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Everything posted by feels
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There used to be a Berkeley Branch, but it closed down many years ago. All the Branch Chiefs are now located in Southern California. There might be a Kyokushin-affliated school up there, but I doubt it.
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You could drive for two hours south and visit the Los Angeles Dojo.
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Kyokushinkaikan vs. Shinkyokushinkai... It's brother fighting brother.
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Which fighting game do you prefer?
feels replied to dippedappe's topic in Martial Arts Gaming, Movies, TV, and Entertainment
Street Fighter Alpha 3 Street Fighter III: 3rd Strike -
I practice knees with the Thai pads, but I practice elbows on the banana bag.
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If people wanted to to talk abut Kyokushin in this thread, then they would have a reference.
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I really need to change my avatar. A lot of people are confusing me for a girl. The person in my avatar is actually Amuro Namie, a famous Japanese singer. Just to clear up the confusion in this thread: Yoko geri is a side snap kick. Mae geri is a front snap kick. Yoko keage is a straight-legged kick to the side. Mae keage is a straight-legged kick to the front. Personally, I don't use mae keage or yoko keage in kumite, but I do use uchi mawashi geri, soto mawashi geri, and kakato geri which are all straight-legged. Mae geri and yoko geri are very efficient kicks as well; and they can reach the chin much better than mae keage and yoko keage..
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There are plenty of karate and other martial art magazines which you can find at a well-stocked Japanese newsstand.
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Academically speaking, my branch teaches that kata helps with power control, speed control, and breath control. If one has good kata, he cannot have horrible fighting skills; or else, his kata is not good in the first place.
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"Real fighting cannot exist without proof; proof cannot exist without trust; and trust cannot exist without respect." - Sosai Oyama Kyokushin Karate uses kata as a tool along with stretching, kihon, ido geiko, strength exercises, cardio exercises, kumite, etc. to improve combat techniques. It maintains the use of traditional katas, but it's practiced more for application than philosophy.
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Well, Noji got triangled...
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Here's the posted schedules: http://www.kyokushinla.com/class.html Just click on the desired location...
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"Sandbox... 12 o'clock... Be there!" Wow. Big talk like that just gets my heart pumping...
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I train at Little Tokyo and Torrance since I attend Cal State Long Beach. I used to train at Granada Hills before it closed down. Currently, the only dojos that I know about in the Greater Los Angeles area are: Little Tokyo West L.A. Manhattan Beach Eagle Rock Torrance Palo Verde Tustin http://www.kyokushinla.com http://www.powerkarate.com
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Maturity comes with age. The quicker one grows up, the quicker one realizes how dumb this situation is. If you don't have a reason to fight, if you have no will to fight, the choice is obviously clear.
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Occasionally, when one of us is too injured to spar, a senior will teach us some Daito Ryu Aikijutsu and newaza techniques.
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I was told that the Hokkaido branch of Kyokushinkaikan had dissolved after Sosai Oyama passed away. My sensei was from there.
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In Kyokushin Karate, Sanchin with ibuki is easily faked through, but difficult for many people to master. It won't win anyone any awards in kata competition, but it is one of the ultimate katas that is essential for Kyokushin training.
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What you wrote here is one way, but not the only one. When I said "we," I didn't mean us.
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When we sit in seiza, our left knee touches the floor first. And when we rise, our right knee comes up first. Samurai did the same because they carried their swords on their left sides and it allowed them to draw their swords.
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Originally, karate only used the front kick.
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Domo is casual. Arigato is proper. Together, it is formal. Tsuki usually refers to punching, but it generally means strike.
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It's very strange to see how much Japanese I learned in a year and a half from karate. We all have to learn the name of different body parts, the name of techniques, and common courtesy phrases. For hi, bye, yes, thank you, and good, we just say osu, though.