If Sin The' was this incredible grandmaster of
the greatest collection of martial arts knowledge ever accumulated (including the secret arts of the death touch and liu fu tao) with mastery of 980 forms, and he was every bit of his claims, dont you think there would be someone, somewhere, out there, (outside of the system of shaolin-do) that would have a good thing to say about him and his knowledge? It has never happened in the two+ years I have surfed the net, not once! And I have actually tried to find
good things to be said about him. Like someone else said in an earlier post (I
forget who, I apologize) when chinese masters are posed the question of Sin The' and his claims, they diplomatically decline comment (or something to that
effect). And that, in case you were wondering, is not a good thing.
This is our Western interpretation, which amounts to hitting your head after you're punched. This video shows a man being killed with one punch and so 'we' go with that (but this is not One "Punch" Kill; this is "hit your head, after being duked") https:/
/www.youtube.com/watch?v=zMTcGjQ3Cso
Hollywood decided to go with a 5-point.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NL7nLSSSWjw
Sin The discussed One Punch Kill with us. This is it.
His word was Napoli, to my knowledge.
एक पंच हत्या Ēka pan̄ca hatyā.
That is what it sounded most like, for "One Punch Kill".
THIS IS THE ONE PUNCH KILL:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m59Ayt3sUN0
This is wiki about the Chinese version. It can be a 'delayed' death. You know if someone screws up your kindy with a tylone-type death grip, it is not a good way to live through the week.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Touch_of_Death
Dim mak is depicted as a secret body of knowledge with techniques that attack pressure points and meridians, said to incapacitate or sometimes cause immediate or even delayed death to an opponent. Little scientific or historical evidence exists for the
existence of a martial arts "touch of death", although it has been confirmed that trauma may cause disproportionately catastrophic consequences when applied to known pressure points under specific circumstances.[1] Commotio cordis, for example, is an
often lethal disruption of heart rhythm that occurs as a result of a blow to the area directly over the heart (the precordial region), at a critical time during the cycle of a heart beat causing cardiac arrest.
The concept known as vibrating palm originates with the Chinese martial arts Neijing ("internal") energy techniques that deal with the qi energy and the type of force (jin) used. It is depicted as "a technique that is part psychic and part vibratory,
this energy is then focused into a wave".[2]
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)