The
only reason to travel this distance is if your opponent possesses
a weapon such as a gun and his using it is inevitable. If this is
the case, then such techniques as a Stepping or Jumping Side Kick
are most effective. This is because of the fact that these
offensive techniques close the distance between yourself and your
opponent quickly and you arrive in an offensive posture.
The Three Concentric Circle Principal does not mean that
you must maintain a stagnate positioning. What it does detail,
however, is that these three circles move as your body moves. They
are a method to accurately gauge the distance between your
opponent and yourself and tell you when defensive tactic is most
appropriate.
By first defining the distance from your attack
opponent, you can enter into any confrontation prepared to
successfully defend yourself in the most appropriate manner. This
area of Hapkido ideology is known as Range Effective Fighting.
Once the range of your defensive posture is understood you then
can successfully employee the second area of Hapkido Theory of
Circular Self-Defense, that of Circular Movement.
Hapkido teaches that by training your body to move in
natural patters of circular motion you can effectively defeat an
opponent’s attack with minimal expended energy and without the
potential of unnecessarily injuring yourself. It must be initially
understood that Circular Defense never has you encounter an attack
straight on. This is because of the fact that linear defensive
techniques are forceful, awkward, and often times hold you locked
into a single pattern of movement. This fact can be witnessed in
the case of the forceful Forearm Block against a Straight Punch.
This common traditional defensive technique, among Hard Style
Martial Art Systems, witnesses you entering into a Front Stance
with your blocking arm powerfully traveling upwards towards where
the attacker’s punch is expected to travel. If the pathway of
his punch has been even slightly miscalculated or the attacker
redirects his offensive assault, you will have expended excessive
energy and your arm will be locked into forcefully moving in the
defensive pattern you have instigated until it reaches its apex.
While the aforementioned linear block is in progress, your
opponent possesses the ability to strike at you with a secondary
attack. If, on the other hand, you train your body to move in
fluid circular motions, if your opponent redirects his attack, you
can instantly adapt your defense to his movement as you will not
be locked into a formal forceful blocking pattern.
Hapkido’s Circular Theory of Self Defense is a style
and a pattern of movement. This understanding teaches that first
you remove yourself from the path of an opponent’s attack, then
you deflect it, intercept it, and finally you disable your
attacker from possessing the ability to attempt to injure your
further. This strategy of defense is accomplished by training your
body to move in fluid circular motion, following the path of least
resistance. This defensive ideology, thereby, allows you to
immediately follow one defensive technique with another and
another until your opponent is completely disabled.
At the basis of Hapkido’s Circular Theory of Defense
is your moving out of the path of an attack. Moving from the path
of an attack does not witness you rapidly retreating backwards or
sloppily moving to one side in a linear fashion. This type of
random movement leaves you ill-equipped to immediately follow up
with further effective defensive techniques that will disable your
opponent. This is due to the fact that by launching your body
rapidly in a linear retreat, your bodys own momentum locks you
into one pattern of movement. Hapkido’s Circular Theory of Self
Defense, instead, sees you calculating the path of your
opponent’s attack, and then making only the minimal movement to
remove yourself from the path of that attack. With this style of
movement you do not have to substantially rebalance yourself, you
use little energy, and you remain in a close proximity to your
opponent where necessary counter attacks can easily and
effectively be instigated.
The most elementary example of moving out of the way of
an opponent’s attack can be witnessed in the circular defense
against the Straight Punch. In the case of the Straight Punch,
which is targeted at your head, simply by pivoting on the ball of
your lead foot and circularly moving your rear leg to a forty-five
degree positioning from where it previously was, your heads
positioning has shifted to the degree that the Straight Punch of
your opponent will continue on its linear path and miss its
target. With this you have achieved initial self defense with out
ever instigating a formal block.
As forceful linear attacks are often very powerful in
their forward driving nature, Hapkido’s Circular Theory of Self
Defense teaches that deflective blocking techniques should be used
in accordance with your removing yourself from the path of your
opponent’s attack. With this, you maintain control over the
confrontation and your opponent does not possess the ability to
unleash a secondary attack on you. This is due to the fact that by
deflecting an attack, you can leave your arm in place, thus,
holding his striking arm in check, as you instigate additional
defensive techniques.
The most elementary circular deflective technique is the
Frontal Circular Knife Hand Deflection. This block is performed by
first forming your hand into a Knife Hand, bending your elbow, and
locating your forearm in front of your body, parallel to the
ground. To deflect the on-coming Straight Punching attack of your
opponent, first pivot out of the path of his attack, (as
previously described), as you do so simultaneously circularly
guide your hand upwards across your body to a vertical
positioning. The Straight Punch will have missed you, you will
have deflected your opponent’s arm, and you will be in control
of the altercation.
With these two simple pivoting and deflection techniques
as a basis, you not only protect your entire upper body from
attack, but you deflect the on-coming punch of your opponent with
little or no expended energy. In addition, by deflecting the
attack, as opposed to forcefully blocking it, you do not risk the
possibility of injuring yourself by meeting bone to bone in a
traditional powerful intercepting blocking technique.
Hapkido’s Circular Theory of Self Defense teaches that
you must maintain control over the altercation and not allow your
opponent to possess the ability to strike at you with a secondary
attack once you have achieved initial self defense. Deflecting is
never enough to emerge victorious from a confrontation.
The point to launch further self defense counter
measures is the moment your opponent’s attack has been
deflected. This is due to the fact that in this rapidly fleeting
moment, he is most vulnerable as his balance is somewhat misalign
and his mind is recalculating what move to make next. Therefore,
this is your ideal opportunity to launch a counter attack.
In the case of the previously described, Circular
Deflection Defense against the Straight Punch, your next line of
self defense could be as simple as immediately reaching in to your
opponent’s chin with your lead deflecting hand, as your other
hand rapidly moves in and takes control of the back of his head.
By immediately taking a powerful front and rear hold on his head
and locking his neck unnaturally away from you, he can be
effortlessly directed to the ground, where additional counter
attack measures can be unleashed as necessary.
Many confrontations do not begin in this previously
discussed First Circle distance. Often times an opponent will rush
in towards you, crossing through the Third and Second Circle
distances, in order to attack. In this style of forward driven
attack, your opponent’s intentions will become quite evident and
you can use his own forward momentum against himself. For example
if an opponent rushes in at you and is either preparing to extend
his arms to shove you or to punch you, your first level of defense
is to Side Step his forward motion. You then immediately deflect
his out stretched arm, with a Forearm Circle Deflection. Your
opponent, due to his own expended energy, will continue to travel
forward with his own force of motion. At this point he will be
vulnerable to counter attack.
Hapkido’s Circular Theory of Self Defense is simple in
its design and it application. It teaches that you simply
encounter any attack by not encountering it at all. Instead, it is
far better to step away from the path of force, deflect as
necessary, and then counter attack with the most circularly easy
technique so your opponent will not possess the ability to strike
at you with a secondary attack.