Dirty Fighting & Grappling
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- Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
- All out fighting isn't a sport, of course. But how do we bridge the gap between the two? How do we make sure that we're ready for reality? In today's video, Sifu Aaron takes you through the seemingly contradictory worlds of sport fighting (on the ground) and the realities of survival. Yes, you must have enough skill and experience to know how NOT to get choked out, or to get your arm broken. But you also must have the training - and resolve - to do what it takes to survive.
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Not many grappling instructors show a street fighting element, I like the fact my bjj instructor does teach fighting with no rules. Thank u sifu
That’s a good coach/instructor. There’s no magic bullet and for everything there’s a time and place, so we’ve got to be wise in our approach as it sounds like you are. Thanks for watching and for the input.
This is great stuff and the only thing I would add is and I know I may get a lot of flack for this lol is I think that you should train this with someone who is a good grappler or go to a grappling school for a while and understand how they train. What I mean by that is a novice who has Mount position is different a good blue belt or purple belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu having Mount position on top of you. I'm not saying that what sifu is suggesting is impractical. I've just found that when people actually enter into a grappling arena and they've never actually grappled with grapplers everything goes out the window. Just like someone who does stand up and says oh if I was fighting a boxer I would do this and before they know if they've been hit with a four punch combo and they're on their back. Or someone who says I would do this to a Thai boxer one good Thai kick and that's the end of the fight because they've never felt that power. And although I know it's not always possible I think training with good grapplers even bringing them as guests to the school for a seminar and having them pull off a triangle choke on you or put that pressure on you or take you down hard out of nowhere those are the experiences I think we need to have in order to make this stuff work. And you said it best you don't rise to your expectations you fall to your level of training. Now I could be wrong but I think we need the experience of having good grapplers sitting on us or taking us down getting that energy so we know how to respond. Hopefully I am making sense.
Love your videos
Great input, thanks. And we agree that, though no approach is perfect, that a professional mix of sport-based training (stand up and grappling) alongside the self-defense methodology is best. If a student has never been in the ring, then they have no idea what it’s like to have punches coming at them. Boxing is the best way to “remedy” that. Same thing with ground fighting. If someone has never wrestled nor done BJJ, they’re gonna have a hard time. This approach, we think, avoids the two extremes of pure sport thinking or believing that you can just eye jab everyone and that’s all there is to it. Like I said, great input. We truly believe that there’s no perfect way to train so we need intellectual honesty and professionalism in our approach.
Probably the best side control explanation I’ve ever seen
Wise words indeed, from a great teacher!
Nasty gnarly stuff. Sifu Aaron gives a lesson gnarly/nasty kind of fighting. Which is obviously needed. Great lesson.
Thanks for the input, Mike.
Hello, very good and interesting. I am German and did not understand everything exactly. Especially the "hard" part or story from about the 7.00 minute. Can you or someone comment on this as text, i.e. write it. Thank you and Greets from Medellin.
Aaron was talking about how some of the old “rough and tumble” Scots-Irish would grow and file their nails to make them better weapons for eye-gouging. Plus, they practiced trying to actually pluck the eye out and some even kept them as trophies. Nasty stuff, isn’t it? We aren’t suggesting you do that…we’re just reporting some history here lol. Anyway, thanks for watching and for letting us know about the language barrier too. Hope this helped.
Just be aware of potential disease and blood-born pathogens. Of course if it's your life, you take the risk but it's definitely something to consider.