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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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numbers. To play by numbers means to work counters and recounters<br />

against attacks in an ordered sequence of play. Few exceed this stage, because<br />

they lack a safe way to spar. Techniques that seem combat valid in<br />

training drills are invalidated with full contact. To prepare for full contact,<br />

fluid movement is developed in flow drills. <strong>The</strong> art is not played well without<br />

flowing. <strong>The</strong> Hiligaynon dialect has a word for the opposite of flow;<br />

players may be described as pugoso—meaning “pushing too hard, too stiff,<br />

not relaxed, or unnatural.” Fluid movements are found in those fighters in<br />

the higher levels of training.<br />

<strong>The</strong> FMA ranking structure has students, fighters, and teachers (i.e.,<br />

instructors, masters, and grand masters). Traditional Filipino society was<br />

divided into nobles, freemen, and serfs. Nobles wore red, while the lower<br />

classes wore black or blue clothing. <strong>The</strong> color worn by students is blue<br />

(asul), associating them with the lower classes. Fighters can wear black<br />

(itim) and teachers wear red (pula). Novices are called likas, or natural, because<br />

they have no preconceptions. <strong>The</strong> intermediate students are called<br />

likha, or creation, because they have learned fundamentals. <strong>The</strong> advanced<br />

students are called lakas, or strength, because their skills are well developed.<br />

A fighter is an expert student on the way to becoming a teacher.<br />

Some teachers have never fought, not even in contests or among friends,<br />

and lack the quintessential stage of martial development. <strong>The</strong> name for a<br />

teacher in Filipino is guro, from guru (Sanskrit; teacher).<br />

An instructor may be either an apprentice, assistant, junior, or senior<br />

instructor. Master instructors may be called Maestro in Spanish nomenclature.<br />

Some groups use Datu (chieftain), while others use Lakan (lord) to refer<br />

to an FMA master. <strong>The</strong> grand master is simply the grandfather of the<br />

school. Traditionally, one must reach age 50 to be acclaimed as a grand<br />

master. Founders of Filipino martial arts are rare.<br />

<strong>The</strong> purpose of contests in the Filipino martial arts is to simulate the<br />

conditions of actual combat in order to learn to overcome the fear of loss.<br />

<strong>The</strong> learning process is facilitated through contests in the arena rather than<br />

an actual life-or-death experience. Combat is usually risky, and learning<br />

experiences can end prematurely. Dueling, particularly the death match, is<br />

FMA tradition, but was outlawed in 1982. Before this time, however,<br />

champions often fought many duels: Romeo (“Nono”) Mamar of Bago<br />

City was undefeated after one hundred duels from 1960 to 1982. With<br />

cash betting as an incentive to public spectacle, duels were often bloody affairs;<br />

at their worst, human cockfights. Organized competitions have been<br />

held in the Philippines since 1949. Sanctioning organizations, such as the<br />

National Arnis Association of the Philippines (NARAPHIL) and <strong>World</strong> Eskrima,<br />

Kali Arnis Federation (WEKAF), sponsor national and international<br />

stickfighting events, and do not permit the bloody spectacles of the past.<br />

Philippines 433

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