seikokaistudent
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Posts
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Personal Information
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Martial Art(s)
Shito Ryu, BJJ, Ryu Kyu Kobudo
seikokaistudent's Achievements
Yellow Belt (2/10)
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Train full contact for sure. Full contact is generally for younger people who have time before their knees get blown out, and who recover/heal quicker. If you are young and have a sensei you really like who does not practice full contact (like me). Find an MMA gym to go to or spar full contact with your friends outside of class.
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I you want to have nice things and make a lot of money, be a part time in the basement of the community club on Tuesdays kind of instructor. By being a full time instructor you are committing yourself to your martial art, and devoting your life to the martial art. You become a pilgrim of the art and must not charge exorbitant prices to pass it on to the next generation of fighters. By taking that step, be prepared o give up material goods. Or marry a lawyer.
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Im still in high school so I don't really have to worry about getting stabbed or shot, so when I have good reason I fight. I would rather give up my wallet than be stabbed if I were being mugged, then again my Uncle was mugged, and when the robber bent down to pick up his wallet he kicked him in the face and got away with his wallet. You should probably avoid violent confrontation in most cases.
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First of all, congrats on starting karate, it may not be as flashy as some martial arts, but it is one of the most solid martial arts imho. Also the etiquette you will just pick up over time, as well as the names and meanings of the moves (with luck you will learn how to count to ten in Japanese in a couple of weeks...lol). You will definitely get in touch with the arts and more internal parts of karate when you start doing katas. Mawashi Geri is round house kick, and Maegeri is front kick if that helps at all.
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Good luck man! You should probably buy a camelbak or something so that you can drink on the fly. I am interested to see how you do.
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Agreed. Also, as a note, it's easy to forget that Martial Arts used to be necessary. As in, if you didn't know how to defend yourself you were easy prey. I think that a part of the stringent standards set are by people who needed their students to be at that level to live. We do have lower standards to a degree and this isn't a terrible thing.I feel that the lower standards lead to people having ranks that they do not deserve, and often offers them a false sense of security. Also is it truly an accomplishment when it is so easy to become a Black belt? All that being said, I don't even believe in the belt system, and I think that ranks should be based on fighting ability instead
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Go for kyokushin if you want to participate in full contact sparring and a little bit rougher style of karate.
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3rd Kyu (green belt) Shito Ryu karate 6 years White belt in bjj since September
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Starting karate. A few concerns. Advice much appreciated
seikokaistudent replied to Jeden245's topic in Karate
Start off easy and pace yourself, try all the gyms and dojos in your area, start exercising outside of dojo practice and gradually start to push yourself as your fitness improves. As for the gi thing I am sure they make a gi that will fit you. Good luck with karate -
Odd request
seikokaistudent replied to seikokaistudent's topic in Kung Fu, JKD, Wing Chun, Tai Chi, and Chinese Martial Arts
Thanks I will check it out -
Hey guys I realize this subject has been posted about multiple times, but I found a resource that might be useful. First of all I think parkour and martial arts go hand in hand, they complement each other like pancakes and syrup, many martial artists train as traceurs and vice versa. Not only is it great for fitness and cardio, it is also pretty dang awesome. I know the factor that had held me back from parkour is the price, I am already paying for multiple martial arts and I do not want to pay for parkour as well. Then I found http://trainingforparkour.org/ an awesome website which breaks it down and allows you to grasp the basics parkour without paying for lessons. The YouTube channel is very comprehensive, an the six lesson playlists pretty much break it down as simple as it gets, each lesson contains a technique some exercises and a final high intensity exercise. Once you know the basics it is up to you to apply them, and this website definitely taught me the basics and lead to me getting immersed in parkour. I vault over everything, and am starting to climb some lower walls/fences. So I just thought I would share it with you guys.