tellner
Senior Master
One could say with more justice that a typical five year program to black belt is a watered down self defense course.
You can turn someone into a ring-ready Thai boxer in a year and a half. He will go through most striking art black belts with three or four times the years. That would argue that it's the "traditional" martial arts which are watered down. Something must be diluting the combative efficiency of the TMA and acting as filler if it takes so much longer to get to the point where you can fight effectively.
The TMABB will argue "But once you get past that learning curve you get so much further. Our ten and twenty year veterans move like magic."
Maybe. Usually not. And even if it is true, so what? Someone who is interested in self defense wants useful skills in a realistic time frame, not belts and certificates and the fortune cookie philosophy that infests most martial arts schools. For someone with a life outside the dojo it's generally about the goal, not the journey, and if he or she can achieve that goal wasting less valuable time, so much the better. On the other hand, if you want an engrossing hobby and martial arts fills that void, then by all means do TMA. But I bet there will be other parts of your life where you'll go for what gives you what you want, not what enthusiasts say you should appreciate.
I don't care about the Sacrality of the Zen of Motorcycle Maintenance. I just want the damned thing to run.
You can turn someone into a ring-ready Thai boxer in a year and a half. He will go through most striking art black belts with three or four times the years. That would argue that it's the "traditional" martial arts which are watered down. Something must be diluting the combative efficiency of the TMA and acting as filler if it takes so much longer to get to the point where you can fight effectively.
The TMABB will argue "But once you get past that learning curve you get so much further. Our ten and twenty year veterans move like magic."
Maybe. Usually not. And even if it is true, so what? Someone who is interested in self defense wants useful skills in a realistic time frame, not belts and certificates and the fortune cookie philosophy that infests most martial arts schools. For someone with a life outside the dojo it's generally about the goal, not the journey, and if he or she can achieve that goal wasting less valuable time, so much the better. On the other hand, if you want an engrossing hobby and martial arts fills that void, then by all means do TMA. But I bet there will be other parts of your life where you'll go for what gives you what you want, not what enthusiasts say you should appreciate.
I don't care about the Sacrality of the Zen of Motorcycle Maintenance. I just want the damned thing to run.