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Ric Flair said:Alright, and how do you deal with it on a day to day basis???
Ric Flair said:As a Wing Chun artist, do you find it very uncomfortable to have so many people within your personal space in places like say a crowded bus/train???
Ric Flair said:Wing Chun was created so we can often adapt to such close contact within reach of other people however, i'm pretty sure this can be challenging for people like us...
Ric Flair said:accelerated heartbeat, problems breathing deeply or regularly, tightening of body, stiffness and pointed shoulders, etc etc.
I would have to agree.Flying Crane said:I would think that any closeness phobias someone might have wouldn't be a result of training in a system like wing chun, or any other martial system for that matter. If you have closeness phobias, I bet it stems from something else.
I don't think this is caused by martial arts ... and I'm a bit surprised at this response.If your martial art causes you mental illness..change arts?!?
Ric Flair said:Any W.C artist here suffer from crowd anxiety or fear of closed spaces???
How about the feeling of being trapped on a crowded bus or subway. What symptoms do you guys feel and how do you deal with such dreadful experiences???
shesulsa said:I don't think this is caused by martial arts ... and I'm a bit surprised at this response.![]()
Jonathan Randall said:I have a phobia about driving in the mountains, over high bridges and on levee roads
arnisador said:I read the original poster's posts and their presence here in the Wing Chun forum to mean that because of Wing Chun's emphasis on close-in fighting and protecting one's contained space, that it makes a Wing Chun player especially nervous to have people too close (within the space they are trained to protect); e.g., "As a Wing Chun artist, do you find it very uncomfortable to have so many people within your personal space" rather than "As a person with claustrophobia/agoraphobia, do you find it very uncomfortable to have so many people within your personal space" which might indicate a focus on a disease rather than training. If the suggestion is that Wing Chun training may create this type of reaction in a practitioner, then I would say the training is, on balance, dysfunctional; if that is not the suggestion, then I do not think I follow the thrust of the posts.
Jonathan Randall said:Then I share your confusion. Perhaps the Wing Chun training is exacerbating an already present condition?