A Great Eye Fake...
and Why It Won't Work in Most Tournaments
by Keith Pascal
The title of this article says that this great eye fake won't
work in most tournaments. It's not that it isn't en effective
technique; you'd probably get it on 99%+ of the time. You can't
use it in tournaments, because it's illegal.
Most traditional
tournaments don't allow kicking below the waist.
This fake works best with a knee or shin kick. Who knows?
With a little creative planning, maybe you can adapt it to an
allowable technique.
This move was actually inspired from a principle used by
magicians.
Magicians use a concept called misdirection. They
distract you into looking at the wrong place at the right time.
Sometimes magicians need to do a secret move in order to make a
trick work. The problem is, sometimes there isn't any place to
hide the movement. They have to do the move out in the open.
The only solution is to distract the audience at just the
right time.
Wouldn't it be great if, as a martial artist, you could distract
an attacker, so he/she wouldn't even see your move coming? After
all, this is one of the ways magicians get the reputation of
having hands that are quicker than the eye. In reality, they
aren't quicker, just smarter.
 
So, let's get down to brass tacks
-- here's a practical tactic that you can you use to protect
yourself better:
One technique of misdirection that magicians use is what's called
"misdirection by motion." Your opponent's eyes tend to follow
motion. And if you want a stronger magnet for your opponent's eye
gaze, make it an upward motion.
You could throw something into the air, but I have a much more
natural move. It's subtle.
You are squared off with your opponent.
You are looking out of the corner of your eye. You are looking
low at your opponent's legs.
Suddenly you turn your head, so you have a bit more of a front view.
You look up, and .... At the precise moment that your opponent
makes eye contact, you kick him/her firmly in the knee or shin.
Get it?
The beauty of this technique is that it's absolutely
impossible for your attacker to look up and down at the exact
same time. Right as your attacker's attention is being drawn up,
you are kicking down. It's a free shot (unless your attacker has
read this article and knows the tactic as well).
 
A Possible Problem:
Imagine a big, mean, hairy attacker in front of you. He's ready to
attack. He has a right lead, and
HE'S LOOKING AT YOU OUT
OF THE CORNER OF HIS EYES. No matter what you do, you
can't get him to look up. What do you do?
Well, as a magician I have had times where the spectator just
won't take her eyes off my hands. So, I usually say,
   "You aren't going to take your eyes off the cards, are you?"
Her response is usually,
   "no, I am not,"
as she meets my eye gaze to tell me this.
And BAM, I do the move. She blew it. She looked up, and she didn't
even realize it.
In a martial arts situation, I might be bold enough to ask something like,
  "you're chicken to look me in the eye, aren't you?"
If they even shifted their gaze for a second, I'd "zap 'em."
You are definitely going to have to practice this type of
misdirection.
It's a real finesse tactic. It takes precision,
but it's worth the effort. It feels great when you
successfully pull it on someone. Have fun.
 
Bonus Tip #1
Do you want another type of eye fake? Your opponent tends to look
where you look. If you look at your right hand, so will your
opponent.
Wouldn't this be nice, if you had your weapon secretly
hidden in your left hand?
Now, if you look with your eyes and point with a finger, you
have strengthened the call for your opponent's attention.
 
Bonus Tip #2
This tip comes in the form of a Bruce Lee quote. Yes, it pertains.
It's from from Jeet Kune Do, Volume Three, by Bruce Lee (Edited
by John Little).
On page 30, Under the subtitle, Strategy of distracting attention,
Bruce Lee says only:
  "Repeat -- for most rapid perception, attention must be at the maximum
   focus on the thing to be perceived."
This is really interesting if you think about it. Why did he put it
under this category? Why not under rapid perception, or even
maintaining focus? Why under "Strategy of distracting..."?
For me, it offers an additional tactic to combine with an eye fake.
To really make my eye fake effective, I need to make my opponent
really concentrate on me.
I don't want him distracted, before "I" do the distracting. The more
intensely I get him to focus, the greater the effect of misdirection.
 
Think about it.
Readers who enjoyed the above article also liked the following article:
Pack Your Martial Arts Techniques With More Hits and Strikes
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by Keith Pascal
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