That is so true - even though i stopped training Chow Gar a year ago, it is now in every breath of my being!Originally posted by Rodnik
To be studied correctly, a martial art becomes a lifestyle, and that\'s quite a committment from anyone.
That is so true - even though i stopped training Chow Gar a year ago, it is now in every breath of my being!Originally posted by Rodnik
To be studied correctly, a martial art becomes a lifestyle, and that\'s quite a committment from anyone.
I thought you were asking for a link, then I read what you wrote again. :duh: :redface:Originally posted by Avicenna
Unfortunately, London is where i used to live, so unfortunately its a bit too far away... 200 milesOriginally posted by ModderrhuI study at YMAA SA, and if the quality of the instructors is comparable, I hope that http://www.ymaalondon.com/ is somewhere near enough. Dr. Yang is strongly traditional, and doesn\'t grade lightly.![]()
That\'s exactly why I\'ll take Taijiquan over Judo and Jiujitsu any day. When I practised those two arts, they left me feeling empty, by comparison. Not that there\'s anything wrong with them, they were just not for me. The depth in something as deceptively simple as Silk Reeling still astonishes me.Originally posted by Avicenna
It felt almost like these things had been lost/missing from the karate, which was odd.