What form of martial art do you practice?

Scuba_Ben, what’s ‘CMK’ taekwondo? I’ve not heard of it? Any big differences to ITF or WTF?

Used to do Uechi Ryu Karate back in the day. Haven’t had a chance to practice for 5 or 6 years, though.

Judo at around age 9 to 12.

Hapkido for about 6 months.

Twaekwondo for about a year.

Finished up with 2 years of Karate/Judo (went to several judo and karate camps and competitions around the New Jersey area).

Now I’m trying to get back in shape and tackle western medieval martial arts.

Though the emphasis is not in unarmed combat (although there are grappling, punching and kicking techniques, as well as dagger combat), it is an interesting martial art form. Of course fencing (long sword, great sword, rapier) is the main study, but it also deals with polearms, staves, etc.

I’m a master of die chi. If I get in a fight, I play dead.

Aikido, aikikai style, nine years.

I agree with Ambush and Carter. Marksmanship is a martial art. So is any kind of warfare. But if you want to stick with the ones that develop the user’s body, not to mention spirit, I think the Western martial arts are boxing, and fencing. Never boxed, but I fenced in college, foil and saber.

I agree wholeheartedly!

Also I did try modern fencing for a little while back in the day. A friend of one of my uncle’s taught here in New Jersey.

I didn’t like it much. It was certainly a physical sport, good for body and mind, but it was just too sport-like for me.

This is what first had me investigating historical (medieval and renaissance specifically) western martial arts, as it teaches concepts and technique used in deadly combat.

I would hesitate to call modern fencing a martial art in the sence that it is not studied as a form of self-defence or method of ‘warfare’. It’s purely sport.

I’m a piss-poor student in escrima, a Filipino stick and knife fighting class. Actually, I’ve already made first rank, and I’m pretty good when it comes to using the knife, but I’m still a little slow with the sticks. So slow, in fact, last time we sparred, my partner smashed my helmet.

Yeah, I need to work on that whole “dodging” thing…

That one I had to look up. It stands for
Chang Moo Kwan Tae Kwon Do (never heard of it myself). I found this quote about it:

That’s froma Canadian club at www.jungdotaekwondo.com, and they seem to practise the Taeguk Poomse.

Chin Mu Kwan, history at http://home.swbell.net/rianardj/kang.htm

As far as I can tell, it’s just like ITF. If there’s any federation-level politics, I don’t know about it.

Havn’t practiced for a while, but took Bujinkan Budo Taijutsu for several years, it’s an old Japanese jujitsu style.

I can’t help it, but everytime I see WTF taekwondo, I read “What the fck taekwondo", sorry but it gives me the comic idea of a cross between taekwondo and drunken style kung fu, where your opponent is left in dumbfounded dissbelief as you pummel them to the ground, mouthing "What the fck” as they fall.

<----- This is in judo.

I have done tae-kwon-do, a little shotokan, and some other styles, and even some Western fencing. Currently mostly jujitsu, although I have no rank in it.

Regards,
Shodan

Aki-Jutsu here.

My father started me on the basics of rolling/falling/technique as long ago as I can remember.
It’s kinda like aikido, but more violent. We resolve the conflict by ending it as abruptly as possible. :slight_smile: Thus, the moves are more or less the same. We just like to use strikes a bit more and sometimes include Boken or Jo work as well.

Shuri-Ryu Karate-Do…

I’ve also done a little judo and some jujitsu… but mainly the Karate…

I’m a little unhappy that it’s been awhile since my last class… Hoping to pick it up again as soon as I’m able…

The hit and run.

Hwa Rang Do … brownie points to anyone who’s heard of it.

I have a brown belt in cowardice.

karomon isn’t that the Korean version of Japanese Jujitsu or maybe I should say an analogue of Japanese Jujitsu, since ideas and methods seem to have moved between Korea and Japan a great deal over the centuries.

  1. LOL @ John Carter of Mars.

  2. I messed around with a couple styles of karate and several grappling arts as a kid and teenager, but I practice nothing right now and haven’t for a number of years. If I have the time, in a semester or two, I hope to take the fencing course at my school. You never know when you will be walking down a dark street at night and get waylaid by a bunch of musketeers!

  3. Could Griffin, NinjaChick, or somebody else knowledgeable in the Korean martial arts tell me what the ITF and WTF in their posts stands for? TIA.

Mephisto -

ITF is “International Taekwondo Federation”
WTF is “World Taekwondo Federation”

Not being much for politics I’m not sure on the difference between the two…I get the impression that the ITF is more focussed on competition fighting than WTF and has it’s own set of forms/poomse.

Technically, the taekwondo we practise is WTF, it’s more self defence oriented (insofar as that’s possible with taekwondo) and more about effective fighting rather than effective competing. I could be entirely wrong about this, we’re just kinda doing our own thing and using the WTF forms lol

Thanks, dragon! :slight_smile: