What made me drop out of DKI wasn't so much the no-touch junk, as my personal experiences I and others with the man.
What totally dropped me was when a blue-belt friend of mine who was DKI had gone to a seminar with Dillman and the ensuing "what the ****?" that happend afterwards.
The fellow had a sensei who was a higher-up amongst Dillman people and thus was able to have dinner with Dillman and the usual post-seminar group. After all was over and everyone was leaving, predictably the BB's took their turns saying goodbye to everyone including Dillman. But, when it was my blue-belt friend's turn to say goodbye to Dillman the man shrugged my friend off. It wasn't like he came up behind him or something. He walked up to Dillman with his hand out for a handshake and Dillman just pulled back and said "No, no, it's okay. really." before my friend could so much as try to reply/inquire. Worse yet, most of the BB's around him and his sensei who got him in to be able to hang out with "master" had the same look on their faces equal to "Just listen to him about that."
You pay 80 + $ to a guy and spend your afternoon/evening at hsi seminar and he won't even shake your hand for a moment afterwards, my friend said with a bit of a grumble as he recounted the story to me.
Yikes, I'd say.
What sucks indeed to me, is that like others mentioend not ALL of the DKI stuff was crock and bull. I still look back on much of my old Kyusho material for grappling/trapping work and have still found it to work pretty well.
Cryin' shame everyone had to get all crazy about teh "Chi powerz". I mean, my old sensei used to be able to do something INTERESTING things that I and others felt, but too bad we never got to learn what it was.
Eh. JKD/FMA serves me well, so no major loss I guess.
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"Success is a process, not a destination. Have faith in your ability."~Bruce Lee