MrStab said:
I'm thinking about starting Boxing soon and possibly doing Krav Maga next year and I was wondering what experience my fellow Escapists had to offer or any advice regarding these two or any other forms of martial art also general discussion thread regarding it.
The style you choose does not matter. Look into
how it is taught.
Classic martial arts classes--learning forms, point-sparring, etc.--are good for flexibility and balance, but are far too abstract for any kind of defense capability. Some of the more practical martial arts (like krav maga) have their own problems for real-world applications.
1. Watch two nine-billionth degree black belts get into a real fight. They'll be using white belt techniques, nine times in ten. Reason? If you walk up to someone and swing at their face, odds are you'll hit them.
2. Too many of the more advanced techniques are
counter-attack. That's why so many matches look like two people circling each other, waiting for the
other person to make the first move. Because they are.
3. Other techniques are just plain useless in a real fight. Jump kicks? Please. You're giving up balance--you're
greatest ally. Reaching up to kick someone in the head? You might as well punch them in the foot (plus you expose your groin). These moves look cool, and learning them is good for conditioning, but they're stupid to pull out in an actual fight.
4. Point bout systems (where the match goes until someone lands a "hit," then the action stops) teach two very wrong principles. Firstly, that you're doing something wrong if you take any hits. Sorry, but you
will be hit, so you'd better learn how to deal with that. If you never take a real hit, your body (no matter how many belts you have) will panic the first time you're punched in the head.
5. The second wrong thing it teaches you is that you'll be able to stop your opponent with one hit. That's for movies. When you land that punch or kick, you'd better be ready for whatever comes next. Sometimes it's advantageous to take a hit in order to give three, and your opponent may be just about to pull that on you.
6. Groundfighting and submission holds are all well and good... when there is someone around to break up the fight, or if you're planning to go "all the way" and incapacitate the opponent. Otherwise, you've just trapped yourself on the ground with your opponent, and if he has back-up, you're vulnerable. In a real-world self-defense situation, you're much better off if you get your opponent down and then
escape. And in the real world, if you break your opponent's arm, knock them unconscious, or kill them,
you could be doing some serious jail time for overstepping your bounds if it looks like you
could have gotten away instead.
7. Weapons, weapons, weapons. Any true self-defense system worth its salt will tell you, "Get a weapon. You're a human being--use a tool!" There is no honor in going hand-to-hand with an attacker. If someone attacks you, it's probably because they have some advantage. Usually, that's numbers or weapons. Grab something and start using it. And if you get in a knife fight? You
will get cut, even if it's accidental. Be ready for it.
Basically, keep these things in mind as you make your decision. Stuff like tae kwon do and most kung fu is great for building balance and body awareness, which is very useful in a fight... but a tae kwon do class isn't going to teach you to fight.
Boxing is probably one of the most useful for getting the basics--footwork and distance, attacking
while defending, and how to take a hit--but the obvious problem is all the focus on punching guys in the head (often a
big mistake without gloves).
Krav maga, jiu jitsu, and other "grapple/throw" styles are nice to know if you end up on the ground... but, as I mentioned above, they are problematic for when you want to
get away after the takedown. Also, they put you in a position where you almost
have to break the opponent's joints, or kill them, which is
not a good plan most of the time unless you're in Special Forces.
The "hot item" a couple years back was Muay Thai... which isn't just a fighting style. It requires years of conditioning to get the bones of your arms and legs ready (ie, incapable of feeling) to do the things you need. Knee someone in the head without that conditioning, and you'll go down with them.
Even the weirdest arts can be useful, and some of the "best" can be ridiculously impractical. T'ai chi isn't the most practical for fighting, but it is unbeatable for teaching balance and weight transfer (which will improve your ability to respond in a fight). Fencing seems goofy, but it's actually one of the most practical weapon styles taught when you understand the theory behind it.
It's all about being aware of what a class is actually teaching you, and what it's actually preparing you for (or not).