now disabled
Master Black Belt
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2018
- Messages
- 1,443
- Reaction score
- 200
Where the heck were you training that this was a regimen for a 6 year old?
I think like some lineages there is ummm embellishment going on lol
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Where the heck were you training that this was a regimen for a 6 year old?
here is the problem with this statement; depending on local laws anything and everything can be deemed illegal. a common pen would be considered illegal if you stuck it in someones eye. the "five finger exploding heart technique" can be perfectly legal,,,it all depends on the context. any martial art move can be illegal or legal depending on context, not the technique itself.
im still curious as to what styles you see as anything more then civilian self defense and sport.
there are plenty of martial arts that do have a link to military applications but they are not what people usually think and are often obscure.
quickly off the top of my head ,military links:
the hallmark of a military combative art is that it begins and ends with weapons and unarmed is only a side note to the core of the art. this puts a large portion of Asian arts as civilian variants of competitive sport and self defense.
- Muay (Thai) boran
- Krav maga
- Filipino Pekiti -Kali
- Indonesian Pencak- Silat
- American MACP and MACMAP (basically BJJ)
- Japanese Koryu arts
- Pankration was a Greek military PT activity but is now extinct.
What of traditional training do you suppose is illegal?
Where the heck were you training that this was a regimen for a 6 year old?
Hello, you can check my reply to Kempodisciple to get further insight. I did not embellish my response.I think like some lineages there is ummm embellishment going on lol
Please check my first post here Self introduction & several aspects of street fighting, and my opinion on MA in such scenarios. I go into detail on traditional training I believe this may help to clear any misunderstanding.What of traditional training do you suppose is illegal?
I could teach all day every day, with full-contact sparring and high-risk techniques without breaking any laws or running afoul of any regulatory institutions (there really aren't any to regulate me, beyond my legal liability in court). It probably wouldn't be a good idea, but I can't think of where there'd be anything illegal in it.Hello gpseymour! Thanks for responding. What I would regard as illegal, training wise, are first and foremost the time spent.
Now a days classes range from 90 min to 30 min each, back in the day it was a full day commitment, not that they trained MA all day but had a very well rounded education that took several hours every day, not to mention that time slots were very strict, this would keep many kids out of school and last time I checked that is penalized, also for adults their jobs are crucial so skipping on your job is a no go. Times have changed and that is good, but obtaining a high degree of skill requires a lot of time and now a days that time is predestined for other activities.
MA are high risk activities, training in the most traditional way possible comes with a higher chance of injury or worse, exerting your body comes with risks. There are many regulatory institutions that check for safe environments and have the power to punish your practice. in many MA generating micro fractures is part of the training if by some chance a practitioner with MF acquired in the Dojo injured himself doing something else he is likely to sue, thus restricting what is a sensei can teach without getting sued. Likewise there are are many drills for conditioning that elevate the level of risk and insurance companies will rocket your prime.
Thinking about it calling them Illegal is not accurate, maybe prompt to legal issues may be more spot on.
Waiting for your reply.
I could teach all day every day, with full-contact sparring and high-risk techniques without breaking any laws or running afoul of any regulatory institutions (there really aren't any to regulate me, beyond my legal liability in court). It probably wouldn't be a good idea, but I can't think of where there'd be anything illegal in it.
If you meant that modern life - and the expectations of modern students - make parts of traditional training inadvisable or inaccessible, I'd agree with that.
In the US, there's not a regulatory body for MA schools. There might be one for fitness centers, but I'm not aware of it (and I've taught at a fitness center). There is no central regulatory body for sports - most are regulated by the organizing association of the sport, and there's not one for martial arts. Even teaching kids, there are no additional regulations - just the normal laws regarding child endangerment, etc. I know in countries like the UK there are specific regulations dealing with kids' programs and they include kids' MA programs - that's not the case in the US. The closest we'd come is if a MA school is part of a MA organization, that organization has some - very little - ability to regulate the school. Basically, even those groups can't usually do more than expel the school from the organization.Hey gpseymour! I'm starting to think that I'm not communicating my opinions correctly. You may be surprised but my favorite part of training is doing forms. While sparring of any kind and high risk techniques have their upsides, they are not the main focus of any MA, combat alone isn't the main focus, MA are about self growth our journey is towards that end, as I have established I'm a peaceful guy.
First of all just as you say modern life makes parts of traditional training inadvisable and inaccessible, on that we can agree. At the end of my last reply I corrected myself that calling the illegal is a stretch, but are prompt to causing legal issues. I believe that you teach at North Carolina, U.S.A. you know how strict law is in the U.S. and that law suits are more common than in other parts of the world. Stating that I'll like to give an example to clear any miscommunication I may have caused and properly land my argument:
I'll speak from experience. One of the drills that I do constantly is body conditioning, Iron bone, weight lifting, and isometrics for the tendons are a few examples. These drills consist on causing micro damage to the body and giving the body time to rest to recover from such injuries, after many years of conditioning your bones, muscles, and tendons become denser thus more resilient, they allow you to strike with more power, sustain power-full blows with less damage, increase your threshold of pain, etc. This conditioning while it doesn't increase your size does increase your mass, you look almost the same but are heavier, denser.
There is a price to pay you are indeed damaging your body to give it a chance to recuperate and become stronger, if done properly there should not be any problems, but a tiny mistake can cripple a person, loss of mobility, dislocation of joints, tearing muscles, bone fracture, among other injuries do happen. I do said training because I want to and am aware of the risks, also I have my training grounds are registered as my private property, just a piece of land no need for an audit of any kind. Should these drills be practiced in a school registered as such and a student injures himself, regardless of the cause, their parents or themselves may look to sue the school, it will be worse if you work with children, every commercial activity in the world has a regulator in the government for sporting facilities I'm betting money there is one. Should injury occur this government institutions can penalize said school.
Another one drill is standing on two poles and executing a number of movements it is great for balance and developing proper biomechanics. While doing this it is easy to slip and roll your ankle, you may also hit your head really hard. Many practitioners, and parents will not like that and will look forward that the school faces legal consequences.
These kind of training may not be illegal but as there is a risk of injury there is a risk of law suit. Thus I believe that many schools opt to take this part of the training as it may have legal consequences. Gpseymour you may be capable enough to hold riskier training in a safe manner, and still you choose not to do so. I believe that be can accept that "riskier" drills do work and help you improve a great deal, these are not for show. There are many drills like the ones I talked about, they work, but hold a higher risk. These drills will help practitioners develop a great deal but the risks involved may be more than what the teacher is willing to risk. At the end of the day it is a compromise.
Waiting for your reply.
i hope everyone realizes this thread had degraded into the world of unicorns and rainbow colored chi balls shooting out of the rear end.
so just in case anyone ever wanted to know, i began my training when i was 8 years old and i used to spend a lot of time out in the woods. i met this bigfoot named Charlie and he taught me the warrior traditions of the bigfoot. he only did this because, to his knowledge he was the last of his species. most of the bigfoot species was wiped out during the Kjadoree war between the bigfoot and neanderthal. anyways i am the only known keeper of the tradition.
In the US, there's not a regulatory body for MA schools. There might be one for fitness centers, but I'm not aware of it (and I've taught at a fitness center). There is no central regulatory body for sports - most are regulated by the organizing association of the sport, and there's not one for martial arts. Even teaching kids, there are no additional regulations - just the normal laws regarding child endangerment, etc. I know in countries like the UK there are specific regulations dealing with kids' programs and they include kids' MA programs - that's not the case in the US. The closest we'd come is if a MA school is part of a MA organization, that organization has some - very little - ability to regulate the school. Basically, even those groups can't usually do more than expel the school from the organization.
My first post here was about how MA are not what they used to be, while I believe it to be true it did a poor job on answering the threats question. The problem with "traditional" martial arts.
My answer is that there is no problem with TMA. MA were created many years ago and cover a number of aspects, their goal was to improve the life of practitioners and make a positive change in peoples lives. I believe that the original goal holds true to this day.
.