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Long Form Three:
1) |
Teaches the concepts that the practitioner must learn: |
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a) |
Long Form Three continues to expand upon the information presented in Short / Long Form One, Short / Long Form Two, and Short Form Three Long Form Three continues to reinforce a new emphasis on conceptual information and relationships over physical emphasis |
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b) |
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c) |
Long Form Three continues to reinforce a new emphasis on self-defense over assumed physical attacks |
2) |
Emphasizes the following stances: |
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a) |
Horse stance - which demonstrates the following concepts: |
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i) |
stability with an emphasis on upper body weapon availability |
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ii) |
Weight Distribution (50% / 50%) |
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b) |
Attention (start / close) - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
form type (encyclopedic) |
3) |
Themes within form: |
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a) |
Horse stance |
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b) |
circles and lines (transitions and variations) |
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c) |
Vise-like maneuvers |
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d) |
isolation (continued progression and expansion) |
4) |
Form type: |
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a) |
Encyclopedic (advanced) |
5) |
Teaches the following strikes / maneuvers: |
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a) |
sophisticated maneuvers - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
multiple effects from a single maneuver |
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b) |
various weapon timings - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
new weapon usage |
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ii) |
new directional (offensive) scenarios |
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iii) |
timings (3-in-1 / 2-in-1 / 1-in-1) |
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c) |
foot maneuver / body rotation - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying degrees of body rotation (covers / step-thru / etc.) |
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d) |
strike rotation - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying degrees of upper weapon rotation (hand / arm) |
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ii) |
varying degrees of lower weapon rotation (leg / foot) |
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e) |
destabilization (of opponent) - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying methods and maneuvers for destabilizing opponent |
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f) |
grabbing - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
new weapon usage (hand) |
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ii) |
varying Vise-like maneuver type |
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g) |
pinning - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying weapon usage (and timings) |
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ii) |
varying weapon potentials (contact manipulation) |
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iii) |
varying Vise-like maneuver type |
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h) |
locking - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying weapon usage |
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ii) |
varying degrees of offense |
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iii) |
varying Vise-like maneuver type |
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i) |
hooking - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying weapon usage (and parts of hand) |
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ii) |
varying Vise-like maneuver type |
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j) |
sandwiching - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying weapon usage (upper + lower) |
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ii) |
varying Vise-like maneuver type |
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k) |
entwining - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying weapon usage |
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ii) |
varying Vise-like maneuver type |
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l) |
stomping - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying weapon usage (foot) |
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ii) |
varying Vise-like maneuver type |
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m) |
head-butt - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying weapon usage (head) |
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n) |
scraping - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying weapon usage (foot) |
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ii) |
varying penetration type |
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o) |
slicing - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying weapon usage (hand) |
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ii) |
varying penetration type |
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p) |
buckling - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying maneuver types |
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ii) |
varying destabilizing type |
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q) |
pulling (frictional and other) - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying maneuver types |
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ii) |
varying destabilizing type |
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iii) |
varying degrees of contact manipulation |
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r) |
pushing (frictional and other) - which demonstrates the following: |
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i) |
varying maneuver types |
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ii) |
varying destabilizing type |
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iii) |
varying degrees of contact manipulation |
6) |
Call out patterns: |
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a) |
circles to lines |
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b) |
lines to circles |
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c) |
variations to lines (continue, reverse, new direction) |
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d) |
variations to circles (continue, reverse, new direction) |
7) |
Teaches the following Methods of Execution: |
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a) |
Thrusting |
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b) |
Hammering |
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c) |
Snapping |
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d) |
Slicing |
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e) |
Clawing |
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f) |
Raking |
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g) |
Scooping |
8) |
Reinforces previously introduced concepts: |
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a) |
open / closed environment |
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b) |
transitional maneuvers |
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c) |
power principle isolation |
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d) |
'degrees of' |
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e) |
hardness of target to hardness of weapon |
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f) |
applied (minor / major) attacks (dead handed) |
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g) |
in-flight (minor) attacks (semi-live) |
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h) |
line of sight |
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i) |
maneuver timings (1-in-1 / 2-in-1 / 3-in-1) |
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j) |
lines to circles |
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k) |
variations to lines (continue, reverse, new direction) |
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l) |
variations to circles (continue, reverse, new direction) |
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m) |
splitting maneuver sets (self-defense) into varying components (splicing / grafting / cutting) |
9) |
Does not reinforce previous introduced concepts: |
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a) |
dictionary form elements |
10) |
Demonstrates primarily self-defense scenarios: |
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a) |
mostly concerned with opponent over attack (applied) |
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b) |
includes both minor and major attacks from opponent |
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c) |
introduces execution on both sides of self-defense techniques |
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d) |
introduces the concept of starting opposite sides of self-defense techniques from differing positions |
11) |
Expands upon isolation scenarios: |
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a) |
demonstrates isolation sequences at new locations throughout the form |
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b) |
demonstrates isolation sequences facing new angles (minor) |
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c) |
demonstrates isolation sequences to new focal points |
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d) |
demonstrates isolation sequences that execute sides both individually (alternate) (single) and integrates both sides together (inter-mix) (single / double) |
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e) |
compounds upon both physical and conceptual complexity of isolation sequences (primarily Vise-like - aka applied) |
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f) |
increases the number of isolation present within a form |
12) |
Demonstrates the following manipulation and maneuvering scenarios: |
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a) |
move (manipulate) yourself |
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b) |
move (manipulate) opponent |
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c) |
move (manipulate) both |
13) |
Demonstrates the following response scenarios: |
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a) |
want to (purposeful) |
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b) |
have to (compelled) |
14) |
Demonstrates the following backing variations: |
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a) |
none |
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b) |
self |
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c) |
opponent |
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d) |
environment |
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e) |
anchor |
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f) |
grab |
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g) |
lock |
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h) |
pin |
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i) |
entwine |
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j) |
sandwich |
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k) |
stomp |
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l) |
Vise-like |
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m) |
opposing forces |
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n) |
leverage |
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o) |
gravity / weight |
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p) |
alignment / structure |
15) |
Demonstrates the following path variations: |
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a) |
horizontal (linear / circular) |
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b) |
vertical (linear / circular) |
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c) |
diagonal (linear / circular) |
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d) |
combinations of above |
16) |
Demonstrates the following range variations: |
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a) |
range of opponent |
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b) |
range of strike |
17) |
Demonstrates the following strike contact targets: |
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a) |
skeletal |
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b) |
muscular |
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c) |
organ / nerve |
18) |
Demonstrates the following weapon characteristics: |
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a) |
formation |
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b) |
type |
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c) |
angle (rotation / direction) |
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d) |
count |
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e) |
timing |
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f) |
speed |
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g) |
range |
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h) |
height |
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i) |
alignment |
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j) |
regulation (formulation) |
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k) |
purpose (intent) |
19) |
Demonstrates the following offensive maneuver types: |
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a) |
striking |
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b) |
manipulating (and/or destabilizing) |
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i) |
buckles |
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ii) |
entangles |
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iii) |
levers |
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iv) |
presses (and burdens) |
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v) |
pulls (frictional and other) |
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vi) |
pushes (frictional and other) |
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c) |
degrees of opposing (forces and Vise-like) |
Long Form Three falls into the category of an encyclopedic form. As such, it demonstrates the following elements of the encyclopedia forms: |
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1) |
The form starts and ends from the attention stance |
2) |
The form is primarily based on a collection of self-defense techniques (of a specific genre) |
3) |
The form is not directly bound to the same categorical limitations imposed on the dictionary forms |
Long Form Three demonstrates the following self-defense technique characteristics: |
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1) |
That the self-defense techniques are predominately applied attacks - which include: |
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a) |
grabs |
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b) |
locks |
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c) |
chokes |
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d) |
hugs and holds |
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e) |
push (in-flight) |
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f) |
attempted maneuvers (chokes / grabs / locks / holds) |
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2) |
That the self-defense techniques deal with attacks from various angles, ranges, and types - which include: |
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a) |
front |
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b) |
rear |
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c) |
flank |
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d) |
offset flank (front and rear) |
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e) |
close range |
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f) |
mid-range |
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g) |
far range |
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h) |
a combination of each of these |
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3) |
That the self-defense techniques are predominately within contact range (penetration / manipulation) |
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4) |
That the self-defense techniques demonstrate: |
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a) |
more precise visualization of maneuvers |
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b) |
specific zones of action |
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c) |
specific directions of attack |
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d) |
new points of view (first-third person + traveling eye) |
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e) |
new response scenarios |
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f) |
more categorical options |
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5) |
That the self-defense techniques demonstrate the following (major) categorical options: |
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a) |
attack (second person): |
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i) |
attack type - web of knowledge |
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ii) |
attack direction |
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iii) |
attacker positioning (foot / body) (before / during / after defense) |
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b) |
defense (first person): |
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i) |
defender positioning (foot / body) (before / during / after attack) |
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ii) |
response type |
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iii) |
response timing |
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iv) |
response maneuvering |
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c) |
observation (third person): |
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i) |
attacker / defender positioning (zone of action) |
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ii) |
attacker / defender range |
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iii) |
attacker / defender maneuvering |