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dantheman

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White Belt

White Belt (1/10)

  1. And therein lies the biggest challange. So many karate schools and styles, 90% of which are family and mcdojos. But I am searching. Go find a Japanese cultural center if you could. Classes are generally dirt cheap. Generally taught by mid-high ranked Japanese instructors with very high standards. But be careful for what you ask for. The first time an instructor punches you in the face because he thinks that your blocks are weak, you may have 2nd thoughts. Damn, that is exactly what I am looking for. japanese, militant instructor with a dash of abusiveness. Thanks for the advise, I just did that. Found a cultural center for 50/month three days a week. Japanese instructors. Style is Shito which is close to shotokan from what I ready. Thanks a bunch hope he will kick my butt .
  2. And therein lies the biggest challange. So many karate schools and styles, 90% of which are family and mcdojos. But I am searching. Go find a Japanese cultural center if you could. Classes are generally dirt cheap. Generally taught by mid-high ranked Japanese instructors with very high standards. But be careful for what you ask for. The first time an instructor punches you in the face because he thinks that your blocks are weak, you may have 2nd thoughts. Damn, that is exactly what I am looking for. japanese, militant instructor with a dash of abusiveness.
  3. And therein lies the biggest challange. So many karate schools and styles, 90% of which are family and mcdojos. But I am searching.
  4. Wado is a Japanese Karate which was born out of its creator's expertise in Koryu Bujutsu (namely Shindo Yoshin Ryu) combined with his studies of Okinawan karate. When we talk of the Jujutsu that is found in SYR however, it probably isn't what you think of as Jujutsu - even our differing spelling of the word gives that away. No, although we do practice locks, holds, sweeps, throws and pins - I wouldn't go as far to say we were grapplers. Strictly speaking Wado does not have Bunkai (or at least not in the Okinawan sense anyway). TBH, unless you are lucky enough to find a Wado teacher that knows his stuff (and you won't know that of course) - and you want to learn how to grapple - I'd find a good grappling club. Sojobo Thank you. I must say as a newcomer it is all so confusing. Wado seems to stress evasion in favor of blocks, but when you watch videos of shotokan practiioners fight, you will see that most of the time they evade as well. Noone is blocking anything. Same with the stances. It is being said that Wado uses higher stances. Again shotikan practioniers use higher stances when fighting. At the end of the day it seems to me it's all really the same and a lot of false marketing and labeling. Dan.
  5. HI Guys, I am really confused about the Wado curriculum , specifically when it comes to how much grappling is taught. I am reading that Wado has been strongly influenced by a certain style of jiu jitsu. My quesiton is , does this influence trasnlate into a more grappling focused curriculum than other styles of karate? I am just wondering if the grappling is limited to Bunkai applications as most other karate styles or if it is visibily more present in Wado schools? Or is it compoletely dependent on who is teaching the class? I am currently deciding between Wado and shotokan and any feedback is highly appreciated. Cheers, Dan
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