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"Things changed 200 or 300 years ago. You don't want to take a cane to a gunfight, so the cane became a crutch and it's been visualized as that for the last couple hundred years," Shuey said. "Today when you carry a cane, they think you're a gimp." Vic Cushing, 68, of Roaring Brook, Pa., has twice used a cane to defend himself. Once, in London, he said he simply pushed his cane into the chest of the aggressive man approaching him. Another time, in New York, he hit his potential mugger, who then hobbled away. "I just smacked his legs a bunch of times and his legs gave out," he said. Cushing has studied hapkido and teaches self-defense himself. For others who are less agile, some question whether some aspects of Cane-Fu might be too complex. John Perkins, who authored "Attack Proof" and teaches self-defense classes, says for fairly fit seniors, he would encourage a cane more than any other method, but emphasizes jabs and strikes over using the crook of the cane. Shuey included using the cane's crook in his class. "If you're a frail person and you're trying to hook somebody," he said, "it's great in the classroom, not on the street." Shuey began learning cane fighting in the early 1980s while practicing hapkido. He started developing a program solely based on the moves in 1995 and came out with his first instructional tapes in 1999. Most seniors who take such classes never have to use the methods, but Shuey says there are plenty of examples where they have. Perhaps the greatest benefit of cane self-defense, he says, is that a cane can be brought anywhere, including airports, without raising an eyebrow. Most of the day's participants -- all but two of them are men -- don't use a cane regularly, but after seeing its defensive potential, at least a few were considering it. "You just don't realize how much pain you could put on somebody really quick," said 61-year-old Ed Smoak of Pinellas Park. "Nobody thinks of a cane as being any kind of an impressive weapon but even a person like me
-- I'm disabled, like I said I don't move real well -- and even me, I could do this."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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