| Filipino Martial
Arts are usually considered to have 12 areas of training:
1. Single Stick or Long Blade 
2. Double Stick or Blade
3. Single Dagger
4. Double Dagger
5. Stick & Dagger or Sword & Dagger
6. Palm Stick or Double Ended Dagger
7. Empty Hand (Punching/Kicking/Grappling)
8. Spear or Staff (Long 2 Handed Weapons)
9. Flexible Weapons (Whip/Belt)
10. Throwing or Missile Weapons
11. Projectile Weapons (Bows/Blowguns)
12. Spiritual & Healing Arts
Generally, few styles if any will teach all 12 areas, with most teaching
around three to nine areas within their curriculums. The Doce
Pares formwork, Sayaw, encompases many of these aspects.
Contrary to the majority of other martial arts, training in the Filipino
Martial Arts begins predominantly with the weapons and empty hand
techniques following after. This is due simply because they are Warrior
Arts (arts intended for the battlefield), thus there was no intention
of going in empty handed against armed enemies - it was necessary
to be armed and proficient in the handling of weapons. Plus, the fact
of carrying daggers or machetes was part of the traditional Filipino
way of living their daily lives. In times of war, there was no time
for philosophy, it was necessary to fight and survive - the Filipino
warriors could never philosophize too much for the simple reason being
that they were almost constantly at war - either domestic or foreign,
or both simultaneously.
Thus,
in the Filipino Martial Arts, when speaking about physical confrontation,
one is equating that to several armed, skilled adversaries. Therefore,
the need must also be to be armed and skilled in the use of weaponry,
with the consideration being that during combat we may lose our weapon
or not have it, then we go to empty hands.
Filipino styles normally classify attacks not by their weapon, or
their delivery style, but by the direction of the energy. A punch
to the abdomen is treated much the same way as a straight dagger thrust
to that region would be. Practioners learn how to deal with the energy
of the attack, and then apply that knowledge to the slight variations
that come with different lengths and types of weapons.
With this in mind, the modern eskrimador must be adaptive to the environment
and tools at hand at any given time, under any given circumstances.
Creating weapons from the immediate environment enables one to turn
a chair, a glass, a rolled newspaper, an umbrella, a video case, a
handful of dirt or a few coins into weapons or self-defence tools.
A distinctive feature of all Filipino Martial Arts
is their use of geometry. In strikes, defences and movement, line
and angles are very important. In addition, the independent use of
the hands, or hands and feet, to do two different things at the same
time are the high-level skills of a trained practioner of Filipino
Martial Arts.
Filipino arts place great emphasis on footwork, mobility and body
positioning. The same concepts (of angles of attack, deflections,
traps, passes, etc.) are applied to similar situations at different
ranges, making the understanding of ranges and how to bridge them
very important. The Filipinos make extensive use of geometric shapes,
superimposing them on a combat situation, and movement patterns, to
teach practioners to use their position and their movements to their
best advantage.
The paradox of eskrima training is that the
practioner trains with weapons to develop an expertise in the understanding
of self-defence against weapon attacks - one cannot simply seek "self-defence",
self-defence thought of as some vague collection of techniques which
can enable you by luck to survive an encounter. To defend oneself
against a dagger attack, the practitioner will initially learn how
to handle a dagger, then how to protect their vital areas, to defend
against the various angles of attack, to anticipate the reactions
of the adversary, and so on. The realisation soon becomes that although
a punch will simply hurt, attacks with sticks, machetes, daggers,
syringes or improvised weapons can be lethal - there can be no half
measures in the application of your defence. |