Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Win a Fight with Rabid Monkey Training Attitude

By Al Case


[]Mad Dog Karate training, rabid monkey kung fu, or whatever, this is the attitude you have to have if you train in any martial art. You simply must shape your mind so that you have what it takes to survive in a kill or be killed fight. You have to learn how to take off the gloves and get down and dirty.

First thing you have to know is that, when in a fight, you can't be polite. Simply, while you're applying Friendship 101, the other guy is looking for an angle. While you're holding out a hand for a shake, he's making a fist.

Second thing, if you are going to walk away and be among the living, is that the nastier the technique you do, the better your chances of living are going to be. The eyes are a great target, poke him in one and you win. The apples are also good to go for, a slam dunk in the junk means no more punk.

Third thing you have to learn, if you want to be the one that walks away alive, is that how you face your training is going to be how you face your opponent. This is really what the whole thing boils down to, and it is what this bit of writing is geared to.

Look, it's good to be polite on the mat, and conduct yourself like a nice fellow, but you have to be willing to go that extra bit of sweat and blood when it comes to your personal work out. Don't whine at push ups, see how many extra you can do. When everybody else is bent and wheezing, make yourself stand and breath easy.

And, take your training to the next level, take some advice from the masters, and go the extra mile. Mas Oyama, the fellow who started Kyokushin Karate, went and lived in the mountains for a year, body building, meditating, and breaking huge rocks with his fists. The result was a fellow who was a winner, and who rose to the top of the karate world.

And the martial arts are filled with stories of people who stepped out of the training hall and into the real world, and drove themselves on to greater height and superhuman deeds. Morihei Ueshiba became a definite fanatic, spending his inheritance that he might go everywhere and train with any martial artist of note. The results of his hard core fanaticism are easily understood when one takes note of the wide spread popularity of Aikido.

I could go on and on, but the message is clear. If you want to get somewhere in the martial arts, put aside your school book dreams and learn to commit yourself. Mad dog Karate, rabid monkey kung fu, or whatever, learn to demand more of yourself, and force yourself to be bigger and better in any martial art you do.




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