ivette_green Posted July 10, 2005 Posted July 10, 2005 No kyokushin in your area? "Don't tell me what I can't do."
Goju_boi Posted July 19, 2005 Posted July 19, 2005 well I heard it's hard to find kyokushin in america.anyways, both muay thay and wing chun are fast paced,but muay thai is more physically demanding.So maybe muay thai is best for u https://www.samuraimartialsports.com for your source of Karate,Kobudo,Aikido,And Kung-Fu
Menjo Posted July 27, 2005 Posted July 27, 2005 i would really like there to be a little more ninjitsu dojos around its too bad how martial artists are often restricted to what they can afford and other factors... "Time is what we want most, but what we use worst"William Penn
Goju_boi Posted July 29, 2005 Posted July 29, 2005 i would really like there to be a little more ninjitsu dojos around its too bad how martial artists are often restricted to what they can afford and other factors...I totally agree with you https://www.samuraimartialsports.com for your source of Karate,Kobudo,Aikido,And Kung-Fu
CagedWarrior Posted August 8, 2005 Posted August 8, 2005 With the choices, wanting striking, Muay Thai is definitely fast-paced, and definitely the best suited for your self defense desires. One trick is if you're willing to do it. Frankly, a lot of people don't want such grueling conditioning and training, but if you're up for it (and I mean UP for it!) then a good Muay Thai place will become the place you love.Competing may not be so available to you- karate tournaments are one thing but a Muay Thai fight is something else entirely. You don't compete in MT the way you do in karate.
mantis Posted August 8, 2005 Posted August 8, 2005 i would suggest you go to the schools and try them for a week each, or a day or just look at them training or something.also, i suggest when you go to school to bug and annoy the masters and teachers with questions and make sure you know who's going to teach you actually..it all depends what you like, but if Wing Chun is one of ur options i wouldnt even look at the rest! that's just me tho.
isshinryu5toforever Posted August 8, 2005 Posted August 8, 2005 Wing Chun is probably your best bet in that group at least for what you're looking at. Football player tough doesn't touch Muay Thai tough. Kendo schools that are traditional aren't fast-paced. They are very precise and disciplined. I think my friend's dojo starts each class with 500-1,000 overhead cuts before moving on to anything else. He who knows others is wise. He who knows himself is enlightened.- Tao Te Ching"Move as swift as a wind, stay as silent as forest, attack as fierce as fire, undefeatable defense like a mountain."- Sun Tzu, the Art of War
Goju_boi Posted August 9, 2005 Posted August 9, 2005 well if you take wing chun and stick to it,you will eventually get to the butterfky swords so u can get some sword training https://www.samuraimartialsports.com for your source of Karate,Kobudo,Aikido,And Kung-Fu
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