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I know there are different styles and schools. I visited a school last week and it was all Tai Chi like training for spirituality / health and wasn’t martial focused.
Is there a style that’s martial focused? Thanks!
Training approach is probably more important than style. By that, I mean that style differences can matter, but two schools could teach the same style and get very different results.I know there are different styles and schools. I visited a school last week and it was all Tai Chi like training for spirituality / health and wasn’t martial focused.
Is there a style that’s martial focused? Thanks!
Training approach is probably more important than style. By that, I mean that style differences can matter, but two schools could teach the same style and get very different results.
I assume you're talking about physical defense (what happens once an attack is imminent, rather than what avoids attacks). For that, decide what you want to be able to defend against, and make sure what you study (single style or collection of them) covers it, in principle.
There are folks who will say competition arts/training isn't good for self-defense. I'm not one of them, though there is some problem with transferring competition skills to a self-defense context. There are other folks who will say competition is a necessary tool for self-defense training. I'm also not one of them, though it can be a useful tool.
I believe self-defense training needs intensity and committed resistance from your partners. The higher their skills at attacking, the better you'll get as you learn to stop them. The closer your drills are to what you're preparing to defend, the better your skills will convert to defending against that.
Personally, I'm a proponent of either cross-training or working out/sparring with folks from other styles (and not the same school). This helps reduce the chance of you getting a false sense of your ability, based on the way folks in your training hall/gym/dojo/dojang move.
IMO, self-defense needs both strikes and grappling (both standing and ground) to be complete, but being really good at either will reduce the risk presented by not having the other.
Sounds like youre looking for Krav MagaI know there are different styles and schools. I visited a school last week and it was all Tai Chi like training for spirituality / health and wasn’t martial focused.
Is there a style that’s martial focused? Thanks!
The same still holds true, though it's a bit easier to identify some styles of Aikido that are more likely to be more SD-oriented. Shioda's Yoshinkan and Tomiki's Shotokan branches are both likely examples within Ueshiba's art. In a related art/style (with less Ki focus), Nihon Goshin Aikido has a lot of similarities to Shioda's offshoot of Ueshiba's art.When I said I visited a school and about different styles I’m referring to Aikido not MA in general.
The same still holds true, though it's a bit easier to identify some styles of Aikido that are more likely to be more SD-oriented. Shioda's Yoshinkan and Tomiki's Shotokan branches are both likely examples within Ueshiba's art. In a related art/style (with less Ki focus), Nihon Goshin Aikido has a lot of similarities to Shioda's offshoot of Ueshiba's art.
Any style so long as you take what you learn and go to people and places that will let you fight them so that you can test and broaden your application skills.
Thanks! I was always interested in Aikido but was always put off by the general ‘wishy washy’ demonstrations of the techniques demonstrated. Then I came across the Rogue Warriors YouTube channel and was like ‘wow’.
In general, the answer is any style you train hard realistically with resistance that involves copious amounts of alive non cooperative sparring. There are probably aikido schools that do this, but I don't imagine they are in the majority.I know there are different styles and schools. I visited a school last week and it was all Tai Chi like training for spirituality / health and wasn’t martial focused.
Is there a style that’s martial focused? Thanks!
Yes, that's a reasonable generalization of most Aikido schools I've seen. There are exceptions, but they are just that, in my experience.Thanks. Is it a general consensus that most Aikido dojos don’t promote more of a realistic approach where you can test and broaden applications? Reason I ask is because I visited 3 Aikido dojos and all 3 are wishy washy non realistic attacks. When I watched Rogue Warrior vids they are more realistic like someone pushing you hard.
Thanks. Is it a general consensus that most Aikido dojos don’t promote more of a realistic approach where you can test and broaden applications? Reason I ask is because I visited 3 Aikido dojos and all 3 are wishy washy non realistic attacks.
The training culture of the school is a more important factor than the style itself. Find a school that trains with realistic energy, that's the hard part.I know there are different styles and schools. I visited a school last week and it was all Tai Chi like training for spirituality / health and wasn’t martial focused.
Is there a style that’s martial focused? Thanks!
The training culture of the school is a more important factor than the style itself. Find a school that trains with realistic energy, that's the hard part.
From a personal standpoint, I think styles that have well defined concepts that shape their techniques are the best styles to go with. Styles that shape the way you think and react to threats around you are more beneficial in the long run.