Many new students feel that studying Karate will help them defend themselves against attackers. Sadly, Karate is not a very effective means of protection unless you are very skilled at it. How long does this take? It could be months, it could be years, or it could even a lifetime. This all depends on the student, the sensei, and the style of Karate. What good is knowing how to do 18 kata if you can only defend yourself against predetermined attacks. In order to protect yourself using Karate, your movements must become instinctive. Using Karate must become second nature in order for anyone to use Karate effectively.
One of my fears regarding the UFC/MMA trend is that it's a sport, and only a sport. It's marketing is a blend of pro basketball, and pro wrestling in some ways. MMA participants share the in-your-face, sensationalist type of hype that pro wrestlers use, and with the exception of the IFL, the individual is stressed in all the hype, not a team (similar to what the NBA did when Jordan came along). What missing from all of this is the moral component in using your fists, feet, and armbars to pummel another human being.
You may disagree with me on this, saying, "What the heck are you saying, Teodoro? Have you ever watched a Van Damme, Seagal, or Bruce Lee movie??? There's gore and violence aplenty, and much of it is gratuitous!" Agreed, but the place where impressionable youngsters went to learn the skills they saw their heroes perform on the big screen was usually a martial arts school that either continued, or descended from a tradition that stressed things like:
- Respect for others, especially elders and senior students or instructors
- Courteous behavior to all
- Humility
- Perserverance
- Cleanliness in uniform, training hall, and language
Hey Nathan, this is my first comment here but I wanted to let you know that you've got a great blog here. I really like your approach of covering all the bases and you make a lot of great points.
ReplyDeleteI'm leaving this comment because I just wanted to thank you for posting a link to Goodin's article here and tell you that I completely agree with you. He says it point blank, "Karate should not, under any circumstances be learned for self-defense." You expand that to include TKD, Aikido, etc., and then you touch upon how UFC/MMA is just sport, and you're absolutely 100% correct.
There are a lot of people out there who join the local McDojo because they honestly want to learn how to defend themselves and their loved ones from a criminal assailant. Unfortunately, they don't realize that they're not actually learning something truly functional for self-defense, but are instead led to believe that their black-belt is proof of their fighting capacity. You can't really blame them. They begin their training with a sincere desire to learn something functional but are surrounded by those who perpetuate the misconception that TMAs such as those you listed are the answer. Even MMA isn't optimized for real self-defense.
There are those of us who do understand the reality of it, however, and I think it's our responsibility to try and educate as many people as possible. Thanks for helping to spread the truth! Well done!
Thanks for the thoughtful comments Nico. When I started in martial arts, now over thirty years ago, I thought that what I was learning was self-defense, but it wasn't, as I later learned. Then when I became a boxer and kickboxer, I thought I was "all that." I wasn't. It's all about compromise. Now I value traditional martial arts for the traditions that add so much to the lives of those who train in them, same for the sport arts.
ReplyDeleteGreat comment.