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About the Author: Fight SCIENCE

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  1. A Psalm┬аof David.} Blessed┬аbe┬аthe LORD my strength, which teacheth my hands to war,┬аand┬аmy fingers to fight:
    2My goodness, and my fortress; my high tower, and my deliverer; my shield, and┬аhe┬аin whom I trust; who subdueth my people under me. Psalms 144:1-2

  2. I'm was always too climbsy and uncoordinated, now I have a bad knee and I am getting older. So I'm thinking about getting a sawed off shotgun.

  3. Can you please so a video for an old martial artist with limited use of my legs and unfortunately I now have hooligans who are testing me?

  4. That point of view is similar to when bjj claims that 90% of all fights go to the ground. It is misleading and incomplete. That lack of refinement is what martial training is meant to remedy.

  5. Wing Chun is an internal art (based on snake style) but i never ever see western teachers talking about the internal side (meditation and qigong). This (and not drills) will allow you to keep calm when adrenaline would normally be blinding your senses and awareness. Realistic training is essential, but not to keep calm – to be effective! You can only keep calm with daily meditation/qigong.

  6. Every fight is an independent event… it always starts verbally and then escalates… ever hear of the expression it takes two to fight!

  7. Unless you are very very experienced when you start grabbing people and trying to move them around or putting them on the ground you better have some bodyweight behind you or you are going to be on the ground.

  8. Man, it is truly impressive how fast you move with close combat , I wish I knew that when I worked as a driver in public transportation when dealing with violent, belligerent people. ЁЯСНЁЯП╗

  9. Wait does robbery fall under street fighting? Like in my city right now there is this trend of robbers on bikes like they can make it arises town do their did and be out of there in a flash.

  10. When some people train for a year or two they will want to fight to prove to themselves they can fight and their training works. After 3 or more years people lose the ego and don't have anything to prove .

  11. When I was heavily training in trapping, a friend threw a slow punch at me while I was holding a beer in one hand and talking to a friend, and I obviously had time to block it, but the funniest part was I guess I never let him take his hand away, and kept small circle/sticky hand deflecting and retaining his hand in front of a whole a bunch of people without ever stopping my conversation with the other friend. I thought it was the punching friend that was continuing to trap with me, because I wasn't really looking, but then he then he grunting with frustration that he couldn't take his hand out of the engagement. lol. Training is such great fun.

  12. You have obviously trained your assistant extremely well. That extended flurry of strikes and blocks the two of you exchanged was almost elegant.

  13. good video , i will like to say …..most of ppl who practice martial arts and we are talking about let say black belt as a reference they will avoid and know how to avoid fights ….ppl who train for fight learn self control because is essential in a fight and last ppl who know they value as a fighter do not go like a peacock on the street , know how to respect his opponent and make not assumption ….his wick i can take him easy …PS i remember back in my days when i done MA ,in my country, if you have above brown belt and got in a fight on street with one guy or 2 at the same time your still the perpetrator in the easy of law and police because you know what are you doing and have skills to avoid the fight ….except life and death situation ………….very interesting videos refreshing my memory and like you said early on other video PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE that the key

  14. Integrating deep breathing into my day, to day life. I.e. Driving, walking the dog, getting it on with your girl… implementing intentional diaphragm breath, breath holds, and controlled exhales has been a fantastic way to give myself an edge. The idea of being conscious of your state, your environment, charging your Mitochondria, and leaning to breathe evenly when stressed is life changing.

  15. Loved the vid. This is so crucial. In my first street fight i got hit in the face from a guy i could take to the cleaners anyday and me faster than him and some karate skills. What threw me was 1. Anger. 2. He and 2 of his brothers coming at me from 3 sides.

  16. What you dont say to people is that if one is out of shape and other is in good shape that one that is out of shape better to be in shape. And if one does not know that at the begining of the fight, he will find out in about 15 secunds. Anyway, if people want to fight they should go to gym. Only punks fight on the streets. One that treins have no need to hurt other people. He knows what he can do.

  17. Thanks Sifu Mark- you are really onto something with that important idea: the chances of getting into a confrontation with a really trained or pro fighter are slim to none. If it's not worth their while and they defuse or de-escalate and walk away, why would be worth our while even as a (hard-training) amateur fighter? (Arnis, TKD, Bagua) That puts anything in the street as a have to fight situation only if there is no way to walk away or avoid it. It's absolutely not cowardice – I have actually won 100% of the fights I haven't had. It feels good to be undefeated. Let's say it goes the other way- I wreck some random a**hole in the street- guess what? I'm likely going to get a knock on the door from the cops. I will probably have to go to court. When I'm in court, that guy is going to roll in on a wheelchair smirking away… it's going to cost me serious time and money to get it straightened out as self defense. This will be a challenge if it comes to light that I have trained a lot… They'll argue that I or any trained person has a "duty of care" to use restraint…..oho boy. The more training = the less fighting in the street.

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