Individuality or different taste is mentioned more and more often in different conversations. My experience with Modern Arnis is that it was a grenade thrown into the closed and conservative systems I had known until then. Every teacher of mine who had a huge shopping list of techniques had experience with Modern Arnis and Jkd. Even though I have a different opinion on many things in MA, it brings me back every time. Today, for me, MA is a living process that is timeless much like the idea of Jkd. The roots are the same, but every tree is different. The masters are the match, the instructors are the fire, and the many unknown teachers are the wind that spreads the fire of FMA. Family systems disappear, but ideas continue. Thanks for the interview Dan and Rubio.
Watching this, there are two gaffes I made. 1. He switched the cane from his right hand to his left and 2. He stopped teaching seminars in 2000, not 2002. He passed away in 2001. By this time I'm freezing out on my deck.
I have two of Dan Anderson's books. They are excellent. Really great material and I refer back to them quite often.
Great interview
@@arnisador8600 Thanks.
Individuality or different taste is mentioned more and more often in different conversations. My experience with Modern Arnis is that it was a grenade thrown into the closed and conservative systems I had known until then. Every teacher of mine who had a huge shopping list of techniques had experience with Modern Arnis and Jkd. Even though I have a different opinion on many things in MA, it brings me back every time. Today, for me, MA is a living process that is timeless much like the idea of Jkd. The roots are the same, but every tree is different. The masters are the match, the instructors are the fire, and the many unknown teachers are the wind that spreads the fire of FMA. Family systems disappear, but ideas continue. Thanks for the interview Dan and Rubio.
@@filipinocombatpraha You're very welcome. I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Dan, Chad is Miami area, Bruce is Clearwater, Chris is Orlando.
And Roland Rivera is in North Carolina
@BarryMcConnell Thanks for the clarification.
@@davegiddings2545 Thanks for the clarification.
Watching this, there are two gaffes I made. 1. He switched the cane from his right hand to his left and 2. He stopped teaching seminars in 2000, not 2002. He passed away in 2001. By this time I'm freezing out on my deck.
Dan
Remy Preasas told Jeff Owens that he was the fastest person in modern Arnis. Also Remy was very impressed with Jim Power from Flint Michigan.
Most of the time I saw Remy he wore parachute pants.
@MichaelCribbs-cy4xn I never met Jeff, but if RP said he was fast, that's good enough for me.
Excellent 👍
Taking a line from Jim Power. Just shut up and train in time everyone will know who the Masters are.