The Eagle/Crane Defense System: Origins and Development

 

By

Dr. Robert Sam Lackey

 

     The Eagle/Crane Defense system (which is an important part of “STOP”—Self Defense Training for Ordinary People) is a contemporary system based on one of the most ancient points of origin—the survival behaviors of animals.  Specifically the Eagle/Crane Defense system was derived from the nest defense techniques I observed five years ago in a nature documentary.

 

     The Eagle defended the “no fly zone” above its nest by circling around behind the “trespassing” bird, flew in behind it, and knocked it out of the sky.  The white crane defended its nest against the strike of a water snake by deflecting the strike with its wing and killing the snake the moment it hit the ground.  Without the use of slow motion photography, I doubt if I would have seen any of the crane’s actions clearly, because they happened so fast.

 

     At the time I observed these two highly effective nest defenses, I knew that I had witnessed the essence of self defense, but I certainly did not envision the development of a human defense system.  That unfolded slowly over time as I was able to translate the gestures of the animals into equivalent actions for humans.

 

     My logical mind, for example, dismissed the crane’s nest defense in large part since I don’t possess a razor sharp beak that can strike and stop an enemy I have driven to the ground.  Likewise, my legs hinge backwards instead of forward like the crane’s, so the lighting fast use of the crane’s legs and feet in trapping and holding the snake to the ground simply doesn’t work for me.  The problem with the eagle’s tactic, on the face of it, is similarly out of reach, because I cannot fly.

 

     On the other hand, Dr. Wong’s instruction in Pai He Ch’uan, White Crane Boxing, opened my mind back in 1972 to the wisdom of the crane, so, in time, I began working on a translation. 

 

     The first door was open.  The first key word was simple and wonderfully powerful.  The crane’s wing was extended downward and swept across the path of the striking snake.  I call this the “crane’s deflecting block.”  The crane’s wisdom is immediately clear.  In human deflecting blocks and catches of incoming torso-level knife thrusts (the equivalent of a snake strike) we have the width of a hand to do the deflecting.  The crane’s lowered wing protects it from its shoulder level down the full length of its torso.  And the same increased coverage is given a human using this block.  So the thrust can be deflected whether it comes straight in, slants down, or up—a major advantage in poor light when tracking an incoming thrust is very difficult.

 

     The crane sweeps the lowered wing across the weapon’s path leading with its shoulder. This rotates the torso automatically out of the path of the incoming threat.  The same thing happens when a human uses the crane’s wing block.  This vital rotation out of the path of the weapon is a major advantage in using the crane’s wing block.  In all of the deflecting blocks I am familiar with, the defender has the option of rotating the torso away from the path of the weapon.  However, the closer the aggressor stands to the defender (so common in muggings and abductions), the quicker the blocking hand has to move, and the less the torso rotates out of the way. But even in an extreme close up assault, the crane block works differently and more efficiently, since the very act of rotating the leading shoulder pulls the torso automatically back and away from the incoming strike.

 

     While the process of translating the rest of the crane’s and the eagle’s actions into human terms may be of interest to some, I will proceed here directly to the results of that rather lengthy process.

 

     Over time, I found that the crane’s tactic of striking the incoming snake after it is secured on the ground is best accomplished by human means if one places the hand of the other arm immediately against one’s shoulder, palm out.  Then, as one feels the incoming thrust brush past the lowered crane’s block, the “intercepting” hand slides quickly down the surface of the crane’s block and secures the incoming knife bearing hand on or just behind the wrist.  This weapon-bearing hand is secured against the crane’s blocking arm, and, as soon as this is accomplished, the human equivalent of the crane’s beak (the elbow) drives up to strike the attacker under the chin—as many times as needed. 

 

     This elbow strike has the basic effect of the crane striking the snake pinned on the ground because the attacker is held in place to absorb the elbow strike’s force by the attacker’s own weight.  Striking upward therefore is a viable equivalent to the force the crane achieved by striking downward against an enemy pinned on the ground. Lifting the aggressor’s striking arm also greatly reduces his contact with the ground and has the effect of immobilizing him—much as the snake pinned to the ground is  immobilized.

 

     If the incoming strike is aimed, or an aggressor’s weapon is pointed, at the defender above the level of the defender’s sternum, the crane’s deflecting block must be inverted and executed by the hand opposite the aggressor’s  weapon-bearing hand,  in the form of a willow hand block.  This block moves in from the outside and drives the defender’s weapon-bearing arm over to the attacker’s center line.   The intercepting/catching fist is then the forward hand which catches the aggressor’s weapon-bearing arm just behind the elbow and drives it upward and across the aggressor’s body at eye level.  This rotates the aggressor’s body in the direction it would naturally turn—but well beyond where it was intended to go.  This neutralizes the ability of the opposite arm to enter the conflict and strike forcefully. 

 

     But more important, by forcing the weapon-bearing arm across the aggressor’s face, it frees the hand performing the willow hand block to drop down out of sight, and then rise up forcefully, unseen,  close to the aggressor’s chest, and  deliver a stunning iron palm blow.  So, once again, the crane’s trapping and striking of a secured target is accomplished—upward against the aggressor’s body weight instead of downward against the ground. 

 

     My basic problem in driving an aggressor to the ground is the extreme danger one always faces from bystanders.  The crane, I would note, sacrifices none of its mobility and tactical security with a ground strike because of its flexible neck and long beak—in a word, it uses the ground, without ever having to go there.

 

     The variations on these defenses needed to handle attacks from various angles as well as the translations needed to apply the crane’s deflecting and trapping blocks to incoming kicks is best demonstrated in a brief video which I am preparing. 

 

     The same can be said of the eagle’s circling attack, except that a good grasp on the principles can be had by visualizing an overhead sword strike caught by the forward hand of an Aikido master.  He too rides the sword’s path with his hand while rotating out of the sword’s path.  His technique typically ends in a throw.  The Eagle/Crane technique can end in a throw but also has a place for a disabling attack on the elbow of the sword bearing hand—with other follow-up strikes if needed.  The Eagle/Crane system makes a point of stopping an attacker in ways that the defender has an ample opportunity to escape.  Too often, a person can recover from a throw quickly enough to require further action.

 

     As one can see, the Eagle/Crane Defense system is primarily focused on dealing with defenses against the use of strikes or weapons of some kind.  To meet the needs of personal self-defense in general, a number of other techniques are added to the STOP training.  These additions include CAPE techniques designed for the mental health community to enable persons in that field to deal with verbal and physical aggression without injuring or being injured by the patients—which is appropriate for anyone dealing with a person has a duty to protect.  Eagle/Crane plays an important role in dealing with situations that involve weapons and can be modified to progress from deflecting blocks to restraints instead of counterstrikes.  The final component of the STOP system is a selection of various contemporary preemptive strikes and escape techniques using the releases and joint locks common to Chin Na.

 

     So my thanks go out to the nameless animal masters I had the privilege of observing defending their nests.  But equally vital was Dr. Wong’s training back in the early 70’s that prepared my mind to respect, and in time, to understand and translate the wisdom of these masters of survival into human terms.