Escrima
The philosophy behind
the Latosa Escrima system is very simple; the whole is greater than
the sum of its parts. For example, a technique does not work by
itself unless combined with the concepts of balance, power, speed,
focus, timing, and attitude. When combining these elements, the
outcome or whole is far more effective then what would normally
be the sum of the parts. This is the reason techniques, as practiced
in the system, are only tools used to understand, accept and retain
these ideas. The number of different techniques mastered by an individual
does not increase his level of competence in this system. Techniques
are only practiced moves until combined with the proper fighting
concepts. The ultimate goal of the martial arts is to make your
mental, physical and technical skills work as one. The goal of Latosa
Escrima is to do this while producing a quality Escrimador who can
think creatively and react responsively rather than giving people
information overload. Escrima was the original name used under the
flag of the Philippine Martial Arts Society. The name changed to
Combat Escrima as the system was influenced by the concept of using
power and combat reality. Combat Escrima relied on a single goal;
winning. This goal proved to be a very valuable asset.
The intimidation factor of the name "Combat Escrima" was
something the students felt they had to defend. However, just the
goal of winning actually proved limiting in the progression of the
system and future instructors. PMAS produced excellent fighters
and world champions but failed to produce very many well-rounded
instructors.
PMAS had the box recipe for producing competent fighters but failed
to isolate the individual ingredients that make up the end product.
Latosa spent his time developing training methods used to understand
the reasoning behind the techniques and isolating the concepts of
Escrima.
Present Focus
In the early stages of developing Latosa Escrima,
the power techniques were key, and the idea of using concepts was
secondary. As the concepts of power hitting: blocking hard, assortment
of different weapons, balance and attitude became more dominant
the system developed a new focus.
It was very important to feel positive and confident about what
you knew.
This proved to be the advantage in a dangerous situation. This early
stage of Latosa Escrima was effective and contributed to the fighting
reputation of his students. In his classes in San Francisco, he
taught each of his top students different conceptual styles with
some specialization (long sticks, knives, double sticks, contact
fighting, swords, etc.). His plan was to ensure that each of the
students worked together. With each one having a piece of the puzzle,
no one could claim they knew it all. The product, Latosa Escrima,
did not seem complete. There was that missing element that connects
and distinguishes the Filipino art from all other martial arts.
It was not the techniques, since most systems techniques are different.
It was not the ability to change from empty hands to sticks. What
exactly was it? The search for the answer became the driving force
in the developing of Latosa Escrima. It was concepts, and how they
have to play an equal role in the effectiveness in the Filipino
martial arts as a whole. Rene had always used fighting concepts
combined with techniques. Techniques became the drills to learn
the important concepts. Latosa is a firm believer in "using
what works" in any given situation, however a person must understand
the various risks (not what they did) as well as the advantages.
He has basically empowered most of his top instructors to develop
teaching formats from what he himself had been teaching and preaching.
He is the visionary and the guide of the system. If any of his instructors
feel that they have uncovered a new technique or concept, which
cuts seconds without abandoning other attributes, Latosa has given
them permission to incorporate it into their teachings.
The basic concept of the system rests with the idea of movement,
balance, speed, power, focus and attitude. The bare bones of the
system as far as techniques go, are what has become known as the
box system. It consists of five interrelated movements, not blocks
or offensive/defensive movements, but just movements. These movements
may seem as if they fall into the definition of blocks, but what
they actually become are interference strikes. The idea is to understand
the movements then relating them to every concept studied in Latosa
Escrima. With only five main movements the approach is simple, yet
the varieties are endless.
Conclusion
Latosa, as an instructor was never one
to hide or refrain from teaching what he had learned or developed.
There are no secrets, nor any hidden agendas in Latosa Escrima.
He believes that if one person holds back information, and the next
person he teaches holds back information, eventually there will
be nothing substantial left to teach. Rene feels that the idea to
hold back information has to do with an instructor¹s insecurity.
The instructor would always have something to use against his student.
The students of Latosa Escrima strive for creativity, innovation
and working hard. Latosa Escrima shall always be in the constant
state of development. As long as students continue to learn quality
Latosa Escrima, the system will continue to develop. It is a progressive,
challenging
and adaptive system. The simple approach of learning conceptually
will help the Filipino martial arts produce top Escrimadors for
the future.
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