I Tried Ninjutsu
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- Опубликовано: 10 июн 2022
- I tried Ninjutsu, the art of the Ninja! We practiced rolls, weapons like the bo, and did a bit of “randori”!
Big thanks to @TheNinjaEveryDay for the help with this video! @ChapelHillQuestMartialArts
Want to learn more from me? check out my website
www.senseiseth.com
Thank you Sensei Seth for visiting our dojo! You’re welcome back anytime!
I like how the sensei is actually humble and not really boastful or talking about how much better he is than anyone else. This guy is a legitimate TEACHER which is nice to see.
Really liking this 'actually try it out" thing you have going. It's like actual journalism!
Mad respect to the sensei... understands that what hes teaching is a martial art and doesnt say that its anything other than that
Seeing that woman cry at the end because she earned her blackbelt was super heartwarming. Whether or not this is the most effective or dangerous or whatever that woman worked really hard towards something that was meaningful to her and she accomplished it. If that ain't the spirit of martial arts I don't know what is
“I did some jujitsu”
I'm not even kidding when I say you should take Icy Mike to these things just to see him go from his fuming state to accepting it till the end of the class. 😂
Try HEMA please. Like technical HEMA. The medieval combat video was just bashing people around in armor but proper HEMA actually has a lot of technique in the swordsmanship
The “flow sparring” drilled here with consensual elements is actually an extremely good way to train and drill. Fantastic tool to add some chaos without overwhelming students, letting them focus on mechanics and finding opportunities for application in a safe way. I think full on sparring is overrated, and using more limited sparring drills (I.e, goal oriented sparring) or flow sparring that is more playful and safe (like this or much of Thai sparring) is far better for skill development
Does art of ninjutsu also include teaching charisma, because damn this teacher is full of it.
As a long time practitioner of Ninjutsu, I have this to say: Excellent work on your part, approaching without prejudice and with real appetite to learn. This is because Ninjutsu is easily exploited by"ninja masters"and has been ridiculed because of that.
It's cool doing these types of arts, "slow" instead of everyone ending up at the ER.
Loved seeing all that wrestling during the Randori session, it would be great to see a wrestling focused video.
Really appreciate that you went in with an open mind, but still asked pertinent, insightful questions. I co-taught a self-defense class on campus when I was in college with a dude who did Toshindo. I was initially skeptical (long before we started the class), but after we worked out together some, it was pretty clear he knew his stuff. I actually underestimated him a bit (totes my bad, bias is a helluva drug), and assumed he had no ground game. He ended up catching me in a knee bar, and I was like "Well, damn. Won't make that mistake again." lol
Respect to you, learning all these different martial arts and taking us along on your journey! As if you weren't a lethal weapon already!😁
Lol look when the karate guy is under pressure he starts wrestling. Or are those karate techniques too?
Man, it's just an super smart idea, to go to martial arts places, which practice traditional arts, but pick out the ones where the teacher is also a BJJ black belt, so people online won't just crap all over them :)
Excellent class! Ninjutsu is something I still practice daily. As others have noted I think this teacher does a great job of not falling into the “mystic” trap. It’s a battlefield art with a core set of techniques, a great ethical philosophy and endless applications. Not so different from an infantry skillset.
Thank you for highlighting the art I’ve practiced for 40+ years. You did us caring justice. Thank you!
My ninjutsu master used to study kendo and he was also a practicing judo master. We were doing espionage, capture the flag, sneak missions, blending into your environment, that drop down thing you do with a rope from above, infiltration, hand to hand combat, weapon use (ALL OF THEM including guns), grappling, wrestling, swordsmanship (although more practically and not in a fancy way) in a forest where you had to actually attack a stronghold at night with guards who were your fellow clansmen.