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what inspired you to take a MA?

  • 19-08-2012 5:39pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 666 ✭✭✭scottie pippen


    this is probably been done before, but what inspired you to take a MA?

    there's a couple of reasons why I started training, but the one that comes to mind is a video I seen of Andy hug,

    the video was a highlight reel posted on strength training forum, in one section andy is dead-lifting what looked to be an absolutely massive amount of weight, which was impresive by itself, but his axe kicks blew me away, so I Joined kickboxing about a week later


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,621 ✭✭✭yomchi


    This man and this film, in 1987 aged 10. :)



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 666 ✭✭✭scottie pippen


    yomchi wrote: »
    This man and this film, in 1987 aged 10. :)



    I think I prefer Uma Thurman in that jump suite! ;)

    images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTBRjQTiVF9bHgRH4XMHCiyxATNClXkomeSe4InPeDplEgCDxBM


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 455 ✭✭Jonah42


    Friend got me to watch this Pride fight:

    fedor-thumb.jpg

    Started Judo and BJJ that very summer :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,630 ✭✭✭Zen65


    this is probably been done before, but what inspired you to take a MA?

    Probably this guy in the 70's, though it was a decade later that I actually started my training. I chose karate rather than Kung Fu as the college club looked better.



    Z


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,708 ✭✭✭✭Mr. CooL ICE


    Joe Rogan UFC commentary :o. Due to his explanations of the ground aspect of MMA, i found an appreciation for all the aspects of BJJ and decided to try out what interested me.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,674 ✭✭✭Peetrik


    Street fighter 2... and ninjas


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 297 ✭✭SaoriseBiker


    Zen65 wrote: »
    Probably this guy in the 70's, though it was a decade later that I actually started my training. I chose karate rather than Kung Fu as the college club looked better.



    Z
    Yes indeed, good old Grasshopper :) Used to come on about 5.00 on UTV on a Saturday after the football results if I remember rightly. Growing up in a country town in the 70's there was no martial arts club, so we used to improvise by getting martial arts magazines and books. Whatever we could take form it, say a Judo sweep or Kung Fu punch or Aikido lock, it was always referred to as a " Karate trick " regardless :D

    Here's what really mad me a life long martial arts nut. Baz Ruttin in one of his books tells how he and his brother when on a family holiday in the south of France as a nipper, snook in through the toilet window of a cinema to see Enter the Dragon in French and was hooked on martial arts since !!!!! Those were the days -



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 666 ✭✭✭scottie pippen


    Peetrik wrote: »
    Street fighter 2... and ninjas

    Sagat was your fav character?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,674 ✭✭✭Peetrik


    Sagat was your fav character?

    Nah Ken, my mate always got Ryu first... bastard


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 673 ✭✭✭pearsquasher


    I saw Seven Samurai around 1987 - age 13 - which caused me to join a kung fu club. (The first MA I encountered)

    Meanwhile I read everything i could find in my local library on martial arts and I
    realized that there were so many differences. I discovered that Japanese classical traditions were the ones I saw used in Seven Samurai - no high kicks, no trying to mimic animals, no somersaults, no breaking bits of wood.... just good guys using weapons against bad guys in the mud and rain... with a sense of noble justice that made all the hollywood ninja/kungfu crap I saw look like cartoons.

    Then I found a book on the ninjutsu of Hatsumi Masaaki and realised this was the stuff to do - pragmatic, use of weapons, non-competitive and zero silliness (despite the crappy ninja films out at the time)

    Then............ I saw an ad for a "Togakure Ryu Ninpo Taijutsu" club opening in Blackrock. Turns out it was Bujinkan, Hatsumi's organisation and I left kung fu in 1989 and never looked back.

    Ok, ok.. i admit I thought the arcade game "shinobi" was bloody brilliant too :)





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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,559 ✭✭✭RoboRat


    Honestly, I could say Van Damme movies or King of the Kickboxers but in reality it was getting the ****e knocked out of me every day in school, resulting in being hospitalised for a month when it went way too far one time.

    A lot of other factors contributed to why I was the target of bullying but I took up Karate for that reason... not that it did a whole lot of good at the time as compliant classmates in a dojo are not the same as the school psycho who doesn't play by the rules and throw a punch in a specific way!

    But in fairness, one night when I was attacked many years later, all of it kicked in and I found a new love for it coupled with K1 & MMA becoming more popular. Then when I smashed my knee and I wasn't able to play football anymore I was looking to fill the void and I got back into MA.

    Kind of wish I never gave up as I always loved it but my passion for football was always bigger... plus it put me through college!


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 15,812 Mod ✭✭✭✭smacl


    Inspired, nope, told more like! A director in the company I worked for was mates with a local Karate instructor on Gardiner street, and all the young lads in the company were rounded up and told to take up Karate. I stuck with it for a couple of years and loved it at the time, but only got inspired after I'd already been there for a few months. I did like the opening scene from the Karate Kid though, where the little dude gets attacked by all the beefy dudes, and it turns out not only are there more of them, and they're bigger, but they're also all Karate heads and beat the living crap out of him. Priceless!

    Wasn't particularly inspired to take up tai chi chuan either, more a bit drunk on the way home from the pub with the GF and convinced her it would be a few laughs and a bit of relaxation. A few laughs it was, with wrestling thrown in on the first night, and full contact sparring a couple of weeks later. Relaxing didn't kick in until we got to the pub after class. To be fair, the GF kept it up for six months, but it wasn't quite what she'd signed up for. I loved it, and while I don't train nearly enough any more, still do.

    I tend to be inspired by people who are good at what they do, particularly those that are much better than me (most of 'em), and this more often than not happens on the mats. I also get inspired by the sheer effort some people put in, and their willingness to carry a fight to someone much bigger and more skilled than they are, in the full belief that they will totally destroy their opponent. I'm further inspired on the those occasions it works for them ;)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,717 ✭✭✭Raging_Ninja


    parents were worried about me when i was young with regards to bullying and since they found out a karate course was going they brought me to it - but then that ended after a few months and that was that.

    When I went to college I signed up to the karate club there and stuck with it for a few months. During the summer the head bouncer at the bar I worked in started teaching some judo to staff, and I fell in love with it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 205 ✭✭Andrew H


    I watched all the Martial Arts films - No Retreat No Surender, Nico, Hard to Kill, Kick Boxer, Bruce Lee's films and loved them all. I also had the High Score on Shinobi in the local Snooker Hall/Amusements in Dun Laoghaire.... :-)

    I got bored lifting weights in the Gym and I always wanted a Black Belt. But I wanted a Black Belt in a Martial Art that was superior to Kick Boxing as it seemed like every second person who practiced around my area (Sallynoggin) had a Kick Boxing Title, what I dident realise at the time was that they were part of a great club in Dun Laoghaire which held numerous titles, in hindsight I should have joined there!!

    I read an article in an English Martial Arts magazine which claimed Kung Fu beat Kick Boxing in most competitions so I joined the Pai Lum Kung Fu club in Blackrock when Pai Lum fell apart we switched to YMAA and trained in Long Fist and White Crane. I spent 12 years training in Kung Fu and then switched to Brazillian Jiu Jitsu which I have been training in for the last 6 years recently receiving my Purple Belt with Team Balance.

    The best part of training in Martial Arts for me is the extra confidence it has given to me plus it has helped me to become friends with people from all walks of life and different Nationalities.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 673 ✭✭✭pearsquasher


    also had the High Score on Shinobi in the local Snooker Hall/Amusements in Dun Laoghaire

    ...hmm... i was down the road in the Farm ;)
    Pai Lum Kung Fu club in Blackrock

    That wasn't Carol Stephenson, Newpark was it? That's where I was in '88 before Bujinkan.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 205 ✭✭Andrew H


    That wasn't Carol Stephenson, Newpark was it? That's where I was in '88 before Bujinkan.

    Yep thats were I was training with Carol, Enda & Steve would have been around 93 onwards.

    I really enjoyed training there, good people :)


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