desperado wrote:long drive
I think all marshall arts are lowered a little bit in their sport form because it becomes more about scoring the point than what would actually win a real fight.
CDLviking wrote:I think all marshall arts are lowered a little bit in their sport form because it becomes more about scoring the point than what would actually win a real fight.
I know you weren't exactly thinking about it when you posted but I'll say Aikido is not a sport.
Yojimbo wrote:I know you weren't exactly thinking about it when you posted but I'll say Aikido is not a sport.]
i totally agree! i do however take karate, shaolin kempo to be exact. i go to ussd. they have tornaments like all the time. it is fun though, but my instructor gets way to competative. i'm a really mellow person so i don't really get all hyped up about it. i don't like being in front or in big groups. it scares me. anywho, yah i've been in this for like a lil over two years and i've already gotten to green with brown stipe. now in mine we have 22 belts so i'm 4 belts away from black and 14 away from tenth degree black belt. i've heard it takes a long time to get to black though.Yojimbo wrote:One of the biggest reasons why I like Aikido is the philosophy behind it. The first principle of Aikido is "Victory Over Self". I practice Aikido first and foremost for self improvement. The second is "Correct Victory" which means to win the correct movement and to defeat but not injure your opponet if possible. The third is "Victory Over the Speed of Light" which means that Aikido techniques must be executed with speed. When one learns the movements then they may work on fast and efficient execution.
Another big reason of why Aikido differs so much from other arts is in the execution of moves. Why brace for an attack when you can move out of the way? Why break your attacker's joints and deliberately cause him injury to that degree if it's not neccesary? One of the the senior student's at my club used to do brazilian jiujitsu for 6 years. He described a single move from a wrist grab that would typically leave a person with a couple broken bones and a bruised groin area... Why do that when you can use his momentum against him, get him off balance, and bend his joints the way they naturally bend causing as little harm as possible, but at the same time taking him down? Why is energy wasted and people hurt when they don't have to be? That's not to say that you can't be more martial in Aikido, as I explained earler it does derive from other traditional Japanese martial arts. But while that extreme force is present and availible if absolutely neccesary, it is always used as a last resort.
SpikeSpiegel306 wrote:Do Americans enjoy martial arts then? I have never really pictured them as martial artists, but I guess thats just a misconception.
Ronin of Kirai wrote:Just like CDL said it depend on the person like with everything else.
..Your a ninjutsu black Belt...In order to aquire that rank do you not have to vist Soke Hatsumi himself...if you have I envy you quite I bit...
I think it would be good If we posted why we like the martial arts? (then again perhaps everyone already has..lol.
....Ya know I dont think its really the art that interset me at first but rather the martial artist himself..Theres something to admire about someone who is devoted to a art form..Now that I'm attracted to the man or woman its then when I want to learn about there art and see exactly why they devote themselves to it.
I love to leran Kenjutsu..maybe even a bit more and ninjutsu..although I like to take both..It's hard for me to get into the training.
I suppose I'm just a side ine man....Instead of studing the art directly I study its principles and history.
Beside I'm not in good enough shape. lol
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