whats your favorite martial art and why?
Yes! The "Martial Art" is my favorite. (How's that for an answer?)
Specifically, "complete and effective Martial Art training." Why confuse the issue with giving it a
name which might lead some to believe it is something it is not? Not all teachers teach the same quality, quantity, and effectiveness of the "Art," even if they go by the same name.
Interesting that this question is posed on the "Korean Martial Art" forum rather than the "General Martial Art" forum. What would you mostly expect to hear as the favorites here, but "Korean Martial Art" under various names (with some exceptions - - jason *cough-cough* smith *cough-cough*):ultracool
Regardless of what name we attach to our training, or from what country it originates, all the ladles are dipped from the same ocean. Geographically, the ocean might have a different name, but it is all the same water. Is your water pure or polluted? Is your cup empty, half empty, half full, full, or overflowing? Do you make good use of the water in your cup to hydrate your body, cleanse your soul, and teach others, or do you squander it?
Does your training go beyond the "combat" and into the philosophy of life, nature, and moral character, or are you just a "warrior" who thinks the ability to fight is enough? Is your self defense training complete, and effective, or are you missing something?
KyukTooKi - it has just about everything.
Kicks, punches, elbows, knees, clinch, takedowns, throws, locks, chokes, etc, etc.
This is a good description (for the physical self defense aspect), and I would say the same thing about my training, yet we don't call ours "KyukTooKi." The chosen name I use is "Taekwondo," but not in the limited sense of the one, or two dimensional "Tae - Kwon - Do" School down the road. I might just as well call what all of us genuine Martial Artists do, "Martial Art - the defender's way of life."
CM D.J. Eisenhart