Jump to content
  • advertisement_alt
  • advertisement_alt
  • advertisement_alt

returning_wave

Experienced Members
  • Posts

    91
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Personal Information

  • Martial Art(s)
    Shotokan variant, Taijutsu
  • Location
    UK

returning_wave's Achievements

Yellow Belt

Yellow Belt (2/10)

0

Reputation

  1. Im genuinely surprised by the number of you carrying guns. Being a strogn opponent of civilian guns generally I would never carry one (besides here in england youd be arrested pretty sharpish and it can carry 10 years). As a rule I dont tend to carry actual weapons (as strictly speaking any kind of offensive weapon is illegal in public, right down to a ballpoint pen if they felt like pushing it) and instead have trained to defend myself with my keys i always have on me, and objects you would find in the real world. In some situations of increased risk though, a real weapon has gone with me. I do tech for a band who palyed in a very notorious venue and i took my M7 bayonet in my techie bag. Im going to uni this year in bristol which is a little bit more dodgy than my current area so i may add a small flick knife or a kobutan to my carry-everywhere-pile
  2. this is a great post, if i may say so Many people see many points to kata and use them for differnt things. Two conflicitng examples: I have a friend with whom I used to do shotokan-esque karate and left because it was increasingly poor in terms of a martial art. I found the answers I was looknig for in kata, performing each move as in the kata but with realitic strength and power and applied in realistic situations at realsitc ranges. My friend found answers elsewhere in the art and his kata is more an exercise in precision of movement. Both views are equally effective and produce startalingly different kata from the same moves.
  3. 'If someone insults you agree with him. If there is no disagreement there can be no conflict.' - Funakoshi
  4. Id echo everything Karateka_latino said with the added point that once you pick aclub, go along for a lesson and watch, or if they'll let you, take part before you committ yourself to a term or whatever. a lot of dojos sound great but are full of flaws in reality. some danger signs: 1. fast indechiperable Japanese - often can be a sign of a teacher more concerned with look adn procedure than practice 2. A noisy class - teacher cannot keep control, leadign to an unsafe environment. This also applies to other safety measures, especially if you are training with weapons (ive been clonked on the head more than once with a sai and I dont reccommend it) 3. A skewed abundance of the highest grades. this can (altohugh by no means definately) mean that gradigns are very speedy with low standards (gradigns usually cost more so the instructor makes more the faster they're done.) 4. A lack of application - if the class do moves to the air or n katas but spend no time on the uses of those moves be warey. You mentioned that you want to defend yourself, so you need somewhere which teaches realistic applications. When you see an application you should think 'coool I could do that.' If 20 flaws spring immedately into your mind you may want to look elsewhere. Cost-wise most places Ive seen in britain are between 4 and 8 pounds a lesson so thats... errm carry the one... between 8 and 15 dollars. much more than this is a rip off nd probably indicates the in-it-for-the-money instructors to be avoided. Man that got quite negative didnt it!? anyway despite all that you are meant to enjoy learnign karate so the most important element of a new club is that its fun!
  5. Rock music of many many descriptions. Acoustic guitar solos to alanis morrissette to feeder to linkin park
  6. i was referrign to fightign away from the rule bound Olympic arena. kicks to the head will very quickly get you flipped on your head in a real situation which i have seen people learn the very hard and painful way.
  7. coool i liek the sai video that rocks thanks for that
  8. the rules are part of my problem really. the rules of the art encourage poor fighting, (as they do in sport karate tournaments, tyo be fair, but not quite to that extent) but anyway with their hands down by their sides either one could have got about a million body hits in so easily compensated for the head kicks.
  9. I know im gonna get shouted at frot this but please udnerstand it is no my intention to troll. but what the hell was going on in Athens?? It was the first time Ive ever really seen TKD in action, and my god it was poor! Is that really how TKD is taught and practised? I always considered it to be a reasonably highly ranked art in terms of beign a decent martial art but the olympic fighters were appalling! They were bouncing for apparently no reason at all on the spot with their hands limp by their sides, and teh only moves they seemed to know were inapplicable kicks to the head which gave their opponent ample (although ignored) oportunity to flip them on their head. so i guess Im basically asking is that how everyone practises TKD or is it a sport-afied version for the olympics?
  10. Im a huge fan of Bill Bryson and next summer im retracing part of his route from Lost Continent at the moment im readign Living and Working in America by Steve Mills as prep for a year of uni. in the US, and The Cell, a book on the growth of international terrorism (cheery )
  11. mine are a varied mix, mostly based around sci-fi and fantasy: Interview with the Vampire Apollo 13 The Matrix & reloaded Equilibrium Stargate Star Trek First Contact of the lot i would chose the matrix as my all time favourite. unoriginal, ill grant you, but still a brilliant movie.
  12. mine comes from a favourite move of mine from Tekki/Naihanchi where the leg is snapped up in front of teh other leg in horse stance. and i thoguht its name was cool: the returning wave kick. quite simplistic really
  13. my choice would be the flinch response from the start of kanku-dai folowed by a knife hand or forearm strike counterattack
  14. thats pretty harsh, GrrrArg. When I did the english version i got english 8 maths 8 science 8 One of my friends got two EP levels (exceptional performance). Ours stand for 'Standardised Achievement Tests and are taken at ages 6, 11 and 14. They count for nothing and are a waste of time not that im bitter congrats on your high US-SATs scores! (Ive watched enough Buffy to know they're high )
  15. well i just looekd up th charges for an 18 year old rentign a car from new yourk for 4 weeks and it comes to 4 and a half thousad dollars. maybe tme to think bout that ebay option
×
×
  • Create New...