July
1996,
I
was describing my efforts to remember what I had learned about Sherman Harrill
to a friend from extensive Northern Chinese Systems. His were very different
traditions than those of karate. This came from that discussion.
One
of my ongoing project documenting Mr. Harrill’s technique. I thing I may have
300 technique applications documented, and I still have 5 hour of video tape I
was permitted to film from that clinic to covery. An I’m fully area that that
is but a fraction of what your systems cover.
The
process applied by Mr. Harrill as I’m beginning to comprehend, is he takes a
look at every piece of the movement. Besides looking at a technique from both
sides, he examines every portion of striking surface, every location that the
technique could be landed, plays with the timing of the sequences too.
I’ve
compared the application he showed for kata Naihanchi (Naihanchi Shodan) (as an intellectual exercise) to those documented by George
Dillman in his texts. There isn’t much by way of comparison. Mr. Harrill’s
applications are more extensive and in far greater grasp of the movement
potential of the kata.
I tried to
describe how he saw one kata movement as having many applications.
The movement to
be used was the descending lower X block from kata Chinto. This was the
movement from that first clinic that I chose.
1. Slide
into a forward left front stance and deliver a descending X block
2.
Turn 180 degrees on a pivot on the right foot, the left leg in a crane stance as
you pivot.
3. Slide into a forward left front stance and deliver a descending X block
For the most
part in those days we did not study kata applications, However, for this
movement Lewis Sensei did suggest two different methods of execution could be
used as a descending X block
Against a right
front kick coming toward you one method was to cross the arms at the wrist and
use the top of the X formed to block into the kicking leg.
A different
method against a right front kick coming towards you was to perform a left low
block to that leg, then as the left arm performs the block, the right vertical
knuckle punch strikes into the middle of their shin. This then is a class of
augmented strike, which looks like an X block. Performed at very fast speed,
anyone observing what was happening would see the X block as what was being
used, but the actual technique was the augmented block and strike, at the same
time.
Two different
things all together, but they do resemble each other.
Fine uses for
the movement, but Sherman explored different possibilities.
1.) First he began with an attacker stepping in with a right
punch as if towards your solar plexus or abdomen.
The
defender steps in with his left foot and uses a right over left X block on top
of the attackers arm, below their elbow. The right arm goes across the
attackers arm. The left arm just blocks straight down, at the same time.
The
defender then turns 180 to the right, while rotating their left arm up and
around the attackers arm, bending their elbow. The defender draws their arms
into their chest during the turn, and at the completion of their 180 they have
locked the attacker’s arm and taken them down to the floor.
2.)
Next he explores variations of that takedown, against the attacker Right foot
forward right punch or the left foot forward left punch.
The
defender uses the double hand descending X block wind up motion to parry the
attackers first punch on the inside.
The
defender can then:
a.
Take the left arm and block/strike down as the right hand strikes across that
arm into the abdomen.
b.
Take the left hand and on the interior line of defense, strike into the ribs as
the right strikes into the solar plexus.
c. Use the descending X block to
strike to the top of the right
punch then finish with number 1. above.
3.
Explore the X block on the interior line of defense as an inside parry of the
attackers first punch, then the options of the X strike.
-Deliver
a right punch into the abdomen with the left hand strike hitting above the
right punch.
-
Deliver a left strike into the abdomen with the right hand punch after that
strike immediately following it.
Mr. Harrill showed a greater reaction
to those double strikes using the
descending strike in a staccato 1-2 manner instead of
striking simultaneously.
4.
Then Mr. Harrill went into greater detail on other options and potential
followup movements to these strikes, parries, etc. Such as performing the
rolling lock within the X block one-handed with the left hand and using a
Right
reverse punch at the end of No 1. Etc.
All in all, it
is interesting knowledge which fully fits the Isshinryu system. It man seem
simple and often is, but it falls within that vast category of things right in
front of your face which you were never shown and haven’t taken the time to
explore.
Well Mr. Harrill
has taken that time, and does those applications.
Although I have
conducted some explorations, once you discover a new facet of a technique, its
too easy to stop there. He didn’t he just kept going and going and going.
Most interesting,
my own discoveries, I haven’t seen in his explanations. Now I know I haven’t
seen but a fraction of what he’s developed, but I thing it’s more the same. I’ve
tried to follow tai chi movement explanations I have seen, and applied those explanations
to Isshinryu movement, with some results. Where he did not come from the same
perspective.
He’s also spent
far more time hitting people than I have.I am sure that gives him a different
perspective than I use.
*** post script ***
That
is what I wrote then, over the years I learned a bit more about what Sherman
Harrill was doing. But that is not what this piece was about, just those
earliest impressions.
Also
today looking back at what I wrote, I realize the number of techniques shown
was my approximation at what Sherman was showing.
Years
later on hearing of his death, I underwent a sort of possession, and for three
month mostly non-stop I pulled together all the notes and things from 10 years
of attending clinics with him, Then I wrote all
of it up by kata. The result the accumulation of 800 applications for
Isshinryu’s 8 kata, and other things. Then I printed one hard copy out for
myself, I called it my Sherm-pedia. These are
photos of that book.
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