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Posted

Greetings! :)

Student: "Why did you hit that guy with a chair? Why didn't you use your karate?"

Master: "Hitting him with a chair was the only karate I could think of at the time."

Lesson: Practice until you don't have to think.

Posted

Welcome! :)

"If your hand goes forth withhold your temper"

"If your temper goes forth withold your hand"

-Gichin Funakoshi

Posted

Thanks for the welcome....

 

Having browsed around martial arts forums on the net for a while, this place

 

seemed to be a bit more relaxed. Some interesting debates, but not

 

so much of the typical arguing about the best styles, katas vs. BJJ, etc.

--kanryo2

Posted

Hey!!! My friend Justin referred me 2 this site, I'd say this site is the best discussion forum for Martial Art's Iv'e seen!

A wise man once said..."Courage is not the abstinence of fear. It is what is done when the emotion of fear is present....That is courage my friend" -Jordan Galendiez

Posted

Welcome to KF.

 

What karate style are you studing?

Posted

Hi there!

 

Welcome to Karate Forums. :)

"Was it really worth it? Only time and death may ever tell..." The Beautiful South - The Rose of My Cologne


Sheffield Steelers!

Posted

Well, Italian_guy, since you asked (I was going to just go by "karate")...

 

My school teaches a mix. My original instructor's instructor studied

 

both Tae Kwon Do and Karate (not sure what style of karate). For Tae

 

Kwon Do, he was an instructor in the Jhoon Rhee schools near

 

Washington DC. Our forms follow the ITF style (like Master Rhee), but

 

with a pretty low stance (more like Shotokan to me than ITF looking).

 

It's a small independent school that isn't affiliated with any particular

 

style. Sparring with gear and with contact. Normal self-defense.

 

We also include ground fighting (looks like regular Jiu Jitsu style to

 

me) that we often include in sparring. While we learn traditional forms

 

and techniques (including the high kicks of Tae Kwon Do) our sparring is

 

based on more traditional kick-boxing techniques (we actually separate

 

our forms techniques used for strength and balance from our sparring

 

techniques) which may sound odd.

 

So in one way, it's easy to fit in - we study a variety of traditional and

 

"modern" techniques. But on the other hand, not having a recognizable

 

style can also make it more difficult to fit in. We just call it karate at

 

my school.

--kanryo2

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