
Dalt píše:Araver:to mi fakt ukaz kde jsem psal ze sebeobrana neni nci vaznyho - ja jsem psal ze na ulici se uplatni mnohem vic bojova umeni a sporty kde jsou lidi zvykly na kontakt (box, thai atd) nez dejchaci typu aikido, taici apod. Dale jsem taky psal ze sebeobrana neni jen obrana proti smrticim utokum ale vicemene jakakoliv situace kdy branis svoje zdravi (at by slo treba jen o monokl pod okem) - tohle vsechno (jak je clovek dobrej fighter) se navic pozna treba i jen z lehkyho sparringu s rukavicema - proste vidis jak se ten clovek hejba atd...)
RUNAR píše:Třeba tady, brácha Draka co jede hlavně Kumite z videjka co jsem postnul:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n4L4jDitr8o
RUNAR píše:Tohle jsou výpovědi z Shotokan dojo v Japanu:
Michael Berger, jak se žije na Takoshoku univerzitě, ano čtete správně univerzitě:
Well, I do have my teeth, but I did have some cracked that broke later, and made many trips to the hospital! I used to go to Takudai an hour early just to get my mind ready. It was like… every day I would think, I could get killed. I could really get killed.
I kept seeing guys get dragged off the floor when they were out. So it became a kind of a kill or be killed attitude. We all used to do whatever we could to win, including just about every dirty trick you can think of.
I had to cut off all my hair after the first day, so they couldnt get a grip on it. Kicking to the groin was not uncommon. I guess I just went in there each day and thought, well, it is either them or me. If you got a tiny window of opportunity, you seized it and tried to end it fast. It was really like facing an opponent in a life and death moment, like facing an opponent with a live sword. I learned to fight with what I call , “ patient urgency,” with a kind of intense focus of concentration that is really indescribable. If you have ever had a gun held to your head, or a knife pulled on you, then you know what I mean.
It is something that lives in me to this day, and will never leave me. It is a fire that burns inside, that can go from a small smouldering coal to blazing when it is fuelled. It effects every aspect of my life. People who have not gone through this kind of thing experientially can never know what I am talking about. But if you talk with Leon or Richard, or Sensei Stan Schmidt, (or a few select others) they know… it changes who you are forever. You really can’t put that into words.
Norman Robinson a zkoušky na 3.dan:
I got to the dojo at 12 and eventually got onto the floor at 5pm. My nerves were shot, I was exhausted from tension, having watched two days of heavy contact and karateka having their teeth knocked out, their noses broken, and many other injuries.
Nigel Jackson:
The kenshusei training was designed to test physical and mental limits, spirit, courage and tenacity. Even so, I never considered quitting.The speed, power, ferocity and accuracy of many instructors’ attacks shocked non- Japanese observers.
Pemba Tamang:
I remember standing in the shower at the end of training day feeling lucky to still be alive.
I don’t mind admitting, it was mentally and physically terrifying. Sometimes I would wake in the morning and hope something had happened to the dojo, so we wouldn’t have to train.
A mnoho, mnoho dalšího, tohle je jen pár příkládků, tohle je tam standard.Podobně v Anglickém KUGB a mnoha dalších dojo.
RUNAR píše:Třeba tady, brácha Draka co jede hlavně Kumite z videjka co jsem postnul:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n4L4jDitr8o
Zpět na sebeobrana, streetfighting a reálný boj...
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