“Diligence passe sens”
(“Great is drill.”) Henry VIII
A common request among combat rookies and even intermediate
players (and if we are honest some long-timers still think this way, too) is
“What’s next?” or “What’s the next super-secret neato technique to master?” And
I get this attitude, I mean who doesn’t want some new bit of information to
chew over, some new skill to toy with and occupy the mind? For some,
familiarity breeds contempt and if most of us don’t feel contempt for what we
know we must do, we can at least admit that sometimes another day in the gym
working on variations of the same things as we did last week can occasionally
lead to a bit of staleness.
But, despite the occasional battle with “This again?” we
must come to terms with and embrace the fact that this is the way of all great
and serious endeavors. Let’s look to other sports for illustration.
If we were to step onto the court of any winning basketball
team during practice, would we expect to see something unlike what we see in a
basketball game itself, that is, athletes working on passing, shooting,
rebounding, the full court press, et cetera?
In football practice from Pop Warner to the NFL, you will
see variations of the same drills and plays.
In tennis you will not see athletes forgoing tried and true
serves in favor of developing jumping spinning back serves with a half-gainer
twist.
In a good boxing gym, you will see amateur and pro fighters
alike working the bag with the exact same arsenal.
In good MMA gyms you will see good double leg takedowns and
the same handful of go-to submissions being worked by rookies and pros alike.
In other words, if even those at the top of their games,
those who play their given games for money are subjected to the exact same
regimen as the beginner (with a difference in intensity, of course) than why
would any of us not at that particular level expect to do something different
to get to that same status?
There is a sometime tendency to see Drills as finite in that
once a particular skill has been honed to an acceptable useful level we get to
move on and leave it behind as we play with the next toy.
Nothing could be further from the truth. Manny Pacquiao
still hones and drills the exact same jab that any 1st day boxing rookie must
work on.
Demian Maia still throws hooks in and uses the same
rear-naked choke that any strip mall aspiring blue belt understands.
You can go on and on with examples of tactics and techniques
that you are introduced to in your first year of training, being much of the
basis of what you will see emerge victorious in rings and octagons the world
round.
We must not approach drilling as a soon to be reached
destination with some threshold arrived at where we get to stop. Drilling must
be a continuous process as we will never quite know what individual repetition
or single drill session will be the one that does the job to make that tool
what it is.
Here’s a passage from Ralph Waldo Emerson on the subject of
drilling:
“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.”
Emerson’s and Colonel Buford’s lesson still hold, we never
have any way of knowing which day of drilling our jab, our double leg, or our
double-wristlock will be the day that puts it over the edge, the day that makes
it move from the commonplace to the extraordinary.
But while we may not know the single instance that does the
job, we do know that every instance contributes to the one (if such a one even
exists). And with this wisdom in mind, we should follow in the steps of Henry
VIII, Emerson, Colonel Buford, Manny Pacquiao, and every other top athlete who
does what rookies do, but they do it better because they never stopped working
on what works and pursued something else. They just kept drilling and drilling
and drilling.
Old School Warrior Resources Below
The Black Box Warehouse
https://www.extremeselfprotection.com/
The Indigenous Ability Blog
https://indigenousability.blogspot.com/
The Rough ‘n’ Tumble Raconteur Podcast
https://anchor.fm/mark-hatmaker
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