Individual styles behind traditional styles
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non-traditional kick |
Creating our individual style is a natural process. Everyone develops their style automatically. This statement is general but can be applied to any specific field—martial arts, combat sports, and self-defence are no exceptions. People who practice fighting are constantly creating their own fighting styles. They are, consciously or unconsciously, the creators of their unique approach to combat.
Whatever one is learning, only a part of it will truly be absorbed. Another part will be automatically rejected by the self. Moreover, every absorbed element is filtered through a person’s individuality. The evolving individual fighting style becomes distinct from the traditionally practiced style. In other words, by practicing conventional techniques, one is also developing an invisible, personal fighting style—what we can call the InFi style.
For example, someone studying Wing Chun kung fu or Kyokushinkai karate is guided by teachers and improved within the framework of tradition. At the same time, behind the scenes, their InFi style evolves naturally, shaped by their personal nature. This means that every practitioner ends up with two styles: one traditional (socially guided), and one personal (naturally formed). The conventional style is visible during practice or demonstration. The InFi style, however, reveals itself only in unexpected situations. For instance, while a traditional style may include 108 rigid techniques, a person’s InFi style may contain only 23—but those are flexible, unique, and flavoured by personal instinct. InFi styles are created, not learned.
But what happens when someone combines two or more combative systems to create a new style, with the intent to share, spread, and teach it—perhaps for business? (Many traditional styles were born this way.) That newly created style, however, is no longer an InFi style. InFi—the personal combat style—is not reproducible. It is unique to the individual. Teaching one’s own InFi style transforms it into a traditional style, with rules and structure. It becomes a school, not a self. In contrast, InFi is a living, ever-changing, evolving expression of the individual. Theoretically, no two InFi styles can ever be the same—just as no two people are the same. An Individual Fighting style is inseparable from its owner.
In summary, think it over and be aware: whatever you are practicing—karate, kung fu, boxing, aikido, jiu-jitsu, krav maga, or mixed martial arts—it exists on the surface, in the realm of conscious learning. That is the visible part. But behind it, something more personal is either evolving or dormant. That is your authentic InFi style. InFi is not a school; InFi is your secret style. And nobody knows your InFi style better than you.