Showing posts with label pertempuran. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pertempuran. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Updated Curriculum DVD's 1-4

Now DVD's 1-4 are available for those interested in learning the fundamental movements and relationships of Pencak Silat Pertempuran.

Available here:
DVD 1 https://www.createspace.com/383937
DVD 2 https://www.createspace.com/383941
DVD 3 https://www.createspace.com/386923 
DVD 4 https://www.createspace.com/386924

They are also available on Amazon.com

Excited to see how this new structure and new syllabus helps people grow in there study of Pencak Silat and in particular PSP.

Sincerely,
Guru Stark



Saturday, January 25, 2014

Updated Pencak Silat Syllabus

So where have we been? Well life has been kicking me in the groin so I've been dealing with that. I've also been working on new material and a new syllabus. Very much related to the previous material, it has been updated and improved. 

After teaching the curriculum for nearly 15 years, pencak silat Pertempuran has undergone a complete system revision! Primarily to aid the student in their study and understanding, the syllabus was re-organized and updated with an emphasis placed on progressive learning, combative application, and simplification.

As a result the DVD's are being finally being re-released. Completely updated with the new syllabus and with a focus on learning.


As with any material video type of material, it should be combined the with training from a qualified instructor, the available written materials, and of course hard, consistent training for the best results.

The first DVD is available here: https://www.createspace.com/383937
and on Amazon.com http://www.amazon.com/Pencak-Silat-Pertempuran-Level-1/dp/B00HZ7NZS0/ 

The written materials are still available on Amazon and Lulu: http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/combatsilat 

Enjoy,
Pendiri Sean Stark
Pencak Silat Pertempuran

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Pencak Silat Pertempuran Values

Every so often, it's important to evaluate what you're doing and where it fits in relationship to where you started, considering where you want to go.

I have personally made a habit of this. Pencak Silat Pertempuran has been taught for nearly 15 years. During that time, there has been some changes to the system, to my practice, to my teaching, etc. but generally speaking it's pretty much the same.

So the time has come to and I'm reflecting on Pencak Silat Pertempuran and the people who have stuck with it. There are only a few really. I had hoped that at this point in the journey I would be further along than I am, establishing Pencak Silat Pertempuran as a mainstay within a nĂ­che community of martial artists. As a result, I've begun to reflect on what I was trying to do to begin with and ask myself if I've been successful, and if so, how—and if not, why?

Pencak Silat Pertempuran has been life-changing for me. I've been involved in martial arts about 20 years now and it's fair to say that martial arts has been life-changing generally, but Pencak Silat Pertempuran has taught me much more. I don't want to digress to much down that path, but I've studied several arts nearing 10 years individually but they haven't compared to Pencak Silat Pertempuran for what they offered me.

I want others to experience it that way too. I always have. So I thought I would take a moment to share some of what I consider to be the values of Pencak Silat Pertempuran or Combat Silat.

Community and Family
For years I have been trying to get martial artists who want to come alongside and share and grow with each other. It started with an idea that I had a long time ago.

KELUARGA - For silat I started an event called Keluarga that was held yearly, with the hopes it would become quarterly or at least bi-annually. It's basically extinct at this point. The idea is still an ember but... The hope with Keluarga was that the community of pencak silat enthusiasts and Pencak Silat Pertempuran participants would partake. People of different disciplines of pencak silat, would gather to share and build community, supporting each other. Basically, to do what no other silat teachers in the U.S. have done, or even tried to do. This has not been successful—Mostly, I think, because of how it was initially conceived. I am looking at ways to make this happen again.

SILATNOW! ezine was another attempt I took to develop community within pencak silat, create awareness of other systems that exist within the US and elsewhere, and generally start silat community. It worked for awhile but was not sustainable long-term by myself, and the community didn't seem all that interested so, though I've gotten lots of positive feedback on it, people generally thought it was good but not worth contributing to. That makes for a pretty rapid decline of good articles.

Pencak Silat Pertempuran (PSP)—Even PSP itself was meant to be community led and community developed. Something where the leaders of PSP would meet to discuss methods of teaching, drills, techniques, etc. whatever makes it better, in an open forum scenario. I had always thought that Keluarga would be that place where the leaders would gather as part of the whole thing, but that requires leaders/teachers. I only have three at this point. It's a start but it's not there yet.

I have not been good at fostering this. My own life is chaotic at best and I haven't been able to invest the time into making this happen. I threaten to but haven't yet been very successful at it despite my best threats to the contrary.

Availability
The primary reason that I make DVD's, Books, and the distance program is to give everyone who is interested, an opportunity to learn pencak silat. It has changed my life and given me so much that it seemed like the obvious right thing to do—to give it back.

This also hasn’t been extremely successful.

Unfortunately, this has been misread by a lot of people as being a business. A money making venture. Let me assure you that’s not the case. Even after years of DVD, book sales, and sixty or seventy people who have joined the distance program, it hasn’t even begun to pan out financially for all of the investment of time, energy and money—Not to mention the impact and time away from family, friends, etc. Even so, I’ll continue to make it available in the hopes that someday I’ll reach the few who truly understand this effective, personal, and simple system.

Even my best efforts at this are criticized by people. That's unfortunate and honestly, a little annoying given what I know I’ve given to make the material available. The countless nights staying up until one or two a.m. and then turning around and going to my full time job.

All that said, I would do it over if I thought people were getting value from it—even a glimpse of what I have seen.

Effective
It has long been my goal to train and teach martial arts that are effective for personal safety and the safety of my loved ones and those unable to protect themselves. In that regard, I've hoped to pass that effectiveness to my students. To make it effective, it has long been my experience that less is more. Especially after having studied many different systems of martial arts to include some of Malay, Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, and Korean heritage along with military combatives. I’ve worked hard to reduce Pencak Silat Pertempuran to the universal elements of combat and ensure that those elements are effective for everybody that studies. Of course, these are my personal interpretations of what they are but it falls to the individual to pursue them.

Simplicity
PSP is founded on the idea that silat and martial arts does not need to be complex or complicated. In fact, the best and most efficient things are often the most simple. As a result, PSP was created out of that idea. Unfortunately, evidence that the simplicity of PSP has been communicated adequately doesn't exist.

I created the books and DVD’s with the intent of teaching lower level silat skills in a methodical way so that a person could easily learn if they used both together. Combined with periodic in person training they could move reasonably well through the system. I know it can be done. It requires regular training partners and a commitment to learning and seeking out answers rather than accepting doubts. People have, in turn, mistook the simple presentation and simple ideas on the DVD’s as the end result—thereby overlooking the beauty of the system.

PSP is literally seven gerak and one langkah presented over and over to produce a system of great depth for a student to include empty-hand, ground fighting, and various weapons. In fact, the weapons the individual finds interesting.

Personal
Pencak Silat Pertempuran was created with the intention that ALL people could be challenged by the study of it and that they could find their own path from within the study. Unfortunately, many who have studied have misunderstood this aspect and felt that they should mimmic the fundamentals of the system. For personal study a consistent foundation is necessary, but only if it provides you a personal system that you can adopt and adapt as your own.

Understanding the Combat Relationship
To me, this is the difference between a martial artist who can be adaptable and those who get stuck as soon as what’s happening doesn’t match their technique training. This is why so many people feel that sparring is the answer and that if it doesn’t work in sparring—then it doesn’t work. The reality is, that in most systems, there is a sizable gap between the techniques and training in class, the drills they may learn, and the actual application.

The goal then of PSP has been to teach that relationship component from the start. There is very little solo practice within PSP as a result. However, the basic level of the drills demonstrated on the DVD’s has led people to assume, those basic drills were as deep or as wide as they got. That’s not even remotely true. This is where time with me as an instructor is most valuable.

Understanding Attribute Development
Again, one of the primary differences of viewpoint within PSP from many other arts, in my opinion at least, is that I really want people to exam themselves, their abilities, etc. and determine what they naturally have to offer. Don’t look to me or PSP to make you taller or smarter but I can teach you to have better reach and be more wise, if you are willing.

Attributes can often be the game changer in combat or fighting and you must be able to evaluate quickly and assess tactically what your options are. You cannot formulate a game plan against someone else, whether it be based on their physical attributes, mental attributes, spiritual attributes, or environmental attributes if you don't train yourself to recognize them in you and around you on a day to day basis.

PSP is designed so that you can develop some attributes like timing, balance, grace, quickness, reach, offensive mindset, adaptability, coordination, targeting, relaxation, etc.

PSP does not want you to think about developing equal skills for left and right sides. That’s not what it’s about. We do things on left and right sides so that people who are left handed or right handed can have a home in PSP. In reality, what you are most comfortable with is going to be more easily learned, practiced and employed. You are most likely to put the knife in your right hand if you are right handed. Don’t waste time trying to become a left handed knife fighter! Embrace yourself and exploit your natural talent above all else.

Understanding Beauty
A lot of martial artists don't understand this. They think the “pencak” is a waste of time. Yet 90% or more have never even been in a fight of any kind. Furthermore, they don't understand the value of developing beauty. In PSP, I hope that eventually people will begin to see that value of developing the pencak side of silat. It is such a good way to develop attributes of body awareness, of finesse, and of fine motor control. To me, there is no silat without pencak.

As a result, the Pencak Silat Pertempuran teaching of the past 15 years is being revised. New materials are on their way but more specifically a new method of teaching much of the same material.

So ask yourself is the system of martial art you train effective, simple, and personal? I'd be happy to hear your thoughts.

Sincerely,
Pendiri Sean

Wednesday, September 04, 2013

Pencak Silat: Combat or More?

For some, the pencak silat is a hobby. It's something we do for fun, or exercise, or social interaction. It may even be a drive we have to feel safe or generate self-confidence.

To me, and hopefully the students and instructors I raise, I hope they see it as more....

When I talk about attributes and attribute development within Pencak Silat Pertempuran I’m talking about more than just physical attributes. Of course, those are very important, things such as speed, endurance, quickness, reach, timing, strong side, mobility, etc. 

The more often overlooked components are things such as emotional and mental attribute development. 

Apart from the need to use the physical attributes you develop during times of physical crisis, and self or community protection, it’s the emotional and mental attributes that take martial arts from a hobby, exercise, or something fun to do just for the sake of it, and give value to everyday life.

Attributes such as patience, will, and determination may seem like obvious traits that would develop over the course of training, but other attributes include things such as self-reflection/evaluation, centeredness, adaptability, respect, and trust are some other examples. 

The majority of us already have an amount of these attributes when we start PSP. Some more than others. PSP when truly studied will continue to grow these as well, challenging you along the way incrementally.

To see it, let’s look at a quick example. When you’re training, do you trust what you’re being taught? Do you trust the teacher? Did you start off fully trusting the teacher or the art, or has that trust grown over time and with the input of energy from you and the teacher? It’s likely that it’s been a process. 

You may even find that if you do not yet fully trust the art or the teacher. That’s normal. As a point of caution, to see the greatest value from your training, you must work through that and learn why you do not fully trust and then take steps to rectify that. One way would be to ask questions, which will develop another mental attribute in the desire to learn—it’s a path of connection and relationship. Relationship to one another and relationship amongst attributes.

Now, I challenge you to take the lessons you are learning in study of Pencak Silat Pertempuran and apply them to your everyday life!

Hormat Saya,
Sean

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Instructors in PSP

There are three rank levels in Pencak Silat Pertempuran: Pelatih, Pengajar, and Guru. They are instructor levels only. There is no need for rank at any other time and the people who achieve these rankings will do so because they love the art and would practice it regardless.

Over the course of the past 14 years that I have been teaching Pencak Silat Pertempuran I have only awarded instructor level rank 3 times.
If you get certified as an instructor in PSP, you've earned it and shown that you love it. It typically takes about 4-5 years to reach the first level of instructorship.

The three people who have trained with me consistently and have taken the training seriously enough to reach Pelatih are:

-Bill Dwyer IV
-Sterling Heibeck
-Andrew Ewing

Of the second level of instructorship, Pengajar, only one of the three has attained this honor:

-Bill Dwyer IV

As of this date, 1/30/2013 I have never issued the rank of Guru, though Bill has been with me around nine years and is approaching it!

Let it be known and understood, you EARN your position in PSP.

Regards,
Sean

Pendiri, Pencak Silat Pertempuran
www.silat.us

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Silat Learning Streams and Application Streams

Every technique has an outcome. Think of a technique as an event. Sometimes positive, sometimes negative, sometimes irrelevant—from both perspectives—attacker and “defender.” 

To explain from the attackers perspective, I may strike and hit the target as intended, or my strike may miss the target because of the defender’s response, or my strike could just miss.

From the defenders perspective, when you defend against an attack, for example, your defense may push/deflect the attack to the left or right or up or down depending on what defense feels appropriate for you. Or you could get smacked. 

No matter what, every outcome changes the relationship between the attacker and the defender. Personal perspective determines the value. From the perspective of either there are opportunities and pitfalls at each intersection.

The greater your ability versus that of your opponents, the more likely you are to recognize the opportunities and be able to capitalize on them. If you are correct in your recognition and capitalize well, you will be able to string together events and thereby create a seamless series. (A series as we refer to them in Pencak Silat Pertempuran is called a “Stream.”)

This is not what makes PSP unique. All arts have this interaction of outcomes. We refer to it as a Relationship.

However, Pencak Silat Pertempuran specifically pays attention to the space in between interactions. As a result PSP has an expectation of the interaction or interplay between the fighters. 

How? 

In certain relationships the response is MORE predictable than in others. By putting ourselves in those specific relationships whenever possible, we CAN have a reasonable understanding of the likely outcomes. We call this the CPS or Combat Positioning System. THIS is essential to PSP.

When in one of those positions/relationships with an antagonist, we can, with reasonable predictability determine a likely response based on the type of strike, trajectories, and angles that we are in. 

Since the majority of that is built into the Combat Positioning System, the only things that are really left to sort out are the trajectory/type of your attack, tool you are using to attack with, and the target chosen. 

Often the target and trajectory are inter-related. The tool may also have some obvious correlation to targeting. For example, if you attack the eyes, with the intention of blinding, then fingers are the most appropriate tool. Likewise, a blow to the ribs would be best with some kind of fist or elbow strike. 

In any case, the target, trajectory, and relationship WILL determine the most likely responses. By understanding those outcomes you can reasonably construct a system to respond appropriately and relatively consistently to them.

The learning methodology of PSP consists of various “Streams” for the sake of understanding / learning but they are NOT necessarily indicative of the intended relationship of the application. Many (most) people miss this piece. 

In this regard, the term Streams actually has two meanings and is more accurately defined as the Learning Stream and the Application Stream. 

The Learning Stream is intended to make the idea of Streams of movement and outcomes clear from a protagonists view. However, the Application Stream is the reality of combat—a jigsaw puzzle built in relationship with an antagonist. 


Thursday, August 02, 2012

Learning Pencak Silat or anything

#pencaksilat #pencak #silat #pertempuran #combat #silat #combatsilat

I've been taking a class at work for something else but there is a simple list that was created for that class about the learning process. Not sure if it came from somewhere else, but based on the comments I get from time to time and the way people seem to think about martial arts, I thought it would be a good impetus for putting some new info out on the intention of Pencak Silat Pertempuran and on learning in general.

The basic outline is this:

1: UNCONSCIOUS INCOMPETENCE—the person is complacent due to ignorance of their state.
(To not know and not care.)

2: CONSCIOUS INCOMPETENCE—the person has had some sort of impetus that has moved them from being unaware of their ignorance to being aware and ready to learn.
(To want to know something.)

3: CONSCIOUS COMPETENCE—as the person begins to learn, they are increasingly aware of both what they know and their limitations, making them ripe for coaching.
(Knowing some and aware that you have more to learn.)

4: UNCONSCIOUS COMPETENCE—as the person practices and perfects whatever it is they're learning, it becomes second nature.
(Doing well enough to do without thinking—as if it is intuitive.)

5: REFLECTIVE COMPETENCE—if the person is called upon to teach others, they will need to move beyond doing it intuitively to doing it reflectively, considering the processes and parts from various perspectives.
(To master something and then reflect on it in order to teach)

The last three of these are what I refer to as: Knowing, Doing, and Being or Scio, Operor, Existo (which is more becoming then being).

Recently I had someone ask me about PSP and the system I have organized and how the organization works. 

They were really asking a secondary question about the validity of having 8 responses to choose from. It showed their ignorance of what I teach and how the system works. (Step 2 above.)

The numbering system itself is only meant as a tool for teacher and student to have an organized discussion and approach to learning. It is not meant as a rolodex to flip through as you fight, per se. (Step 3 above.)

In reality, under pressure, you're only going to do what comes out of you naturally. If you train enough, gain faith and confidence in what you're learning—even if something goes wrong—you can you still do with surety what you've been trained to do. It must be trained enough to be natural. It's that simple—and that difficult. (Step 4 above.)

His question was "with eight possible responses how can you sort through that in a fight?" He would be very shocked to understand that there are hundreds of responses, maybe more honestly. 

The reality is that you don't sort through them at all. You just need to practice, and then practice, and then practice some more, moving through the three stages, letting your responses develop and letting your understanding of the physical, psychological, and emotional relationship transpire. It's both active and reactive—not one or the other. 

The training method I have created is meant only as a way to organize in a small, relational way, SOME of the possibilities, and more specifically the probabilities. 

It is not prescriptive like most martial arts but it is somewhat predictive.

Thanks for reading,
Sean
Pencak Silat Pertempuran

Tuesday, December 07, 2010

Instructor Series: Attributes of Pencak Silat Pertempuran

On the topic of techniques, some people get confused about the purpose of the curriculum of pencak silat Pertempuran. They THINK that the curriculum is THE application. However, as I tell people, the point of the curriculum is attribute development. So what does that mean?

Well, no matter what system of martial art you study, YOU will always be an integral part of it. You cannot escape the fact that YOU are the primary component. As a result, I can only guide your application of pencak silat, I cannot dictate it. Therefore, the best use of my teaching then, is to give you the skills to find yourself in it.

WHAT I teach are the tools and the ideas. WHO you are determines the EXPRESSION of PSP.

I cannot dictate your expression. I can guide it. I can mold your expression into something that more closely resembles pencak silat, BUT it is entirely on YOU to figure out how to actually EXPRESS it.

It is not plug and play. Perhaps there is a way for arts to do that but what I'm teaching is a matrix for understanding relationship. It's so much broader than applications that are plug and play.

Monday, December 06, 2010

Instructor Series: Pencak Silat and Ego

Let go of your ego.
As you practice martial arts, and for those of us practicing pencak silat, there are several things you may end up seeing or doing yourself. Some of them are very subtle but they rear their heads regularly. I've seen them in myself from time to time and more obviously in people I've taught.

Things you might ask yourself or actually say:
1. "That doesn't feel comfortable to me. I think I'll do it this way." Yet, admittedly you are training with a teacher bc you have much to learn. And usually this is done shortly after you learn something for the first time—not after repetitive study.

2. "I wouldn't do that in the street..." Again, admittedly you are training with a teacher bc you have much to learn. Perhaps the take away isn't the technique, but the principle. Additionally, there aren't too many absolutes about what will and what won't work. It's all situational and all relational.

Things you might actually do:
3. When someone you are teaching brings up a great question you may not admit that you don't have all the answers and that you may have to ask someone else or even just explore solutions together.

4. If you get hit, instead of accepting the challenge to improve through training or asking what you could have done differently, you get angry or frustrated

5. Thinking: "This is really simple. I'm too advanced for this stuff." Or "Can't we do something other than this simple stuff?" 

6. Defend your training blindly when critiqued. Even critique that is done in a negative spirit can sometimes yield value. Be willing to just look.

7. If you ever stop putting yourself out there for others to evaluate, ask yourself "why?" It could be that you're trying to protect yourself.

8. Blame others, including your teachers for your lack of growth and development. That's pure crap. You need to own your path.

I'm sure there are others. Certainly there are more obvious ones than these, but I've seen these in myself and others over the past 20 or so years of training and they can be very subtle.

Just a quick note to think about.

Would love to expand this if you feel like contributing.