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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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ecome other thoughts. In combat application, the interception and management<br />

of an attack is open to a greater number of options along the<br />

track of an arc rather than a straight line. An appreciation of the cyclical<br />

nature of events also allows for anticipation according to a variety of options<br />

and an execution of a particular option in a tangential rather than<br />

confrontational manner.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Economy of Energy Principle encourages the practitioner to identify<br />

the most efficient way of accomplishing goals and admonishes the student<br />

to avoid “working harder than one’s opponent.” In this way, whatever<br />

one learns, one is under constant pressure to perform it more accurately, efficiently,<br />

and effectively. In this way a practitioner learns to “work smarter,<br />

not harder” in dealing with conflicts.<br />

A final significant overlap among Daitô-ryû, Hapkidô, and aikidô is<br />

their reliance on a subtle hierarchy of sophistication that guides the practitioner<br />

to identify ever increasing levels of efficiency and effectiveness in the<br />

arts. For the Japanese arts, the first level of expertise is identified as jû jitsu<br />

(gentle technique), which is expressed as yu sool in the Korean tradition.<br />

Essentially an art based on strength, leverage, and speed, this level of expertise<br />

often includes a degree of forcing compliance by means of causing<br />

pain for the successful execution of the technique. Though the least sophisticated<br />

of the three levels, this skill level is perhaps the most widely exhibited<br />

among Hapkidô practitioners and contributes to its reputation as a<br />

no-nonsense form of self-defense.<br />

<strong>The</strong> second level of sophistication is identified in the Daitô-ryû tradition<br />

as aiki-jujitsu (coordinated mind/spirit technique); this is hapki yu sool<br />

(coordination of power in soft technique) in the Korean tradition. Aikidô,<br />

for its part, speaks of “blending” with one’s partner. All three phrases indicate<br />

the ability to use the nature of attackers’ own physical structures<br />

against them. Disrupting an attacker’s foundation, balance, direction, timing,<br />

or focus allows defenders to optimize their assets in confrontations<br />

with individuals of greater size or ability. Well known among aikidô and<br />

Daitô-ryû practitioners, this level is less well-known in the Hapkidô community,<br />

with the exception perhaps of practitioners in Korea itself.<br />

<strong>The</strong> highest level of expertise is designated aiki-jitsu (spirit techniques)<br />

and is the subject of much debate within both the aikidô and Daitô-ryû Aikijujitsu<br />

community. This level of training allows the practitioner to exploit the<br />

biomechanical responses of the attacker’s own body, such as conditioned responses<br />

and reflexes. In such cases the defender, then, is able not only to engage<br />

enemies, unbalance them, and use their strength against them, but to incorporate<br />

the intent behind their actions in defeating the attack as well.<br />

<strong>The</strong> organization of a typical Hapkidô school reflects many of the accepted<br />

organizational practices common to most martial arts in both Ko-<br />

Hapkidô 161

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