nice video. It's damp chilly winter here too, so you'd have to put a wristlock on to get the naranča Cedevita out of my cold dead hands! We'd love to see more of the bounty you purchased in the UK too. Hope you had a fab trip over there.
As an older Aikido/Ju-jitsu guy who taught and cross trained for many years, I have to say that all of these wrist locks are only really effective when applied ballistically. Yes, you "can" use pain-compliance to move or control someone with Sankyo or Nikyo, but they work much better as breaks in a "self-defence" situation. Especially, with more than one opponent, where you have to put someone out of the fight and/or intimidate the F out of his mates. What is really worth looking at in this respect is what Paul Vunak and others used to refer to as "reference points" - positions that occur naturally in a fight, that lend themselves to setting up a trap or a joint break.
I think your demo of the wrist lock shows something that a lot of people miss: A lot of things you do are based on opportunity. You don't look for a wrist lock, rather if it's there, you can employ it. The same is true for what the goal of the "technique" is. You practice a thing like a wrist lock, to understand the extent/full range of the application and where/how it can still cause pain and leverage. If it happens to be near the point where a break can happen then that might the result but if it's nowhere near that point, then you don't push through blindly to it as if it's the goal. In most instances, what a locking action achieves is a moment of control where you can take an advantage and lead the engagement. One typical criticism of wrist locks is that no one grabs your wrist like how they do in the demos but the point really is that ultimately people do grab your wrists in one way or another and when they do, knowing how the joints can be manipulated is just another tool.
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Nice, the collabs with Alan are always really good. An Irl collab is like an evolution of those videos.
nice video. It's damp chilly winter here too, so you'd have to put a wristlock on to get the naranča Cedevita out of my cold dead hands! We'd love to see more of the bounty you purchased in the UK too. Hope you had a fab trip over there.
Haha, UK trip was so nice, I might follow up on some nerdy purchaces I made!
I’m so pleased with the quality of this video considering the filming conditions
I wanted it to be special 😭
@ The background looks amazing.
@@indefenceofthetraditionalma it does, I did play around with the brightness/contrast/sharpness a bit
As an older Aikido/Ju-jitsu guy who taught and cross trained for many years, I have to say that all of these wrist locks are only really effective when applied ballistically.
Yes, you "can" use pain-compliance to move or control someone with Sankyo or Nikyo, but they work much better as breaks in a "self-defence" situation. Especially, with more than one opponent, where you have to put someone out of the fight and/or intimidate the F out of his mates.
What is really worth looking at in this respect is what Paul Vunak and others used to refer to as "reference points" - positions that occur naturally in a fight, that lend themselves to setting up a trap or a joint break.
Another banger
@@KuzushiKev 🙏thank you
Just got to the end of the video 😂😂😂
😆
@@indefenceofthetraditionalma now share it around!!! (Community post on ur channel pls) 😭😆
I think your demo of the wrist lock shows something that a lot of people miss:
A lot of things you do are based on opportunity.
You don't look for a wrist lock, rather if it's there, you can employ it.
The same is true for what the goal of the "technique" is. You practice a thing like a wrist lock, to understand the extent/full range of the application and where/how it can still cause pain and leverage.
If it happens to be near the point where a break can happen then that might the result but if it's nowhere near that point, then you don't push through blindly to it as if it's the goal.
In most instances, what a locking action achieves is a moment of control where you can take an advantage and lead the engagement.
One typical criticism of wrist locks is that no one grabs your wrist like how they do in the demos but the point really is that ultimately people do grab your wrists in one way or another and when they do, knowing how the joints can be manipulated is just another tool.