| Added for You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Recreation and Sports > Martial Arts > Is Karate Any Use as an Effective Self Defense System? |
|
Added for You - Is Karate Any Use as an Effective Self Defense System?
Student Loan Debt Solutions yer for self gain or promoting your school.The figures for students opting for loans are only going higher as each year passes by. Not only that; with the escalation in the cost of tuitions, the amount borrowed is also at an all-time high. But despite that, the list of student defaulters is low. This is due to the fact that today there are many solutions for student indebtedness and students are better-informed of how to implement these solutions.The wisest solution is that of loan consolidation. A student It's about taking on particular training philosophies that put you where you need to be. Kata has its place along with basics, pad work, flow drills, pressure points, push hands, sparring, grappling, bunkai and intensity training. MMA is simply a distilled form of pressure testing. Any technique within MMA can be found within karate or any other traditional style. What we need to do is listen to the MMA people, learn from them, take their fighting skills and put them back into our karate. There is nothing r Tune Into The New World Of Internet Talk Radio The debate as to whether karate is effective on the streets continues to this very day and with current interest in mixed martial arts training it seems that karate is on the losing side. The no camp are winning this one, and to a certain extent I have to agree with them.Once upon a time, people of all ages gathered by the radio to hear the latest news, opinions, humor, and music from far away. All people knew was anything worth knowing was happening somewhere on the radio, and you could travel around the world just by turning your dial. Traditionally, audio programs have been available via dedicated terrestrial networks broadcasting to radio receivers. Typically, they have operated on AM and FM terrestrial platforms. But radio fell on ha The problem with a lot of karate is the way in which it is trained. If you want to be able to get through a live situation in one piece you have to train for it. Marching about doing your kata and inventing clever bunkai, for instance, simply won't work. Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) as promoted by such events as Pride and UFC are potentially the closest thing you can get to a live fight without getting seriously hurt. So if we are to be effective on the street it makes sense to switch training and take up MMA. But that is not necessarily the case. Think about MMA as a philosophy of combat and a training framework for high pressure survival situations, rather than a self contained style or system. MMA represents a certain way of doing things which means that it can fit nicely into any other training system. Karate is a catalog of movement - the application of that movement, in order to be street effective, has to be trained in a realistic manner. The concepts and philosophies of MMA provides that mental and physical stimulus. We can keep our kata and bunkai, basics, kumite and all the other exercises and traditions that define karate. What we need to do is look at how to implement them. You have to develop skill, sensitivity, balance, power and reflex and good karate should already provide the means to achieve these qualities. Pressure testing is important for students who require street effectiveness, either to satisfy themselves or because their line of work puts them there. But pressure testing is still just part of the bigger picture. MMA provides the framework for pressure testing. It's not about being trendy by bolting on a bit of submission wrestling onto your karate syllabus and neither is it about going with the crowd and pretending your karate is something else. I'm not advocating mix-and-match or using similarity between techniques and kata movements to justify putting MMA into karate. It's not about combining styles or pretending to be an MMA player for self gain or promoting your school. It's about taking on particular training philosophies that put you where you need to be. Kata has its place along with basics, pad work, flow drills, pressure points, push hands, sparring, grappling, bunkai and intensity training. MMA is simply a distilled form of pressure testing. Any technique within MMA can be found within karate or any other traditional style. What we need to do is listen to the MMA people, learn from them, take their fighting skills and put them back into our karate. There is nothing r Gym: The Best Self-Help Life Improvement Guide romoted by such events as Pride and UFC are potentially the closest thing you can get to a live fight without getting seriously hurt. So if we are to be effective on the street it makes sense to switch training and take up MMA. But that is not necessarily the case.Signing up for a gym is not just about weight loss or muscle building. Indeed they are the main priorities. Nonetheless there are many unknown yet unconscious bigger and better benefits from weight training.It changes my life. Hence I would like to share the 5 life changing life attributes from weight training. Anyone will gain even if you are a beginner in weight training as long as you mean business.Discipline is the big #1 attribute you cultivate when you Think about MMA as a philosophy of combat and a training framework for high pressure survival situations, rather than a self contained style or system. MMA represents a certain way of doing things which means that it can fit nicely into any other training system. Karate is a catalog of movement - the application of that movement, in order to be street effective, has to be trained in a realistic manner. The concepts and philosophies of MMA provides that mental and physical stimulus. We can keep our kata and bunkai, basics, kumite and all the other exercises and traditions that define karate. What we need to do is look at how to implement them. You have to develop skill, sensitivity, balance, power and reflex and good karate should already provide the means to achieve these qualities. Pressure testing is important for students who require street effectiveness, either to satisfy themselves or because their line of work puts them there. But pressure testing is still just part of the bigger picture. MMA provides the framework for pressure testing. It's not about being trendy by bolting on a bit of submission wrestling onto your karate syllabus and neither is it about going with the crowd and pretending your karate is something else. I'm not advocating mix-and-match or using similarity between techniques and kata movements to justify putting MMA into karate. It's not about combining styles or pretending to be an MMA player for self gain or promoting your school. It's about taking on particular training philosophies that put you where you need to be. Kata has its place along with basics, pad work, flow drills, pressure points, push hands, sparring, grappling, bunkai and intensity training. MMA is simply a distilled form of pressure testing. Any technique within MMA can be found within karate or any other traditional style. What we need to do is listen to the MMA people, learn from them, take their fighting skills and put them back into our karate. There is nothing r Religion Versus Science: The Truth the application of that movement, in order to be street effective, has to be trained in a realistic manner. The concepts and philosophies of MMA provides that mental and physical stimulus.I find myself amazed and appalled that such strong antipathy exists in this day and age between non-believes and believers--and between diverse groups of believers--that murder and injustice are perpetrated daily on innocent men, women and children.Whether Christian, Jew, Pagan, Muslim, Hindu, or any other believer or non-believer, we must know that hatred and intolerance are not God’s way, no matter how we may conceive the fact of creation: whether as an Old Testa We can keep our kata and bunkai, basics, kumite and all the other exercises and traditions that define karate. What we need to do is look at how to implement them. You have to develop skill, sensitivity, balance, power and reflex and good karate should already provide the means to achieve these qualities. Pressure testing is important for students who require street effectiveness, either to satisfy themselves or because their line of work puts them there. But pressure testing is still just part of the bigger picture. MMA provides the framework for pressure testing. It's not about being trendy by bolting on a bit of submission wrestling onto your karate syllabus and neither is it about going with the crowd and pretending your karate is something else. I'm not advocating mix-and-match or using similarity between techniques and kata movements to justify putting MMA into karate. It's not about combining styles or pretending to be an MMA player for self gain or promoting your school. It's about taking on particular training philosophies that put you where you need to be. Kata has its place along with basics, pad work, flow drills, pressure points, push hands, sparring, grappling, bunkai and intensity training. MMA is simply a distilled form of pressure testing. Any technique within MMA can be found within karate or any other traditional style. What we need to do is listen to the MMA people, learn from them, take their fighting skills and put them back into our karate. There is nothing r E-mail Ain't Easy s, either to satisfy themselves or because their line of work puts them there. But pressure testing is still just part of the bigger picture.Two recent studies indicate that neither B2C nor B2B marketers are using e-mail marketing effectively in spite of its inherent qualities. Forrester found 62 of 63 campaigns lacking and E-Mail Data Source found a boat load of issues with 355 retailers they studied. It looks like e-mail marketing is much easier said than done.Forrester created a 10 criteria methodology to score e-mail marketing programs from more than 60 companies in 6 categories: business services, MMA provides the framework for pressure testing. It's not about being trendy by bolting on a bit of submission wrestling onto your karate syllabus and neither is it about going with the crowd and pretending your karate is something else. I'm not advocating mix-and-match or using similarity between techniques and kata movements to justify putting MMA into karate. It's not about combining styles or pretending to be an MMA player for self gain or promoting your school. It's about taking on particular training philosophies that put you where you need to be. Kata has its place along with basics, pad work, flow drills, pressure points, push hands, sparring, grappling, bunkai and intensity training. MMA is simply a distilled form of pressure testing. Any technique within MMA can be found within karate or any other traditional style. What we need to do is listen to the MMA people, learn from them, take their fighting skills and put them back into our karate. There is nothing r Military Patches yer for self gain or promoting your school.Patches are structures that are worn on a uniform. Officially these structures are known as shoulder sleeve insignias. Patches are primarily of two types - unit patches and shoulder patches. Unit patches display the unit from which the personnel hails, while the shoulder patches, worn on the shoulder or sometimes on the sleeves, display the rank of the individuals.During the Second World War, the United States became a dominant world power. The new status demanded It's about taking on particular training philosophies that put you where you need to be. Kata has its place along with basics, pad work, flow drills, pressure points, push hands, sparring, grappling, bunkai and intensity training. MMA is simply a distilled form of pressure testing. Any technique within MMA can be found within karate or any other traditional style. What we need to do is listen to the MMA people, learn from them, take their fighting skills and put them back into our karate. There is nothing radical or new here. Karate is a holistic art encompassing health, personal development, physical training and self protection. How many schools foster bad habits that go against the grain of karate? Ballistic stretching, bullying, inflexible hierarchies, endless rules and regulations, lack of understanding and bad "self defense" should not exist in modern dojos. Old-style karate was a complete art and today we can encompass those values without taking a step backward, thanks to increased knowledge of sports science, psychology,combat training and so on. The sharing of knowledge is another important factor with the availability of instructors, DVDs, books, web sites and forums. There is no longer any excuse for anyone to teach bad karate. We have to go to where the good information can be found - and that includes MMA. To answer the question - Is karate street effective? - Yes, if you do it right.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:9 Reasons to Use Promotional Products Undereye Circles: Causes and Cures Why It So Difficult To Lose Weight, Is There Something Wrong With Me? Article 1
|