sammy3170 said:
I've read a very interesting book recently which bought up something I hadn't thought of. Robert W Smiths Martial Musings talks a little about Bruce Lee and the point he makes that is most interesting to me is that Bruce Lee started with Yip Man at around 13 years of age and left for America around 18 years of age. That doesn't give him a great deal of time training in the martial arts. Now I'm not saying he couldn't fight because I know he had a lot of street fights but I know guys who can fight and have never done martial arts. What accreditation did he have and why is he held in such high esteem. Is it because of the movies or is it because of something else? I've trained in the martial arts under an instructor for longer than he did. What makes a master? I'm just asking the question for interests sake. I've recently left my school because my 'master' was not such a master after all.
Anyway have a super day guys.
Cheers
Sammy
Bruce Lee Blah Blah Blah ad nauseum!!
Mate, he was a thug. He was egotistical. He was not a Martial Arts Master!!
He was apparently a good fighter, we'll have to take his word for that, as there is no tangible proof.
If Chucks description of him makes him a master,
that If Bruce wasnt training in Martial Arts he was thinking about Martial Arts from the time he got up in the morning till the time he went to bed.
, then I and probably half the guys who post on this BB are masters too.
I find it hard to appreciate a guy, who did possess some incredible fighting skills(like someone we used to know), that when teaching a newbie Chi Sao, became so insensed when the newbie actually got one in on him, that he beat the poor sod so bad he couldn't even walk out of the kwoon unassisted.
Definately not the action of a Master
He was not the first to think like he did, he was not the first to talk like he did. It was just that he could yell louder, and push harder against the "norm" than anyone else had tried before him.
If he was the first, then Uechi would never have developed the system of martial arts based on Pangai-noon, that we now know as Uechi Ryu. Miyagi would never have developed Goju Ryu.
They would have just learnt and taught the systems as they had been taught to them.
He wanted to be a movie star, and that's exactly what he was. He was incredibly fast, and incredibly focused. He could develop power in such a way, that most of us can only dream of. When all is said and done, as a
MARTIAL ARTIST he was a great actor. As a
MARTIAL ARTS MASTER he was severly lacking.
--Dave