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N2IT wrote: » She went from white belt to yellow belt in Krav Maga. She has been doing it since she turned 6 and she will be 8 in January so it was a long road, but she finally got it. Keep in mind this is a very strict place this is not a belt factory. Just thought I would share that, I am very proud of her.
Bl8ckr0uter wrote: » Is it traditional karate or more Americanized?
Bl8ckr0uter wrote: » Awesome. I'm a Orange belt in tang soo do and I've been trying to find a shop so I can cross black belt off my goal list. Is it traditional karate or more Americanized?
Slowhand wrote: » Very cool, big congrats to your daughter. I've got a couple of buddies that train Krav Maga, and I have to say it looks like a lot of fun. I've already invested about 10 years of my life working on Choy Li Fut kung fu, or I'd have jumped on that bandwagon, myself. I hope she sticks with it, martial arts can be a big confidence-booster, especially for young children, and working with a school that puts more emphasis on skill than rank is very important.
N2IT wrote: » Since it's Winter season they train with their mittens, scarfs, and coats. They do seasonal training so you can turn their clothing into weapons against them.
Bl8ckr0uter wrote: » Awesome. I'm a Orange belt in tang soo do and I've been trying to find a shop so I can cross black belt off my goal list.
Plantwiz wrote: » Martial Arts Belts, White Belt, Black Belts, Green Belts, Blue Belts at Century Martial Arts
Bl8ckr0uter wrote: » I totally did not read the entire post. Sorry for the assumption, Krav Maga is pretty intense. How did she get involved in it? Do you practice?
N2IT wrote: » Naaa I did Judo for several years, but I have a very bad neck injury from being a stupid teenager. Now I just focus on my children. I like Krav Maga for my daughter and I think I will either get my son into Judo or bring him straight into Brazlian Jiu Jitsu. It just depends on his development. I have large floor mat and several different punching bags and pads.
Psoasman wrote: » Congrats to your daughter! That's impressive. I have a 1st degree black in Tae-Kwon-Do, but it's been years since I studied. When my boys get older, I'd like to get them into it.
N2IT wrote: » It's Israeli fighting style. Krav Maga = Contact Combat. It's mainly strikes, knees, elbows, wrist locks, neck chokes, foot stomps, hammer fist. She is still learning the basics, but she throws 4 types elbows and can get out of all sorts of holds. Her strikes are beastly lol, both fist and hammer. I have her hitting the bag 2 nights a week along with her training 2-3 times a week. Her kicks are coming around. Mainly front kicks with heel and and more defensive push off. And there is the round kick and leg strikes. Like Muay Thai. Where you lift your knee up and then turn into your opponent and strije the lower leg or knee. It takes a lot of dedication. The only other activities she does is Soccer when the season is here and ice skating.
N2IT wrote: » She went from white belt to yellow belt in Krav Maga. She has been doing it since she turned 6 and she will be 8 in January so it was a long road, but she finally got it. .
SteveLord wrote: » A portion of it is for the self defense factor right? When was the last time you saw someone in the news that defeated a criminal with martial arts? Or a bully in school? Yeah, I'm a little skeptic about it's value. The wife wants to put our son in Tae Kwon Doe...and I rightfully accused her that she just wants to see him in the outfit.
erpadmin wrote: » I used to study Aiki-Jujitsu with a buddy of mine for a year during high school (many moons ago). I had always wanted to get back into it...aside from the homework I did to read up Kava Maga, I saw there are a couple of reputable schools in NYC that are extremely hardcore. The one place I looked at, the sensei/instructor takes his students back to the Holy Land for seminars/training. But I think what people get out of this particular martial art from what I read is if you pick it up quickly, you can progress quickly (like with everything else)...but what you are learning in the beginning would be more than enough to deal with that drunken moron at the bar. LOL. Thanks for this N2...and best of luck to your daughter...it sounds like no one will be messing with your family...lmao. Did your SO do any training herself in anything?
apena7 wrote: » Yes, most martial arts are of little value in real-world scenarios because you are trained to follow the rules of the "sport." A criminal will always have the advantage over someone who trains for competitions because the criminal won't have any rules. However, Krav Maga is a combat system and is practical for real-world scenarios. But with any combat system, the real training is psychological as you must be prepared to use the tool of violence to injure or kill in order to survive. By the way, congrats to your daughter N2IT!
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