I was watching
the movie The Forbidden Kingdom, when during the fight between Jackie Chan and
Jet Lee I noticed when Jackie used the Drunken Fist in the fight.
The hand
position I noticed was the one he used as if he held a cup of wine in his hand,
even though it was empty.
When I was
training with Ernest Rothrock, I know he
showed me that one time, though no version of drunken fist was in my studies.
Of course I have
seen it used many times in kung fu movies, often by Jackie Chan.
I am not commenting
on the use of drunken kung fu, just on that fist formation.
One evening
years after I had been shown the hand formation, I started messing with it,
trying to see if it had value for use.
I formed the
hand formation of the thumb and index finger curved open as if holding a wine
cup in one’s hand, and the other fingers curled closed.
Then I tried
lightly striking with it in different ways.
I discovered
various ways it could be effective. But the one that intrigued me most was when
I was striking with the entire first section of the index finger as one unit,
the striking surface the first bent knuckle and the finger aligned with the
wrist. It formed a very hard striking surface when aligned to the wrist, even
without conditioning for use as a strike.
A strike into
the side or front of the neck, into the armpit, into the ribs on the line as
shown on the bubishi, into the solar
plexus, into the groin, among other locations, would be quite effective. And
unexpected by many when used that way.
Of course the
ippon ken can be used just that way too. A bit different than just forming the
ippin ken fist and striking with the bent knuckle, imo.
This just brings
to mind other unusual striking surfaces that can be useful.
For fun watch
Jackie Chan and Jet Li go at it.
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