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The Tao of the Dog &
The Why of Dog Brothers Martial Arts
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written by Guro Crafty
I am often asked about the our
name, "the Dog Brothers." It can be explained on many levels,
but one of my favorite ways of looking at it can be found in a newspaper
article by one Jeff McMahon:
"Most actions of men can
be explained by observing a pack of dogs. Not wild dogs, just neighborhood
dogs who all scurry under the fence on the same night and set off together
to reclaim a glimmer of the glory their species possessed before domestication."
I think that's right. The dog
is the interface of man and the wolf and we can connect so strongly because
our dynamics are so similar. Even as we change the wolf into the dog to
suit our purposes, we still need its glimmer as wolf. In some breeds, and
in certain individual dogs, the glimmer is brighter than others, and that
is why you see an Akita named Zapata in our logo.
I know the Dog Brothers have
a good reputation for airing it out pretty well, but we know what we do
is well short of combat, death matches of yore in the Philippines, or
a policeman going into an abandoned building after a bad guy. It is important
not to take oneself too seriously, and I like the way the quote captures
a certain perspective on the Dog Brothers. We are not wolves, we are but
human dogs.
Still, it is important to
be aware of something else too. Yes we are but a pack of dogs, and just
like dogs we have territory, and hierarchy, and squabbles over the , ,
, females. But there is something more. Just like dogs, there is the bond
of the pack.
The bond and aggression go
hand in hand. ALL animals with individual relationships (wolves, monkeys,
geese, dogs, humans etc.) also have aggression. Animals lacking the ability
to discriminate between other members of their species, e.g. minnows,
do not. The presence of aggression does not always mean that there is
a bond with other individuals, but a bond with other individuals always
means there is aggression.
Aggression is an instinct,
even as sex is an instinct. And just as a man eventually will have a nocturnal
emission in the absence of sex, so too aggression will discharge eventually
even in the absence of "legitimate" cause. Thus all efforts
at eliminating the causes of aggression can be seen in scientific terms
as inherently doomed efforts to prevent a instinctual discharge by means
of eliminating its typical eliciting stimuli. To the extent that the efforts
to eliminate the eliciting stimuli succeed, the discharge of the aggression
becomes less predictable and often more dangerous. Skill in aggression
will be needed from time to time, especially by those lacking skill and
will. The solution is to ground aggression in a ritual expression that
also prepares it for functional application.
Aggression has three purposes
in nature. First, to spread a species out over territory so as to not
overload an eco-system. Amongst humans this is called "war".
Second, for rank within the hierarchy of a social group. All social groups
have hierarchy. And third, for reproduction. Classically this means two
males fighting over the female, but it also means the female defending
her young. If there is no social unit, e.g. Siamese fighting fish, it
does not matter that the loser dies, only that the winner breeds. In contrast,
in social animals, there is a strong biological benefit if the second
and third types of aggression do not damage the loser. This is so that
the social unit, (the pack/the tribe), which exists precisely because
of its survival value, remains strong.
Most martial arts are usually
of the second type of aggression, with overtones of the third: Young males
competing. In contrast, the Filipino Martial Arts originate in the first
form of aggression, in war. Thus there is a quality of cooperation in
the learning process of the FMA that can be distinctive.
How so? If, as a tribe we
are going to defend our land, women and children, it is in our respective
individual interests that the other warriors of the tribe become good
fighters as well. If I push you too hard and break your spirit, it does
not serve my interests. If I push you too little and you are soft, it
also does not serve my interests. And vice versa.
Dog Brothers Martial Arts
is the name that I put to the system of many styles that I have evolved
out of what my teachers have taught me, the fighting experiences of all
the Dog Brothers and my teaching. Why give it a name? Because to call
it something else would be inaccurate. It is its own unique thing.
Why a "system of many
styles"? Because fighting is like the children's game of "rock,
paper, scissors" and no one style is for all situations and opponents-not
even Top Dog's style-and in my opinion he is the best stickfighter of
our time. Bruce Lee spoke of "No way as way", and similarly,
Sugar Ray Leonard once said "You don't beat the man, you beat his
style." In other words, you beat him where he has a way. Thus, we
seek to specialize in generalizing; the goal being that no matter the
situation, we have a game to play instead of a way. DBMA draws upon all
the Dog Brothers and those with whom we have fought, and those with whom
we have trained. And it is a system because I think we have a coherent
way of imparting certain knowledge, understandings, training methods,
skills, attributes and techniques towards certain goals.
Many martial arts discuss
how there are different mindsets/qualities with which one can defend/fight.
Often the names are a bit poetic; Fire, Water, Wind, Rock, Earth, etc.
but the point is made that the more realized the fighter is, the better
his ability to fluidly shift between them. To be able to do this in the
intense adrenal state of a fight is an subtle and evolved thing. Paradoxically,
the mental state of Play is the state where this happens best. The further
one can enter into the dichotomy of Fight and Play simultaneously, the
better. The best fighting is done where the fight is play. Thus, in DBMA
we say "Do not have a Way as you Play. Fight the Way you Play. Let
your Fight be Play." To experience this is transformational.
"What Is Play?"
in evolutionary biological terms is an interesting question in its own
right. It is a state in which deep learning takes place and the training
methods of the FMA are of a high order in creating it and teaching it
as part of the learning and training process. The competitiveness natural
between men can easily kill Play. Abecedario, numerado, sombrada, and
carenza are methods with a thousand faces and all help create Play. The
process of learning in the FMA way develops powerful understandings and
skills for dealing with people outside of a fighting context.
The three FMA teachers from
whom we draw most are Guro Dan Inosanto (Inosanto LaCoste Blend) Grand
Tuhon Leo Gaje (Pekiti Tirsia Kali) and also Punong Guro Edgar Sulite
(Lameco Eskrima). We draw from other FMA teachers and systems too. And
we draw from outside of the FMA as well, usually within the framework
of the Majapahit Empire.
What's that? Centuries ago,
political boundaries were different and the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia,
and Indo-china were part of what was known as the Majapahit Empire. Martial
arts from this part of the world tend to have, to use a JKDC term, "common
thread" with each other, i.e. there is a shared internal coherency.
Thus we can draw from Krabi Krabong from Thailand and it fits. (In this
area our lead man is Ajarn Arlan "Salty Dog" Sanford.) We can
take from Silat (Pendekar Paul Dethouars) or Bando (Dr. M. Gyi) whatever
fits, and so on. We also take from Brazilian Jiu Jitsu (the Machado Brothers),
because it works, because little of FMA grappling (dumog, buno, etc) has
made it to the US, and because chauvinism is counter-productive to the
search for Truth.
Most martial arts are basically
young males competing. Though we certainly have that too, the idea of
DBMA is of a lifelong martial art. Although the Dog Brothers are known
for "Real Contact Stickfighting", DBMA uses the vehicle of learning
to fight this way as a means of creating a man who can walk through the
entirety of his life as a warrior in his world today.
NOT EVERYONE SHOULD DO REAL
CONTACT STICKFIGHTING AND ONLY YOU DECIDE THAT. IT DOES NOT MEAN THAT
YOU ARE A KITTY IF YOU DON'T. Whether you do or do not, our mission is
for you to learn to fight well for real. Someone with this training should
be able to handle himself proficiently in real time with sticks, clubs,
knives, staff, improvised weapons and empty hand in all ranges. He should
have skills and intelligence for multiple player situations. He should
have a clear sense of what he can and cannot do, and be able to assess
situations and people well. He should be seasoned in handling his adrenaline
and know for what he fights and for what he does not. He should be fit
and healthy. This is whether he is a younger man, a middle aged man, or
an older man.
And for each of these there
is short, middle and long term training, which should be done together
in an ever changing blend. One should not try to live permanently in the
testosterone frenzy of getting-ready-for-a-fight training, but one should
always be of a level of fitness able to apply maximal effort without notice.
One needs to train for now and for over the years. This promotes physical,
psychological, emotional and spiritual health as well as fighting skill.
To last over the years, one
needs to be intelligent-the secret of life is to get smart faster than
you get old. If we try to always operate in that young male testosterone
frenzy, just like Bruce Lee we're not going to last very long. In training,
there must be the "three Fs" (Not those! Baaad Dogs!) Fun, Fit,
and Functional. To be functional, we must be fit and healthy, and what
we do to be fit and healthy must be fun to do or we will not do it. Now,
"fun" can be a superficial word, but what we really mean is
with joy in life-but that would have ruined the alliteration.
The Knowledge that we study
of another time and place must serve this time and place. There is the
martial and there is the art. As Wild Dog's daughter Keelin once said
to me "Art is the repository of the human wisdom which cannot be
expressed in words." Both the martial and the art are necessary,
just as the yin and the yang are necessary to the Tao. The further one
can go into each simultaneously, the greater the dichotomy, and the deeper
the transformation. Higher Consciousness through Harder Contact.
Woof,
Guro Crafty
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