Online Martial Arts Upsets Society…Something is About to Happen!

December 25, 2010 by  
Filed under Fitness

The boy sits in front of his laptop, inspecting karate fighting on youtube, googling kung vs karate, and generally perusing the many types of martial arts…online martial arts. Many think he is trapped in a virtual prison, but this couldn’t be further from the truth. Something is about to happen that will enlighten mankind, and change the world forever.

Consider what the boy at the computer is really doing. He is engaged in storing up energy. Yes, there is a certain parasitic back and forth in this energy thing, but he is getting more than he is giving.

The watching of the fight causes muscles to twitch, installs synaptic responses that enervate the boy. The exhilaration of winning and losing causes the whole nervous system to move into a state of excitation. Most important, the images imprinted on the brain are an very personal tutorial.

Why do you think they call it programming? The programming is not in the computer, except in the driest of senses. The real programming is happening in the boy.

Excessive knowledge is being tamped into his brain. He starts to know about all manner of subjects, and his education explodes. He begins to mull over such things as ninjitsu, MMA, Tai Chi Chuan, and more.

The visions of Gung Fu movements to be implemented becomes instilled in him. Within his psyche are the seeds to handle all manner of confrontation, physical and otherwise. The next cycle of humanity is about to open its eyes.

This has already happened in history. It happened when mankind swarmed into the cities during the industrial revolution. When mankind released his energy at the end of that industrial upheaval the world was changed.

It happened when mankind discovered television sets, and then exploded into the world with all manner of new concepts. It happened when mankind invented computers, and the world became a virtual conception of unlimited design. The same upheaval of energy and experience is about to happen with online martial arts, when the boy pushes back his chair and goes to explore what he has learned…life will never be the same.

I’m sorry, but if you Mouse to Monster Martial Arts your life will never be the same.

Is Classical Martial Arts Better Than MMA?

December 22, 2010 by  
Filed under Fitness

Classical Martial Arts against MMA, this is an fascinating question. On one hand, we have the classical practitioner, as in Krav Maga or Tai Chi Chuan and that sort of art. On the other hand we have the people who praise the UFC and regimens such as one would see on Strikeforce.

Now, obviously, we are going to have a difference of opinion, the main thing is can we come up with some facts, or at least opinions so well grounded, that belief in one system is superior to another? I believe it is possible.

First, there is sport v art. In a sport one fights an opponent. In an art, one is in conflict, and thus attempting to resolve conflict, with oneself.

Second, there is the question of control. In a classical art one is attempting to control ones body, ones opponent, and ones own spirit. In MMA one is all too often just attempting to knock somebody’s face in.

Thus far, the edge seems to be headed in the classical direction. In attempting to control ones own self there is a high ground, after all. This is not to say, however, that the MMA school of thought does not have considerable attributes and qualities.

The main consideration, UFC stylists would argue, is whether an art works in the dark alley, and in this they would appear to posssess an edge. After all, the face smashing, body twisting, leg breaks that one perceives in the octagon is definitely useful for self defence. This writer, however, is not completely convinced of the argument.

In the ring rules are present. No fingers to the eyes, strikes to the coconuts, small joint twisting, punching the back of the skull, and so on. These are the techniques that a classical practitioner might veer towards in a street encounter.

Thus, in the final tally, while experience with violence, such as one might find in the MMA ring, has a definite edge, this writer is still going to stick with the classical. After all, in traditional martial arts one learns how to fight without getting mugged, and there are lessons to be learned outside of violence, and which can actually de-escalate conflicts. Choose which you wish, be true to your choice, both classical martial arts and MMA have much to offer.

Got an opinion? Head to Monster Martial Arts and get more facts, see if your opinion is really right. Pick up a free book explaining Matrix Martial Arts while you’re there.

Self Defense Is A Must When It Comes To Defending Your Family

November 18, 2010 by  
Filed under Fitness

When it comes to matters concerning your home, remember one simple rule. You are owner, master and protector. No one else has domain over your home. If you think you are not as proficient with self defense, you aren’t alone. However, a burglary in your home is very different from an assault outside. When burglars come into your home it is a very different thing. Every man has a duty to defend his family and every woman should follow suit in case trouble arises when her husband is not home. In the unfortunate event someone gains entry into your home, you have every right to eject them. The law sees a break in as a legitimate threat to the occupant’s safety and they are allowed use lethal force if necessary. Therefore, it is important to know some fighting techniques to protect everything and everyone you care about.

There is such a thing termed as the ‘castle exception.’ But do remember that this is exclusive to time when the home is broken into. For example, if someone attacks you on the street, it is incumbent on you to show restraint. While your duty of care towards your loved ones overrides every other concern, you must not use lethal force in the home unless absolutely necessary. It can be counterproductive as the possibility of killing a man could make it psychologically difficult. What you could do is use moves that are designed to protect rather than harm lethally.

In some homes, people keep firearms to provide protection against intruders. Indeed, when you consider the number of lethal weapons in homes across the nation and the way the law is, it?s surprising there are so many burglaries. Well that just goes to show that desperate times call for desperate measures. In light of this, you will be better off considering burglars as part of a dangerous group. You must even be prepared to be attacked from behind. Don’t panic. An assailant from the back can be neutralized with a severe blow to the nose using the back of your head.

All you need in the event of a face off with an assailant is your courage. That’s your first step to protecting your self. Panicking will tip the scales in favor of your assailant. Compose yourself and remain focused. The assailant is probably more afraid. Certainly, being discovered and confronted by the owner of the house was not their intention. They may well try and escape at this point and it might be prudent to let them leave without challenging them in case they are holding a weapon. If not, then its time you resort to your self defense skills. A few targeted shots at the nose, the abdomen and the neck.

Once they tumble, keep your weight on them and keep them immobilized while you get the cops. You can then rest easy as the fiend is carried away in handcuffs because self defense training helped you defend your castle without any bloodshed. If you have not bought a video or attended a class then it is time to do so. Do not be in a position of remaining lost as a burglar ransacks your home. Do yourself and your family a favor and learn how to defend yourself and them today.

Bruce Strong is a fan of martial arts. By training himself with the different self defense techiques, he is equipped with different close combat training. To learn more about self defense, inform yourself about self defense training.

Uncovering The True Evolution Of Real Taekwondo Styles

November 16, 2010 by  
Filed under Fitness

Taekwondo styles are interesting things, as they are each a slice of the complete discipline, and even resemble the ultimate sequencing of all arts. I say this as a fellow who studied at one of the original schools of the art, the Kang Duk Won. For the past four decades I’ve watched as each style of Korea’s most famous art has emerged, and there is an evolution of art occurring here that is worthy of note.

First, the original kwans, the Song Moo Kwan, Moo Duk Kwan, Kwon Bop, and all the others, were predominately Karate. Most of the fellows who put these arts together studied with Gichin Funakoshi during the forties. The rest studied with his students or asssociates.

Thus, the first schools were karate, plain and simple and not negotiable. Korea gaining independence, however, and nationalism rising, taekwondo was invented by General Choi Hong Hi. Thus, much of Japanese Karate was tossed out, altered, and taekwondo began its various evolutions.

There are several taekwondo methods, and several evolutions of forms. Most of them are versions of simple karate basics, with concentration on kicking. One should not hold one art as better than another, and such statements as my Taekwondo is the Deadliest Martial Art, or my Taekwondo is the Best Martial Art should be withheld. The individual arts are pieces of the whole puzzle, and the serious student will study all the styles, do all the forms, and decide for himself which are best.

That said, one should branch into a study of Hapkido. Hapkido is a put together by a fellow who is supposed to have trained in Daito ryu Aiki jujitsu. There is some confusion on the exact experiences of the founder, but the art is proving valuable. It is lasting, and people are learning their lessons, but one does need to go into a study of it with awareness.

After Hapkido there are the original Korean Martial Arts. These would be such arts as Taekgyeon and Subak. Taekgyeon, and there is some variation on this spelling, eventually translated into Hwarangdo. While Hwarangdo borrowed the name, there does seem to be some meat to the art.

Subak is one of the ancient Korean arts taught before the Japanese outlawed martial arts study in Korea. It is an excellent style of drilling and training and throwing an attacker. Unfortunately, it may be difficult to find a sensei in this style, but it is still worth exploring.

So, the advice here is that one start off with the simple variations of Choi Hong Hi, and travel through the various groups and styles to find what is best for you. After that, one should explore original karate forms and techniques, to better explore the origins of TKD, and then begin a sojourn through Hapkido, and Hwarangdo, and, if one is lucky, Subak. While this suggestion of study may seem time consuming, it is the only way to get to the the original secrets of Real Taekwondo Styles.

Al Case studied the Kang Duk Won back in the seventies, and it was in its original form. Go to his website if you want to pick up an absolutely ree Karate Book.

Who Would Win The Ultimate Martial Arts Fight: Steven Segal Lawman Against Michael Jackson!

November 16, 2010 by  
Filed under Fitness

I love to have The Gloved One fight. His moves are so polished, his sense of timing is exquisite. Heck, Steven Seagal Lawman is gonna have to be on his best to beat the zipper man!

First Stevie is ranked large, as in tents for shirts and the ugliest jackets known to a homeless man. This weight will give him an advantage, should he ever connect. But can he connect when the other fighter has the quickest mitts known to man?

And Stevie may have studied Aikido for half his life, but let’s hope he remembers some of his karate tricks. Michael, you see, has those slick, velvet coated hands. Those hands slither and slide, jib and jive, and can fool even the smartest artist.

To be honest, though Michael may have gotten the first few jabs in, Steven does have a few tricks up his rather large sleeves. He’s got…Southern Firepower! He’s got access to shotguns, pistols, and some stout, redneck nightclubs!

Uh, the hitting kind of nightclubs, not the jive and wail kind of nightclubs. Though, to mention it, Stevie does pick a mean guitar, and maybe he could swing that guitar like an ax! Surely a big old electric guitar bashed up against the side of Michael’s cranium wouldcause some kind of trauma!

Anyway, I know there are going to be a few people that aren’t going to go along with my reasoning, but I want you to think about the Beat It video. In that video Michael leaps into the middle of a streetfight and disarms two seasoned thugs armed with wicked looking carvers! Now that has got to be some kind of tough!

And, if that isn’t tougher than your aunt’s used undies, you can see other movies where Michael outruns machine gun bullets, bashes the hopes of hoardes of baddies, and all while singing a tune! Sure, Steven can wail a bit, but…I’ve never seen him sing in the middle of one of his movie gang fights! Heck, all Stevie can do, in the middle of the brawl, is grunt, look hard about the edges, and give a snappy one liner when everybody is laying around all broken!

Okay, I think I’ve made my case, and only the biggest fool isn’t going to agree with me that The King of Pop would beat heck out of the King of Aikido. Unless the Aikido Bad Ass can draw and shoot his trusty pistolo faster than than a politician’s mouth! Now if only Michael would jump out of the grave so we could really see this ultimate martial arts fight!

This has been fun, but if you want some serious martial arts, then click on Monster Martial Arts and get a free book on Matrix Martial Arts.

The Real Secret Of The Dim Mak Poison Hand Death Touch

November 14, 2010 by  
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Let’s be honest, in my telling you The Real Secret of the Dim Mak Kung Fu Death Touch, there’s going to some people who like what I say, and there’s going to be people who don’t like what I say. Well, illusions die hard, but the truth is always better. The truth, when it comes to using fingers to kill people, is not all it is knocked up to be.

In the first place, there really is an art that teaches this thing, but it is extremely hard to find a teacher, and to be accepted to learn is really hard. You have to actually know a few kung fu styles, you have to have an recommendation from a Kung Fu Master. And that is no guarantee that you will be accepted as a discipline.

In the second place, one must question the worth of studying such a rare and esoteric art. It will take years to understand the teachings and to be able to actually use them in a fight. Quite honestly, the time spent learning the poison hand death touch you could spend learning other arts.

And, what is going to have more worth? The ability to touch somebody with your fingers and have him go off and die three days later at seven thirty eight if the moon is full? Or to get so good at other arts that nobody could get close enough to you to even try such a technique as the poison hand?

To learn the Dim Mak one will be studying medicine, but not the normal medicine. You will not learn to alleviate sickness, but rather to cause the body to go into disharmony and die. This means that you will have the double study of learning the right way of curing people, and the wrong way.

You will also have to learn certain things about the time of using the death touch. You could strike (touch) somebody with a finger, but if it is the wrong time of the day, your touch is wasted. This means you are going to have to learn all sorts of things about the time cycle of the internal organs of the body, and how this translates to the trigger points on the outside of the body.

Look, I’m about done here, and you’re free to do what you want, but let me tell you one little tale of a real death touch. Certain ninpo arts teach how to wear ring needles (and other types of gimcracks). They coat the needle with a deadly poison, then cover the needle with wax.

They can poison anybody and cause death, but they are safe to themselves and their friends. Now this is a real art that I am telling you, but one that doesn’t take decades to learn and use. And that is about all I have to say on the subject of the real secret of the kung fu dim mak death touch.

Al Case began studying the martial arts in 1967, and became a writer for the magazines in 1981. If you want some really great techniques, visit his site, Monster Martial Arts.

Sure Fire Ways Of Achieving The Ultimate Kung Fu Chi Power!

November 11, 2010 by  
Filed under Fitness

Okay, I’ve had enough of the pretty boy weight lifting and sit ups and stuff…I want an exercise routine that will enable me to have the ultimate Kung Fu Chi Power! I want to be a Gung Fu Monster! I want to rip up 300 year old trees by their roots and knock over cement outhouses with my little pinkie, and I’m going to start doing the following calisthenics every day until I make it!

First, for kung fu jump kicks, I’m going to do the following exercise. I’m going to dig a hole, one shovelful a day, and practice jumping into and out of the hole a thousand times a day. By the time I’m down to ten feet, I should be able to do jumping kicks that’ll knock over skyscrapers!

Okay, for body slamming that would put king kong to shame, I’ve got a real he man, kung fu drill! I’m going to live out in the country and every day I’ll lift a calf on my shoulders. By the time the calf is a thousand pounds, I’ll be able to lift anybody in the world, and throw him or her at the ground so hard they strike oil!

Of course brute force isn’t all I want, not when it comes to getting the kind of Kung Fu power ‘m thinking of, so I’ve got a gung fu training drill that will sharpen the eyes and make my fingers nimble. I’m going to sneak up on a wasps nest and practice snatching wasps out of the air with my chopsticks! Hah!

Taking punches is pretty important, too, and I’ve got the right idea for that. I’m going to practice running into walls and trees and things. A thousand days of running full tilt through orchards with a blindfold on should prepare me.

And the old noggin, how could I forget martial arts head conditioning! I saw a guy in a flick who could ring a giant bell just by slamming his head against it! Hey, if I practice smashing into bells with my head long enough, ain’t nobody gonna be able to ring my bell, if you know what I mean.

Let’s see, what else do I have to…oh yeah, ‘that!’ I think a little makiwara training with ‘that’ will strengthen ‘that’ immensely. Of course it may look a little ugly when callouses start appearing, but that’s a small price, and if even ‘that’ is a weapon, I will have achieved my goals and be the ultimate gung fu strong man!

I will be the strongest Kung Fu warrior in the world! Every body part will be thick, immense, dense, rippling with muscle, and able to be used in combat to the death! All hail to me…the possessor of the ultimate Kung Fu Chi Power!

For the best in home study Kung Fu books and DVD/courses, mouse to Monster Martial Arts.

A Very Intriguing Method For Making Martial Arts Chi

October 29, 2010 by  
Filed under Fitness

Martial Arts Chi is one of the great secrets of all time. It’s not just that you see it on the big screen, or that it has become some sort of an urban legend, it’s that there is truth to be had. Chi does exist, but how the heck to you create it…let alone use it in martial arts techniques?

So we have a two part question here: how do you make chi, and how do you use it? Interestingly, the second is the answer to the first. Unfortunately, this results in a catch 22…how do you use it if you can’t make it, how do you make it if you can’t use it?

To solve this mystery let me give you an internal exercise and a drill, and see if you can solve the problem. The exercise is an old Bagua exercise named ‘Stroking the beard.’ The drill is based on the old ‘Catch hands’ game we used to play as children.

To Stroke the beard simply move the hands in medium circles, coming together at the chin and moving downward as if stroking a beard to your navel. To do this effectively you must relax your muscles, let your weight drop, breath low, and do it until you can do it with no distraction. Doing with no distraction means concentrating on only the exercise, and this is very crucial to your success.

Once you have stroked the beard for a couple of hours, find a friend and practice ‘Catch Hands.’ To do Catch Hands simply face your partner at handshake distance and let your hands relax at your sides. Your partner places his palms together and extends them in front of his body.

The object of this drill is to take your time, create lots of silence, and then catch his hands. Don’t slap at them, just catch them, like catching birds without breaking their wings, and do it gently. This simple move is the same motion needed to block or a strike, and is well worth practicing.

As you practice, over time you will become more adept at the exercise, and you will find yourself becoming calmer, jerking less, and that is when the benefits of stroking the beard are going to appear. You will find that energy flows down the center of your body and gathers at your center. It will be like a fountain that is bubbling backwards, and it will be as if energy is entering into your tan tien with every breath.

Eventually, you will be able to catch your partner’s hands easily and there will be nothing he can do about it. The important thing, though, is that you will feel the ‘universal energy’ that is chi. Keep practicing this exercise and you will experience some fascinating results, and it will be proof positive that you can create and use Martial Arts Chi.

Al Case has written a fascinating book on how to Create Chi. You can find it at Monster Martial Arts.

Quicker Reaction Time Through Traditional Martial Arts Practice

October 27, 2010 by  
Filed under Fitness

I saw an interesting TV show today, a couple of fellows were discussing how to achieve faster reaction time through traditional martial arts training. The odd thing is that they were obsessed with training the muscles. The conclusion they reached is that you train the body to react so fast that there is no reaction time.

But to have a body is to have reaction time. If you conduct your self defense through a body then you have to have the time it takes to make that body work. It’s going to exist no matter what you do.

Unless, of course, you see what is happening before it happens and move with it. Or, better yet, move before it can even occur. You simply watch what is going to happen and insert your body into the desired place and time.

Training in Martial Arts techniques is going to help you do this. You create a plan, and you carry out the plan. Eventually, all actions can be predicted, eventually this carries into life, and life becomes something you can predict.

Of course, those that don’t believe this have there own way. A boxer or MMA specialist trains his body to react, but the other guy is also training his body to react, so what you have is two virtual robots bashing their bodies together, and less awareness. This is not shortening reaction time, it is increasing it, once you have been bashed enough times.

You have to be willing to face yourself and ask the question, what is reaction time, if you are going to to undo it. You are acting after something. But what?

Well, after reality has already occurred. That’s right, you are making your body do something because of something that has already happened, and thus you are already late, and thus you are a victim. You have to be a victim if you follow this path of muscle memorization, acting after something has happened means you are moving after somebody has already acted.

If you don’t want to be the victim, you have to seek out methods which do not have muscle memorization, and which short circuit reaction time. While classical martial arts practice (if you can find a pure school, and an instructor who knows what he is doing) doesn’t provide the glory, and sometimes seem a bit confusing, the fact of the matter is that they have been expressly designed to get rid of reaction times. Reality fighting methods may draw in the crowds, you will gain faster reaction time through traditional Martial Arts training.

If you desire to know more about ridding yourself of reaction time, mouse to Monster Martial Arts. Get a free ebook while you’re there.

How The Various Martial Arts Create Power

October 13, 2010 by  
Filed under Fitness

When it come to generating real martial arts power one has to consider the concept of Fa Jing. This is the simple explosion of energy from the energy center that makes such arts as Karate, Shaolin, Tai Chi, and other traditional martial arts superior to sports. This is not to speak ill of the art of fisticuffs, this is just to say that there is a concept that, if followed, will create a superior human being.

The secret of Fah jing is to drop the weight into the earth, which causes a charge of energy to go up the legs and into the tan tien. This energy enters the tan tien, which causes an explosion of power to emanate from that point. The energy coursing out from this energy center can be directed and controlled into the arms, and into various martial arts techniques.

To ground one’s weight is not just jumping off a rock and landing on the earth. It is a method that will not work if one does not actually put his awareness into the action. Putting weight into the ground without awareness is like dropping an egg on the sidewalk…it just splats.

When you direct your awareness into the earth–and this is an actual perception apart from such things as eyes, ears, and so on–you will actually feel the pulse of energy in the lower body. It will feel like plasma, and you will suddenly feel a vast space and power inside your lower body. You will also become capable of motion that people only dream of.

Oddly, though the energy enters the tan tien, the whole body that becomes the storage center for the energy. The body will become a tool through which you can direct the energy coming out of from the tan tien. This is the point at which your training really starts to accelerate, because you have to analyze what geometric path the energy has to follow if you are going to put it into your martial arts techniques.

Do you generate an edge on vertical circle on one half of the body? Do you transfigure the chi from the vertical to the horizontal, then pulse it out the arm? Do you spiral it through the limbs, as would a Baqua master?

Obviously there are going to be many ways of utilizing this manifestation of energy, once you become able to make it and control it. The real point is to make your technique able to manifest the chi power easily and naturally. This is a two edged sword of physics that, to be truthful, not many martial artists teachers have been able to master.

What we are really saying, you see, is that the body is a motor, and this is a datum new to this planet and to our culture and to our martial arts. But if you can understand this data, which I call flux theory, then you will be able to do things with your chi that have, up to this point, been the stuff of legends. The golden age is on the rise, you see, and it is possible through understanding such things as martial arts fa jing.

You can find out more about fa jing and neutronics theory in Matrixing Chi by Al Case, which is available at Monster Martial Arts. 3e

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