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- Newsgroups: rec.martial-arts
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!darwin.sura.net!udel!louie!strawberry.cns.udel.edu!weigand
- From: weigand@strawberry.cns.udel.edu (Steve Weigand)
- Subject: Re: George A. Dillman?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.213055.15919@udel.edu>
- Sender: usenet@udel.edu (USENET News Service)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: strawberry.cns.udel.edu
- Organization: University of Delaware, Newark
- References: <memo.758220@cix.compulink.co.uk>
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 21:30:55 GMT
- Lines: 67
-
- In article <memo.758220@cix.compulink.co.uk> bburgar@cix.compulink.co.uk writes:
- >Steve Weigand (weigand@banana.cns.udel.edu) writes
- >>I've been reading a lot about a karate instructor named George Dillman
- >>in some of those cheezy karate/kf magazines. He has a series of video
- >>tapes about how to apply pressure points into fighting - a subject that
- >>continues to interest me.
- >>Thanks,
- >> - Steve Weigand
- >> (weigand@ee.udel.edu)
- >
- >Yes, I've trained on one of his seminars and I have seen the first
- >6 vidoes. He is for real and is worth visiting. The people he knocks
- >out are really out and not all of the knockouts are on the neck. The
- >arm ko's are most impressive as far as I am concerned.
- >
- >One word of warning - be very careful in practicing these techniques
- >as nobody really knows how or why they work (although some people think
- >they have a good idea). The reason that they were put into Kata in
- >the first place was to allow safe practice. From the weekend my right
- >arm is tingling and numb on and off (especially when I type - this post
- >is killing me!) It is supposed to go away after a few days, I hope it does!
- >
- >Take care.
- >Bill Burgar.
-
- A quick question on being knocked out by the pressure point strikes...
- How much force was used to attack the points? Was it just his finger
- on the skin of outside the point and then he pressed in with a lot of
- force, or was it that the strike came from far away (like a punch) and
- hit you? Or none of the above?
-
- I've done a hell of a lot of research on the subject by now. I've read a
- lot of texts about this subject, and I've asked a lot of people a lot
- of questions about it. Still, I haven't been able to knock someone out
- with it. I have a pretty good idea how to do it, but I guess I haven't
- really had the chance to practice it. (Nobody seems to want to be my
- training partner -- wonder why?)
-
- From my research, I've understand that striking on the points is
- considered very dangerous. When you strike a point, you are not only
- just striking a nerve, you're effecting actual physical changes in the
- organs that the meridian you are hitting on goes through. In other
- words, if you attack the large intestine meridian along 3 points, you
- could shut down the person's large intestine... he could die. So it
- really behooves one to learn about chi flow and meridians, (the
- zhang fu organs of Chinese medicine), before striking aimlessly. I
- think the best place to start is with acupuncture.
-
- But I do want to say that one thing I am pretty sure about is that
- striking on the points is VERY BAD. Lord knows what kind of damage is
- being done when that happens, especially if the organs that the
- meridian travels through is relatively week or already sick. For
- instance, the arm has the heart meridian running through it on the
- inside of the arm. There is a couple pressure points on the heart
- meridian in the arm. If I struck them, one after the other, and then
- I struck a 3rd point on the chest (above the nipple), which is on the
- heart meridian, then look out! Not only can you suffer a black-out,
- but if you have a bad heart to begin with, you may find yourself having
- a heart collapse within a day or so. So it's very nasty to be playing
- with these things without knowledge of where one is hitting.
-
- Any comments?
-
- Thanks,
- - Steve Weigand
- (weigand@ee.udel.edu)
-
-