Let’s talk a little about Resistance. People often get
squeamish at the thought of training with resistance, as
they envision a hulking opponent smashing them
repeatedly in the face. Not a pretty picture. In fact
it is one I have been on the receiving end of. I had
been boxing for about a year when my coach had me spar
with Tex Cobb’s bodyguard at the old Main Street Boxing
Gym in downtown Los Angeles. This guy was huge, and
weighed in at nearly three hundred pounds! My coach
told him to take it easy, as he had boxed
professionally. Unfortunately, some people have a hard
time turning the intensity down. (This is why we make
sure that our students are paired up with others who
want to train at the same level of intensity. We also
use helmets!) I moved around with him and he unleashed
a jab that I distinctly remember to this day.
Let’s just say that I learned the difference between
having my hands up under my chin and really having my
hands up in front of my face. That thunderous jab drove
me back into the ropes, almost off my feet. Up went my
hands, and boy did my head start moving! So did my
feet. I was all over that ring. Luckily, I was in
better shape and he tired out with about thirty seconds
in the round. Most people will never go back to
training after getting a headache like that. My coach
was so encouraging that I didn’t give up. But that is
the normal method in boxing gyms. Many professional
coaches first want to see if a prospective fighter has
heart, so they toss them in the ring with a pro to see
how they handle the beating. If they have heart, they
will train them so they can try to make a living off of
them. I want to get the realistic training to everyone,
so I employ the concept of Progressive Resistance. I got
this term from bodybuilding, and I like to use a weight
lifting analogy to explain this principle.
Imagine that you decide to sign up at a gym. (Martial
arts sounded too dangerous!) You have a personal
trainer to teach you how to lift correctly and get you
going in the right direction. You tell the trainer that
you want to work on your leg strength. She says okay,
and teaches you how to do a squat. She puts a
broomstick across your shoulders, feet shoulder width
apart, has you keep your back straight while bending at
the knees. She points out that you should sit back,
almost like sitting in a chair, to avoid having your
knees move out in front of your toes. Better for your
knees and better for balance. After a few minutes you
can duplicate the squat correctly. Now what did you
actually just learn? You learned a technique. That
would be like going to our JKDU/HP-MMA class and
learning how to throw a solid punch. It has taken you
about three minutes to learn the proper form for the
technique called the squat. Now what happens? Do you
just practice that technique with the broomstick for the
next three years? No. Your trainer takes you to the
squat rack. Why? Because you have to add resistance if
you want to get stronger.
Doing the technique with resistance is going to trigger
the Adaptive Response. If you don’t add resistance you
are not going to get stronger. If you don’t add
resistance in your fight training you won’t develop
fighting skill. Let’s now say that your wonderful
trainer takes you to the squat rack and proceeds to load
the bar with 300 pounds! What is going to happen if you
try to squat that much your first day? You are going to
break something. Why? TOO MUCH RESISTANCE! You have
to start with just enough resistance to make the effort
slightly difficult. This causes your body to adapt.
You go in the following week and you can add a little
more resistance. Over time, depending on your goals,
you may be able to squat with 300 pounds. The exact
same theory of Progressive Resistance holds true for our
fight training. Too much resistance is
counterproductive. You will actually be worse off by
adding too much resistance than not training at all.
Instead, the trick is to add enough resistance so that
it is slightly difficult to apply your technique. As
you improve, you add more resistance. The amount you
end up training with depends upon your goals. I call
this VARIABLE INTENSITY TRAINING, as each person in
class trains at his or her own level.
Our rule is that when two people play together, the
intensity is adjusted for whoever wants to go lighter.
Some people lift weights to tone up, others train to be
bodybuilders. Some people want to train martial arts
for health and self-defense; others want to become cage
fighting champions. The amount of resistance and the
level of intensity will differ depending upon your
goals. You may end up doing two sets of squats with 135
pounds. You stop when you start to feel the burn. A
professional may build up to 400 pounds over six sets,
taking many of the sets to the point where they cannot
possibly do another rep. (Those are the guys screaming
in the corner of the gym.) They add more resistance at
a greater level of intensity. In our training, I can
spar at full resistance, doing my best to defend each
offensive attempt from my opponent without using full
intensity. I can strike quickly without full power so
that my partner is not overwhelmed. That way we all
improve and have fun doing it.
There is one more very important aspect of this weight
lifting analogy. Whether you are in the gym to tone or
to become a competitive bodybuilder, THE BASIC
TECHNIQUES YOU PERFORM ARE THE SAME! You do squats,
bench press, curls, lat pulls, etc. The professional
adds greater intensity and uses more variations of each
technique, but the basics are the same. This holds true
for fight training as well. The basics will be the same
whether you are a hobbyist or a professional fighter.
There is no need to have one curriculum for fighters and
an entirely different curriculum for people who want to
learn self-defense. The professional is just more
skillful in the basics and has more variations. Nothing
magic, just scientifically tested techniques and
training methods performed using progressive resistance
to build that skill. I hope you can see why Progressive
Resistance is an extremely important part of our
training.
This is what allows people of all ages, sizes, and goals
to train in the same general manner as an “Ultimate
Fighting Champion”. Since the concept of progressively
adding more and more Resistance is not widely
understood, many martial arts systems simply don’t
include that all-important factor that triggers the
Adaptive Response: RESISTANCE! They instead practice
forms, drills, and techniques where neither person ever
actually fights back. These drills and techniques are
performed without any resistance of any kind. Bruce Lee
used the term “aliveness” to talk about adding
resistance. This is often misinterpreted. People will
take a technique that is practiced without resistance
and try to make it “alive”. They do this by bouncing
around like Muhammad Ali while doing the technique,
still without resistance. Bouncing around does not make
it alive. Resistance makes it alive. Movement is part
of resistance, and it is easy to confuse the two. If
your partner is trying to keep you from performing your
technique, then there is resistance and you are going to
improve.
Intensity is also mistaken for resistance. A person can
go through a technique routine with a well trained,
compliant partner at great intensity. This is wonderful
in demonstrations. One person feeds and the other
person flies into a fast, intense series of blocks, eye
strikes, nerve hits, followed by a takedown. Very
impressive. That guy was moving with unbelievable
speed, precision, and power. If you were to watch the
demonstration again, it is best to watch the feeder.
What you will usually see is a person who throws a punch
then stands there while the defender goes through the
routine. No resistance. The feeder stands like a
statue offering no resistance. There is great intensity
in this type of demonstration, but without resistance
you won’t be able to deal with a real attacker who will
resist 100%.
Am I saying that it is useless to train without
resistance? No. Training without resistance is
important to memorize the various techniques. By
memorize I mean that your body has to develop the
coordination for the technique so that you have all the
details in place. You can also use them for
conditioning the body. Just like learning the squat,
you need to learn each technique. But, again like the
squat, it should only take a few minutes to learn most
techniques. There are only two types of drills that
martial artists do. Memorization drills or resistance
drills. I call resistance drills Performance Games.
(See Chapter VII) We learn the technique, and then put
it right into the Performance Game so that you develop
the skill to utilize the technique while under
pressure.
Is an attacker in the street going to resist you?
Absolutely. If you don’t practice with resistance you
won’t be able to handle the situation. I’m going to say
it again.
“If you want to learn how to fight, you must
practice fighting against someone who is fighting
back!”