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Jeff “Stickman” Finder was first introduced to martial arts as a child in the late 1950’s by his father and grandfather, who learned boxing skills in Chicago. In the early ‘60’s his older brother introduced him to combative self defense skills that were taught at a military academy. In 1964, someone anonymously left him a copy of Jay Gluck’s now classic book “Zen Combat”, which opened his interest to many forms of martial arts, including Aikido and ninjutsu. In 1966, at the age of 11, Jeff had the opportunity to travel for several months in the Far East. There he was exposed to the culture and martial arts of Japan, China, the Philippines and Thailand. Though he didn’t begin formal training in the arts until graduating from UC Berkeley (’77) with a BA in History (Asian focus), through his teen years he worked out with friends who did Taekwondo, Judo, and Chinese kung-fu. In college he took Aikido classes at Cal under Shiohira-sensei (Ki Society) and Kajukenbo with Don Roelle, who was at that time a black belt candidate under master Al Reyes Sr.
In 1977 Jeff began his formal martial arts career,
enrolling in Bok-Fu Kenpo in Berkeley, California. He did most of his training under Sifu Al Thomas, earning a black
belt in this system through the School of the White Tiger. This was a good foundation in physical
training. Forms, sparring and bag work
were practiced daily. This was an “old
style” school, with blood-stained mats, holes in the walls and duct tape on the
heavy bags. At one time there were 135
students; in one day, Sifu Thomas cut 100 and put the rest on probation. A month later there were 6 left; two eventually
received black belts (Marc Sabin being
the other one). During the next 12
years this would be his primary art, but he would also cross train to varying
degrees in Aikido, Gracie Jujitsu (with Cesar and Halph Gracie), May Thai, Silat,
Tai Chi Chuan, and later on Wing Chun through advanced instructors under GM
Chris Chan.
In 1979 Jeff met Bob Flores in Santa
Cruz, a native Filipino who had trained alongside Leo Gaje in Pekiti Tirsia in
their youth. This was Jeff’s
introduction to the Filipino martial arts (FMA). For several years the little bit he learned from Bob, plus Dan
Inosanto’s book “Filipino Martial Arts” were all he had to go on. Then, in 1985 while attending a Max Pallens
karate tournament in San Leandro, Jeff watched a demo of several different FMA
systems, including one by the Serrada Escrima Association of Stockton, under the
late grandmaster Angel Cabales, who was a living legend in the art. Jeff attended a 2 day seminar the following
weekend and became a student of the system.
Angel originally sent him to train under Anthony Davis, who lived 35
miles away. After a year of study there,
Jeff was finally accepted as a private student with GM Cabales. For the next 1-1/2 years he commuted to
Stockton weekly, a 150 mile round trip from Berkeley, to practice in Angel’s
living room, often with other more advanced students such as master Sultan
Uddin and soon-to-be master Wade Williams.
Often after a day of training, Jeff would accompany Angel to the Stockton
academy in the evening to work out with the students there. Jeff received his Advanced Certificate (#33)
on December 30, 1987, the same day Wade received his Master’s Certificate. Although he was not previously certified,
Jeff began teaching Serrada Escrima at the White Tiger in Oakland with
permission of GM Cabales. In February
of 1987, Angel did a seminar at White Tiger with several of his top students at
that time, including Sultan Uddin, Wade Williams, Carlito Bonjoc, David Mah, Anthony
Davis and others, to promote the school as the official Bay Area Cabales
Serrada academy under instructorship of Jeff Finder.
Another facet of Jeff’s training began
in early 1987 when he began studying Tai Chi Chuan under the late master John
K. Wong, founder of the Wu Shing Academy in Suisun, California. Jeff was originally attracted by John’s
ability to translate the relationship between hard and soft styles of martial
arts, but soon discovered much more. “Uncle
John”, as he was known to his students, started out under Kempo grandmaster
William “Thunderbolt” Chow in Hawaii.
There he befriended Adriano Emperado, who would become a co-founder and
head of the Kajukenbo system. John Wong
was the first mainland administrator for Kajukenbo, overseeing at one time
3,000 schools! Eventually he left the
politics behind to teach his grandfather’s system of Tai Chi. Besides the martial arts, John came from a
Kahuna family and was into healing and spirituality. Jeff had long been a student of the writings of Max Freedom Long about
the Hawaiian religion of Huna. John
became a mentor in this area, and much of this phase of study was devoted to
Applied Kinesiology for the body, and spiritual discussions to develop appreciation
for higher levels of consciousness. A practicing
meditator since the age of 18 (transcendental meditation, Aikido meditations,
guided visualization, etc), these years with John not only tied together
different aspects of martial arts but tied together the link between the physical
and psychic arts. Jeff eventually
earned a black belt in Chuan-fa through his studies here.
In 1988 Jeff participated in the 1st
U.S. National Escrima Championships in San Jose, run by Alfredo Bandolan. There he fought Arlan Sanford, who would be
one of the original Dog Brothers. From this
experience he was invited in 1989 to become a member of the 1st U.S.
National Escrima Team, under coaches Fred Degerberg, Alfredo Bandolan and
Richard Bustillo, which went to Cebu in the Philippines in August of 1989 for
the founding of WEKAF (World Escrima/Kali/Arnis Federation) and the 1st
World Championships for full-contact stick fighting. Jeff went to the finals in light-heavyweight, losing a split
decision (tournament officials gave him a 1st place trophy anyway,
after reviewing a referee’s scoring error).
The following week Jeff again took second place in a tournament in
Manila, again involving controversy that included death threats by RP military
personnel against the referee and members of foreign teams. In spite of the controversy, this was an
exciting and memorable trip.
It was after his return from the
Philippines that Jeff decided his future in the martial arts would be in
Escrima, and from that point forward this became his primary art. He began writing about his experiences in the
Philippines and his training under GM Cabales, first for the short-lived but
influential Escrima Review newsletter and then online for the Escrima Digest and
later the Escrima_Arnis
digest. It was also after this trip that he began experimenting with different
materials for sticks, seeking a stronger, longer lasting stick. He became the first to market synthetic
sticks to the public, and in 1998 he was inducted by GM Gaudiosa Ruby into the
U.S. Kali Association Hall of Fame for his contributions to the art.
At this time (late 2001) Jeff Finder
has been teaching students for 18 yearsand is now teaching just a few students
privately or in small groups. In 2000
he returned to graduate school and is currently studying in a counseling
program for somatic psychology. He is
also pursuing interests in neurolinguistic programming (NLP) and hypnotherapy,
both of which are modern reinterpretations of subjects he first learned through
martial arts. NLP is a powerful tool
for trauma release, and is based on our modalities of accessing consciousness
(visual, auditory, tactile). These were
understood by the ninjas (according to writings by Ashida Kim) who traced the
lineage through the Chinese back to ancient yogic mudras. Hypnotherapy closely related to guided
visualization and is often combined with NLP as a powerful tool for
reprogramming the subconscious. Jeff’s
goal is to bring together these different elements in a program he has entitled
SEPAT – Self Empowerment Practice
and Theory, which embodies physical techniques for health, self-defense and
psychological growth and well-being.
10/30/01