Traditional Japanese Jujutsu is based on the premise that YOU have been deprived of your primary weapon. The assumption is, or should be, that your opponent possesses a (primary) weapon. I would be greatly interested in your favourite entry and/or disarming techniques from this tradition. Great presentation BTW
I don’t really like disarms per se. I focus on shutting down the attacker rather than trying to remove the weapon. Usually when I bounced I used a Russian 2 on 1 and hard forward pressure , headbutts with low line knees and a basic foot sweep !or something close to it
No. Jujutsu was primarily used as a way to augment one’s weapon use, e.g throwing someone to the ground and stabbing them between the gaps in their armor.
@@Jackthestripper originally yes but it evolved in the 18th and 19th century. Traditional work includes numerous subdivisions including use of weapons, restraint, rope and prisoner transportation, are I was a etc but different schools have very different focuses
@@systemacanadathe real takeaway is that it was simply a training methodology to train for any scenario. Rather than some form of static “martial art” that you can make definite descriptions about.
kevin secours tell me do you know the 2020 movie jiu jitsu? if not, look for some fight scenes because I would like to know if what you see there is Japanese jiu jitsu like in this video of yours (however, I really like the presentation)
No that’s got nothing to do with Japanese jujitsu. There is a throw or two here and there but most of those actors are hong kong style stuntmen . Lots of high kicks and flips which the samurai naturally would never use in armour with weapons on the battlefield . What looks good on film is rarely what is used in real life .
@@systemacanadaah thank you so much I take it that you saw that movie, and thanks also for the answer because I've been looking for a lot of kicking or punching techniques in Japanese jiu jitsu ( most of the videos I've seen were mostly projections ) 😮
@@matteoporceddu5262 not copied no but there is definite influence both ways-some karate teach basic throws and locks and jujitsu has basic strikes. There are only so m at ways to affect the body. The major difference is the goal-why are you striking? In jujitsu it’s often to enter for locks and throws whereas I. Karate it’s often one strike one kill mentality.
@@systemacanada I sent you an email a long time ago to see about helping you do marketing. A big secret to TRS Direct's success is their copywriter, John Carlton. If you look up some of his old saleletters, you'll see how he moved so many DVDs. His stuff could compel your grandma to buy a DVD on self defense.
@@systemacanada That stuff works though. As a copywriter, I've actually tested the techniques and proven them. Here's one of my favorite headlines, hopefully it will give you a chuckle: "World Famous Streetfighter Will Give You A FREE GUN... Just To Prove To You He Can Take It Away From You Bare-Handed... As Easy As Candy From A Baby!"
Outstanding love it would train every day in this absolutely
Thanks for watching.
yes!!!, i have vol 1-3 & there excellent, looks like i found my christmas present to myself
I’m glad you enjoy them. Thank you so much for your support. I really appreciate it.
Traditional Japanese Jujutsu is based on the premise that YOU have been deprived of your primary weapon. The assumption is, or should be, that your opponent possesses a (primary) weapon. I would be greatly interested in your favourite entry and/or disarming techniques from this tradition. Great presentation BTW
I don’t really like disarms per se. I focus on shutting down the attacker rather than trying to remove the weapon. Usually when I bounced I used a Russian 2 on 1 and hard forward pressure , headbutts with low line knees and a basic foot sweep !or something close to it
No. Jujutsu was primarily used as a way to augment one’s weapon use, e.g throwing someone to the ground and stabbing them between the gaps in their armor.
@@Jackthestripper originally yes but it evolved in the 18th and 19th century. Traditional work includes numerous subdivisions including use of weapons, restraint, rope and prisoner transportation, are I was a etc but different schools have very different focuses
@@systemacanadathe real takeaway is that it was simply a training methodology to train for any scenario. Rather than some form of static “martial art” that you can make definite descriptions about.
kevin secours tell me do you know the 2020 movie jiu jitsu? if not, look for some fight scenes because I would like to know if what you see there is Japanese jiu jitsu like in this video of yours (however, I really like the presentation)
No that’s got nothing to do with Japanese jujitsu. There is a throw or two here and there but most of those actors are hong kong style stuntmen . Lots of high kicks and flips which the samurai naturally would never use in armour with weapons on the battlefield . What looks good on film is rarely what is used in real life .
@@systemacanadaah thank you so much I take it that you saw that movie, and thanks also for the answer because I've been looking for a lot of kicking or punching techniques in Japanese jiu jitsu ( most of the videos I've seen were mostly projections ) 😮
@@matteoporceddu5262 kicking is generally low. Hand strikes are similar to karate .
@@systemacanadai.e. any kick, punch or open hand technique in Japanese jiu jitsu is taken from or copied from karate
@@matteoporceddu5262 not copied no but there is definite influence both ways-some karate teach basic throws and locks and jujitsu has basic strikes. There are only so m at ways to affect the body. The major difference is the goal-why are you striking? In jujitsu it’s often to enter for locks and throws whereas I. Karate it’s often one strike one kill mentality.
Some of your stuff should be on TRS Direct!
I was with paladin press before they closed so I think they were direct competitors
@@systemacanada I sent you an email a long time ago to see about helping you do marketing. A big secret to TRS Direct's success is their copywriter, John Carlton. If you look up some of his old saleletters, you'll see how he moved so many DVDs. His stuff could compel your grandma to buy a DVD on self defense.
@@TheKitchenerLeslie lol. Yes I’m well aware of his secret death touch black ops buzz lines.
@@systemacanada That stuff works though. As a copywriter, I've actually tested the techniques and proven them. Here's one of my favorite headlines, hopefully it will give you a chuckle: "World Famous Streetfighter Will Give You A FREE GUN... Just To Prove To You He Can Take It Away From You Bare-Handed... As Easy As Candy From A Baby!"
@@TheKitchenerLeslie oh I know it does. I worked in marketing for 15 years. I just don’t like it for my products.
so many similarities to other styles of practice.
Absolutely.
All inclusive system
Thanks for watching.
🌻💝🌻
𝐩𝐫𝐨𝐦𝐨𝐬𝐦