The 5 Animals
Article by Master Bill Mailman, Shichidan
| Tiger - Strength, Tenacity,
Ferocity
The tiger has no fear. It is the king of the jungle. It is to the tiger’s
advantage to move in quickly and make the kill. No sense giving the weaker
opponent a chance to get lucky; simply move straight in and end it. Of
course, in order to use this strategy, you must be the larger, stronger
fighter or it will backfire on you.
In our system, tiger techniques move straight ahead while throwing
a devastating array of tiger’s claws to the face and groin. You keep your
front leg light so you can kick quickly—the equivalent of the tiger’s pawing
or scratching. You put the weight on your rear leg so you can leap like
the tiger. In essence, it is the strategy of moving straight ahead that
distinguishes the tiger. |
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| Leopard - Speed, Power, Agility
The leopard is a cat, too. In what way does it differ from the tiger?
The Leopard is smaller than the tiger and cannot successfully come straight
at the larger opponent, so the leopard uses slanting attacks. It jumps
around behind you and then does it’s cat thing. It’s also very quick and
elusive, throwing many strikes from in close. Almost any size fighter can
employ leopard techniques, but speed is essential. |
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| Crane - Grace, Balance, Patience
The Crane is a master of balance and judgment. As the 600 pound tiger
moves straight in toward the 40 pound crane, the crane instantly judges
the range of the tiger’s attack and jumps to the side, just out of the
tiger’s reach. Then the crane launches an attack at a vulnerable point,
such as the eye. A crane’s beak to the eye ends the tiger’s attack. Because
most of us are concerned about larger people attacking us, crane techniques
are most useful. Combination 7 is the first crane technique learned in
our art and its’ strategy of jumping out of range and then hitting the
opponent as they come forward is the essence of crane. |
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| Snake - Inner Power (Chi), Precision, Suppleness
What if you use your crane technique and jump back, but the tiger is
quickly on you again, and again? ‘Fall’ to the floor and use snake techniques.
When you’re on the ground, you have four possible weapons to use; two hands
and two feet. You’re opponent must stand on one leg, so he effectively
has only three weapons at his disposal. At this point, you’re already ahead;
add in grav-ity’s help (he can be made to fall while you’re already down)
and you can see the advantages to dealing with the extremely large person
in this way. |
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| Dragon - Rides the Wind, Fighting Spirit, Transcendence
The dragon is an imitator; it copies all the other animals as well as
doing it’s own unique style. For instance, within our “Dragon Faces the
Four Winds”form you can find snake, crane, leopard and tiger techniques,
but the dragon can also fly. Think of how much potential energy a heavy
animal that can fly would have at it’s disposal. When the dragon leaps
into the air, it pounces not just with it’s weight, but also utilizes spinning
motions to flail with it’s tail. Bruce Lee was called the “Little Dragon”
because his wheel kick was so devastating! |
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There you have it… the attributes of the Five Animals. There are a few
other animals that we use less often, such as the eagle, monkey, bear,
and even the rooster. Having a variety of animal fighting styles to choose
from ensures that no matter what your opponent’s size or what he does,
you can find something within our system that will defeat him!
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