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Posted On:
9/29/2008 2:32pm
Style: Kenpo & Jiu-Jitsu--
Here is a link to a YouTube video of the Academy of Health and Martial Arts:
YouTube - Academy of Health & Martial Arts Demonstration -
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Posted On:
10/23/2008 9:01pm
Style: Judo--
Where now
Thank you for suffering for my amusement. How long and why did you stick with this school for so long? Where are you training now? I haven't visited this school but have been to Lamy's Black Belt Academy a few times and have no complaints against them.
http://www.lbbatkd.com/index.htm -
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Posted On:
10/29/2008 11:10am
Style: Kenpo & Jiu-Jitsu--
I stuck with them primarily because I wanted my black belt. The training there was, as I'm sure you already know, not good. However, I was also training at other places and so I was able to take the techniques that were being taught, and modify them and train them in my own training time to be practical and effective.
Originally Posted by Crazy Mike
Cerio's Kenpo is not "bad" as a system....it's just that many of the techniques need modification and interpretation in order to be effective as practical self defense....I know enough about the martial arts and have enough experience in other arts to do that interpretation and modifcation on my own time. So, I was suffering though the classes there so that I could get the raw material that I could then do my own work to, on my own time.
However, when they sprung the 10k gimmick on me, and then did a few other unethical things that I'm going to keep personal, I left. -
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Posted On:
11/19/2008 12:41pm -
Featherweight
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Posted On:
11/20/2008 12:11pm
Style: Shotokan Karate--
inexperienced Blackbelts you say, sounds like a McDojo to me. Were these blackbelts usually underage children/minors or were they just rushed through the initial training and gradings?. Having said that, My Dojo had bad or generally inexperienced blackbelts who couldn't answer my simple questions and what they use to tell me is. I don't know how to do that yet or what is a roundhouse kick. Unfortunately I'am some similarities between your Dojo experiences and My own, and I simpathise with you, because I know how difficult finding a Genuine Dojo or Sensei is.
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NOTE TO SELF - MOAR GRAPPLE - GET A NORMAL HAIR CUT - REPEAT
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Posted On:
11/20/2008 12:31pm--
...and she almost became our Vice PresidentI'm sure that everyone has known someone at some point in your life that is not that bright, not that well educated, but loves to tell other people what to think and how to live, but that can't take criticism themselves and who get really touchy and bitchy if people disagree with them or present ideas that differ from their own. -
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Posted On:
11/20/2008 3:25pm
Style: Kenpo & Jiu-Jitsu--
LOLZ.
Originally Posted by PeopleSoft
To share another story...
One night, we're going through techniques and we come across a particularly terrible technique....one that is very impractical in that it involves kicking an opponent and then assuming that they've fallen down due to the kick, then jumping up and landing on the fallen attacker and striking / clawing at the eyes. Now, not to mention the illegality of taking someone that you've just kicked down and instead of retreating, jumping on top of them and trying to blind them (hello civil and criminal charges), there's also the danger of the basic strategy of jumping on someone and standing over them....you'd more than likely catch a kick in the groin or get pulled to the ground and end up in a grappling situation or scramble, etc.
Now, having had students question the practicality of the technique for years, one night in class, after she has the entire class run through the technique and says (I'm paraphrasing here):
"Some of you wonder if you'd actually do this technique on the street. Some of you have asked about whether or not it's advisable to be that aggressive or risk attacking them on the ground.
Well, we don't care about any of that. We don't even think about that, because we're KENPO PRACTITIONERS!"
When she said that, I think I looked around and shook my head, just amazed at the amount of sheer incompetence and ignorance of what she was saying. Like I said before, if it was just her, then whatever......but her teaching impressionable teens and young adults that is just downright unethical and dangerous. -
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Posted On:
12/15/2008 9:20pm
Style: Kenpo & Jiu-Jitsu--
I have recently run into a former instrucltor at the academy who now trains at a new school. He enlightened me about a number of things that went on at the school during his tenure there that make me even more happy that I left. Recently, I had a conversation with the fellow who is their main instructor. He himself is a great martial artist, and is at the end of his rope with them. He needs the job that they provide him with, so he sucks it up and puts up with their crap, but to listen to him rant about them was an interesting experience, as it showed me that not even their closest instructor and most senior student who runs one of their schools has any respect for them or anything good to say about them.
Additionally, it was brought to my attention by that same instructor that the "master" of the school, James Rath, had an affair a few years ago, with a student. Now, people's personal lives are no business of anyone's. However, for a "master" of a school that stresses the internal arts and the moral and ethical dimensions of the martial arts to so flagrantly and unethically abuse his influence and power and so hypocritically violate the tents that he so fervently preaches just sickens me.
Having spoken now to about a dozen people outside of the school who have either done business with them or known them in some capacity, I have not met a single one who has had a good thing to say about them personally, their martial arts, or their business. -
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Posted On:
12/16/2008 3:46am
Style: Judo--
I've only been there a few times, mostly for sparring or if they rarely have grappling. They're nice people and fill a family niche, which is me being nicer than calling them a McDojo. They work mostly ITF Tae Kwon Do and have a forms, breaking, point fighting tournament in the spring.
Originally Posted by Rambamatic
Is that the one where uke attacks with a stepping foreward right punch and tori responds with a right high block that swings clockwise while raking the eyes as you step your right leg back and attach with a roundhouse ball kick as uke falls you jump and land above his face, left right claw the eyes, scoop his head with your right leg and then side kick it as you step away? I love that one practicality be damned.
Originally Posted by Rambamatic



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Posted On:
9/23/2008 5:35pm
Style: Kenpo & Jiu-Jitsu
The Academy of Health and Martial Arts in New Hampshire