Be patient with me, as before we get to the answer to the above
question of bestest strike ever, most effective submission under the heavens,
we’re going to take some seemingly unrelated side-roads.
·
We’re
going to walk with Netsilik hunters.
·
Ponder the
large part that a few lumps of sugar played in the D-Day invasion.
·
Quote a
little Ralph Waldo Emerson.
·
Lay out
legendary Field Marshall Erwin Rommel’s simple test for evaluating field
officers.
·
Tell why
WWII British Commandos and US Army Rangers praised soil engineers and
geologists who never saw battle.
·
Quote a
little Smokin’ Joe Frazier
·
And then,
finally, answer the titled question and offer a suggestion or two about how we
can add more W’s to our own combative curriculum vitae.
Netsilik Hunters
The Netsilik are indigenous peoples who inhabit the far north. Much of
their survival is based upon hunting prowess. The land they inhabit is
windswept trackless terrain and ofttimes snow-covered and featureless rendering
the few familiar navigation points there obscure or non-existent. Not to
mention the frequent bouts of thick advection fog that lies over this already
difficult to navigate terrain. This fog can be so dense as to reduce visibility
to a mere half-meter.
And yet, the Netsilik are seldom lost. Why might that be?
Well, likely many factors, but the one we’ll focus on here is, before
an advection fog even sets in, the wise Netsilik are always paying attention to
the wind. They note the prevailing direction of the wind. If/when an advection
fog drapes the terrain they use the “feel” of the wind as a reference-compass.
Notice that they notice the timbre of the wind before
it is needed. It is too late to note the utility of wind direction when you
can’t see where it is coming from or blowing to. One must be mindful and
vigilant before one needs to be mindful and vigilant.
D-Day & the Bad-Ass Medicine of Sugar Lumps
Like a highlight reel worthy KO kick to the head or “fade-to-black”
rear naked choke, our images of D-Day are often colored by newsreel
pyrotechnics of Spielberg-esque cinema-mastery.
But…these representations often obscure thousands upon thousands of
unseen/unknown small efforts that pack large results.
I quote from Invasion: They’re Coming by Paul Carell a
documented blow-by-blow account of the D-Day invasion from the German side of
things. Mighty illuminating.
“A quarter ounce of sugar—just three lumps—dropped into the water
of a concrete mixer, was enough to rob two-hundredweights of concrete of its
strength, for if calcium combines with sugar, instead of with carbon dioxide, a
readily soluble calcium saccharate is formed. Thus, if a member of the French
Resistance succeeded in getting himself employed by the Germans near a concrete
mixer he could cause extensive damage to the defenses by dropping quite small
quantities of sugar into the mix or into the stored materials. The concrete
shield of a gun-emplacement or the roof-slabs of a dugout might be sufficiently
weakened to crumble like sandstone if hit by a shell.”
Again, small seemingly undramatic efforts, like noting the wind or
knowing a little fundamental construction chemistry can pay LARGE dividends.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
This is the eminently useful Mr. Emerson from The Conduct of
Life.
“We spread the same amount of force over much time, instead of
condensing it into a moment. '... At West Point, Col. Buford, the chief
engineer, pounded with a hammer on the trunnions of a cannon, until he broke
them off. He fired a piece of ordnance some hundred times in swift succession,
until it burst. Now which stroke broke the trunnion? Every stroke. Which blast
burst the piece? Every blast. " Diligence passe sens " Henry
VIII. was wont to say, or, great is drill.”
Rommel’s Test for Ability
Rommel valued officers who did not merely ordered to do.
He valued those in the mix, in the trenches not behind the lines,
behind the scenes or mere speculators or spectators.
He knew that working alongside his men gave him a realistic view of
the matters at hand, fostered camaraderie, and that all work, even the
so-called scut-work was part and parcel of being a warrior.
When he met new field officers, he would say, “Let me see your hands.“
When the officer in question peeled off his
gloves, if the hands were calloused and scratched from setting fortifications
and laying barbed-wire he knew he had one he could rely on.
If they were soft and protected he knew, in
essence, that the man before him did not note the wind, did not know the value
of small things such as lumps of sugar.
Three Cheers for Soil
Engineers
Pre-invasion or covert operation small squads of
British Commandos or US Army Rangers were often sent to potential landing
sites, not to perform some dramatic act of film-worthy sabotage but to collect
soil samples.
These men risked their lives to, hopefully, bring
back small canisters of soil from potential landing beaches. Sand from shoals.
Chipped rock samples from cliff faces.
These would be brought back and examined by soil
engineers and geologists who would then pronounce with authority such things
as...
“Tanks will mire in this meadow crossing”
“Paratroopers can’t fast-march in this terrain” “Landing craft will be stuck
hundreds of yards from shore leaving many men to drown” “Grappling hooks will
not hold on this rock-face and they will be mowed down.”
Again, seemingly small efforts---large
impacts.
Smokin’ Joe Frazier
This is Smokin’ Joe on knowing the “wind”
before you need to know the wind.
“You can map out a fight plan or a life plan,
but when the action starts, it may not go the way you planned, and you’re down
to your reflexes—that means your [preparation.] That’s where your roadwork
shows. If you cheated on that in the dark of the morning, well, you’re gonna
get found out now, under the bright lights.”
The Pragmatic Moral of the Tales
We often look to the dramatic incident, the
last thing, the big show and assume that is the majority of the
tale. We see the big overhand that dropped and stopped but fail to count all of
the preparatory jabs that accrued damage in the preceding rounds, all of the
subtle shifts, weaves, and slips that robbed power and form from the eventually
KO’d opponent.
We look to the shoulder-ripping
kimura/Double-Wristlock and itch to hit the mat and work our own finisher asap,
but we often get blinded to the meticulous pinpoint precision of ground-control
that preceded the tap. In other words, we overvalue the submission and fail to
marvel at the knee-to-knee block, false crossface and far-pocket step that
paved the way.
We often pursue the big, the cinematic, the
final results at the expense of the “unseen” that preceded.
To ignore such factors is to fail Field Marshall Rommel’s “Let me see your hands” test.
In big endeavors ALL is chosen and noted with
care. Plunging to end-results in training and thinking will likely insure that
those wished for, hoped for results will always elude your grasp.
We must note wind, callous our hands, do the
roadwork, take our soil samples now and every day.
Then…then we are walking the wise warrior
path.
[For more Rough& Tumble history, Indigenous Ability hacks, and for pragmatic applications of old school tactics historically accurate and viciously verified see our RAW Subscription Service.]
Thanks Mr Hatmaker .
ReplyDeleteThank you kindly!
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