
“If you follow the classical pattern, you are understanding the routine, the tradition, the shadow. You are not understanding yourself” – Bruce Lee
I’ve learned from both traditional and non-traditional methods, but I no longer do innumerable forms, horse stance training, or countless arts and drills like Sombrada, Chi Sao, and Hubud. While these methods have their merits, they don’t always translate to effective fighting and can become unnecessary overhead. They make you proficient in routines but don’t necessarily teach you how to dominate opponents and win.
Imagine a fighter pilot following rigid instructions in a fixed sequence—it wouldn’t work. Dogfighting demands adaptability, split-second decisions, and real-time strategy, just like sparring and fighting in martial arts. The same applies to life—if you’re overemphasizing rigid patterns and limited contexts, you won’t be ready to adapt and overcome when it matters most. Much less little to no strategy and just emphasizing flashy routines.
Traditional methods often overwhelm you with too much information, leading to confusion and inefficiency. Instead, RAT Synthesis focuses on 40 key techniques and a simple, comprehensive, and adaptable strategy—one that is dynamic, aligned with real-world combat, and covers all ranges of engagement, integrating proactive aggression as defense and a relentless offensive approach. We also target vital points and break the rules of dojo sparring and MMA ring fighting.
As Bruce Lee famously said, ‘Move like water, be still like a mirror, respond like an echo.’ That means having a relationship with an opponent that is not fixed or in a limited context. This philosophy captures the essence of RAT Synthesis.
I believe in getting in the water and swimming—dominating with strategies and tactics that actually work. This includes sparring drills that gradually expand in context until they evolve into full sparring. We also isolate to develop specific skills or techniques.
At RAT Synthesis, we train this way. We assign a student or teacher to play the ‘bad guy,’ using specific behaviors or techniques while the ‘good guy’ learns to defend or attack and overcome obstacles to achieve victory.
This method not only sharpens real-world application but also helps eliminate egotism where the ‘bad guy’ then starts going outside the drill, as one side is predetermined to lose.
Conclusion: The Path to True Mastery
Mastery isn’t about memorizing routines—it’s about embodying skill, strategy, and adaptability. Forms, endless arts and drills, and rigid traditions may build discipline, but they don’t guarantee victory in real combat or life’s challenges. True mastery comes from immersion, from stepping into the chaos, adapting in real time, and refining what actually works.
At RAT Synthesis, we break free from limitations and embrace the flow of real combat. We train to dominate through strategy, proactive defense, relentless offense, and the ability to adjust under pressure. Just as a fighter pilot doesn’t rely on static instructions but on instinct, intelligence, and skill, we cultivate the same approach in combat and life.
The choice is simple: overemphasize art and rigid traditions and hope they hold up—or evolve, adapt, and master the art of winning. The battlefield—whether in a fight or in life—favors those who can think, move, and strike with precision.
Be water. Be relentless. Be unstoppable. Win.




