever and quite
hilarious sexual innuendo, which I don't think
would be appropriate to repeat here. Then, it was an immediate dive
into Jik Bo (our first form, straight-step), head-first, sink-or-swim.
I managed a fair doggy-paddle.
We trained 10 hours that day. And I was hooked on Pak Mei. Watching
Lui-Sigung perform is like watching a shaman of ancient times,
vigorously, violently weaving a spell of subjugation over his enemies.
When Sigung performs, his entire countenance changes; there's
not a trace of "Papa Lui". It may be cliché, but "demon" is accurate a
description as anything else.
But, if I was forced to use one descriptive for Lui-Sigung, I wouldn't have to think twice: "Generous"
My Sifu, Ruston Aaker, is incredibly knowledgeable about body-mechanics,
structure and breath-work. His dedication and depth of knowledge are
concealed by his perenially humble nature; do not let his relaxed
attitude fool you, he is incredibly skilled, particularly
in sword-play. Working with him over the last couple years has improved
my Pak Mei ten-fold, and deepened my understanding of what makes the
system unique and special; worth preserving. Along with my 9th
generation brothers, Jordan Bywaters and Robert Holcomb,
we exchange thoughts, experiences and methodologies which leads to a
collective group improvement; there's no possibility of us "not being on
the same page". Sifu and myself have several commonalities, including
an affinity for swordsmanship, both inside and
outside of TCMA. It makes the relationship smooth and comfortable. I
would like very much to think he would agree.
The engine that drives Pak Mei is "luk ging", a type of energy
expression unique to Pak Mei. Developed through the "Six Parts of Power"
or the six areas of martial force (neck/teeth, shoulders, waist,
abdomen, arms and legs), and the use of the Four Energies:
Float, Sink, Spit, Swallow, we develop a "sacred" ging, something akin
to "scared/shock power on steroids". For a closer cultural perspective,
the following is a poem from 5 Ancestors Boxing, describing the "4
Energies":
吞如洪水卷地,
吐如疾箭离弦,
浮如风吹羽毛,
沉如顽石投江。
Swallow, like flood waters into the earth
Spit, like an arrow leaves the (bow) string
Float, like wind blowing through feathers
Sink, like a rock cast into a river
The "4 Energies" concept not being limited to Pak Mei, has yielded many
different descriptions and expressions through the various arts which
utilize the concept. Here is another, more pragmatic poem on the "4
Energies" --
吞、吐、浮、沈。
Swallow, Spit, Float, Sink
攻爲吐 - Attack is Spit
守爲吞 - Defense is Swallow
進爲吐 - Advance is Spit
退爲吞 - Retreat is Swallow
快爲吐 - Speed is Spit
慢爲吞 - Slow is Swallow
輕爲浮 - Light is Float
重爲沈 - Heavy is Sink
化爲浮 - Neutralize is Float
凝爲沈 - Stiffening is Sink
Using the "Four Energies" and the "Eight Methods" are paramount; without
them, it's not Pak Mei, no matter how fast or clean it looks. The spine
is the largest kinetic spring in the body, and Hakka arts have made
good use of that fact, to produce maximum force,
even when there is little space to "load up" a strike, illustrated by
the following Pak Mei poem:
两手不回随手转
"Hands don't draw back to extend forward."
The "8 Methods" or "Baat Fa" could be consider Pak Mei's basic/common
"movements". It's a subject that requires in-depth study, that this
article's limits will not allow for. If any are interested, I recommend
my Sibak, Sifu Adam Chan's YouTube channel. He
has a video for each of the Baat Fa, and explaind them in detail. For
now, here is a list of the eight, as my Sifu presented it to me:
"Baat Ging: Eight Methods/Actions"
鞭 Bin: whipping
割 Got: cutting
挽 Waan: pulling
撞 Jong: colliding
衝 Chung: charging
彈 Tan: springing/bouncing
索 Sok: jolting (searching)
盤 Pun: revolving/cycle
It's about generating as much force in as short a distance as possible.
Where Bruce Lee had his famous "1-inch punch" we go even further, to
"no-inch power". This power coupled with Pak Mei's "3 Gates" targeting
system, makes it exceptionally devestating and
accurate; in general, strikes are targeted at the eyes, groin and in
our lineage, particularly, the throat. We all know the medical
implications of those techniques ---
Pak Mei's reputation as an aggresive art is well-earned.
While it's true that many of our weapons forms were trades with other
styles, Pak Mei mechanics are applied to the forms, so they are, in
essence, Pak Mei. That said, the best suited to express those mechanics
is the pole (gwun). Grandmaster Chuen Lai Chuen
traded three hand-sets for a pole-set, at one point. "Continuous Double
Tonfa/Crutch" (回環雙枴) is also a Pak Mei speciality, generally reserved
for advanced practitioners. "36 Movements of the Big Fork/Tiger Fork"
(三叉大扒) is especially treasured by our lineage,
as our 5th generation Master Ng Yiu was reknowned for his skill with
the Dai Pa (also known as "Tiger Fork"). His Dai Pa was so heavy, three
students had to carry it together to the demonstration grounds. The Fork
is still on display in Hong Kong. Sigung-Lui
once told a story, that Master Ng would "throw a handful of coins"
across the kwoon floor. Then, grasping his Dai Pa, he would "hit the
coin with the tine, bounce the coin into the air, then thrust it into
the wall". He repeated this for each coin. Another
notable fact is that Master Ng removed many of the "crouching"
sequences from the form-sets, as his large stature made them
impractical. As a large man myself, I really appreciate that. In fact,
my body style is similar to Master Ng's in build, and I try to
model my general "shape" from his postures.
We have many other sets including quiang (spear), huedeidao (willow-leaf
sword), zhan ma dao (horse-chopping saber), kwan dao (glaive), qiao
deng (bench) and several more. For a weapons enthusiast such as myself,
it makes for a good fit.
Over the last year, I've been making the awkward, challeging transition
from student-to-teacher. To be specific, it's more of an
"assistant-teacher" or "junior-intructor" position. This lead to the
creation of the Joplin Pak Mei Athletic Association, the organization
I teach through, under the auspices of the Simon Lui Pak Mei Athletic
Association of Minnesota. While I've worked with both, I really find
myself elated after a training session with the kids class. Their raw
enthusiasm and boundless energy reignite my own
passion for the arts, time and again. The wonderful thing about
teaching children: they don't know what they can't do. They haven't put
limitations on themselves, yet. If I ask an adult to do a forward
break-fall (front flip) he is going to give me the "huh?"
look. If I ask a youth... they just do it. Children are certainly more
malleable; and very impressionable. They are watching and listening
before and after "bowing-in or out" of class. I have to remind myself;
"they are always watching".
"Lead by example" was the motto instilled into me, early in my martial
career. In recent months, many reknowned Sifu, Sensei and advanced
practitioners have left this mortal plane. Collectively, we have some
very large shoes to fill. If not us, then who?
In the spirit of that question, I'd like to share a portion of the
eulogy that my Karriman-Sensei wrote for his own Sensei, Richard
"Papasan" Gordon, when he left this world:
"I’ll continue to hang out with older folks. I’ll continue to visit them
in the hospital, and occasionally I’ll lose one. That’s just part of
the trade off. They pass what they learn from their life and the
previous generations to us and we repeat the process
— mistakes and all. If we had them around all of the time we wouldn’t
get a chance to find out how important paying attention is. We’ll
probably find that we were talking when we should have been listening.
I learned a long time ago that if you want to learn the fastest, safest,
best way to do something, you ask someone older. Do yourself a favor
and find an older adult and let them mentor your socks off. It’s kind of
necessary if we ever hope to fill their shoes."
- Sensei John J. Karriman
I'd like to thank and credit my Sigung, Sifu and all my pai brothers for their input, suggestions and support.
A special "Thank You" to my Sibak, Sensei/Sifu Russ Smith, and his
student, Brother Joshua Durham of Burinkan Martial Arts, in Dade,
Florida. Sibak Smith has been an inspiration and encouragement to me,
since we first met at the 2016 LHPM Banquet. I performed
a single saber set, which I had to augment on-the-fly, to avoid
striking a spectator. Sibak Smith not only noticed, but commended me for
the improvisation. Those few words of kindness took root in my very
heart. All of the poems in the article were provided
by Sibak Smith. Many can be found in his recent book, "Principle-Driven
Skill Development". I cannot recommend it enough, especially to those
are, or are intending to teach.
Brother Joshua Durham has become a close, personal friend, and we have
many great exchanges of ideas for our youth programs. He has also
provided me with great materials and insight into the Huedeidao, or the
more commonly known, "Butterfly Swords". Learning
and seeing his process and methodology has helped me shape my own.
Thank you, both, gentlemen. Not only for your guidance and
encouragement, but for simply making yourselves available to an
overgrown adolescent, who likely gets over-enthusiastic at times.
Myself, and the Joplin Pak Mei Athletic Association fully support
Burinkan Martial Arts, and all the wonderful things they are doing for
Traditional Martial Arts.
Joplin Pak Mei Athletic Association:
https://www.facebook.com/whitebrowmissouri/.
Lam Hung Pak Mei Home Site:
http://pakmeiassociation.com/
Sifu Ruston Aaker's page:
https://www.facebook.com/COpakmei/
Burinkan Martial Arts:
www.Burinkan.org