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I have never taken part in Martial Arts but I will write an essay in MABS.

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    I have never taken part in Martial Arts but I will write an essay in MABS.

    I have to say that after reading this entire I am a little dissappointed. I have never taken part in Martial Arts but have wanted to for many years. However, I wanted to wait until I had finished all of my education before beginning training. As a result, I spent many years just researching different types of martial arts and visiting various schools to observe their classes. After a few years I pretty much narrowed it down to BJJ and Saito Ninjitsu.

    I chose BJJ because I believe that most "real life" fights end up on the grown very quickly, and I think knowing how to fight on the ground and place someone in a submission hold is vital. However, the down side is that BJJ does not involve much (if any) striking. Accordingly, I think that its very important to be competent in striking to a degree. This is due to the fact that most "real life" fights usually start out with a few punches being thrown, and then quickly end up on the ground.

    This is where Saito Ninjitsu became attractive to me. It seems that they incorporate a little bit of everything into their art. Grounding fighting, striking, pressure points, joint locks, etc., all seem to be taught in Saito Ninjitsu.

    I visited quite a few BJJ dojos and liked what I saw. I only went to places that were in some way affiliated with the Gracies, so what I saw was consistent at each dojo/school. Again, the only problem that I had is that there was little striking involved, so my remedy, stemming from advice of the teachers at each school, was to incorporate Muy Thai or Boxing into my training. Since most of the schools also offer Muy Thai and Boxing, in addition to BJJ, I found this to be an effective solution.

    At the time, the only school teaching Saito Ninjitsu was The Temple of The Full Autumn Moon in San Diego. Sensei Phelps was the head instructor. I visited the school a total of five times (over about a 2 or 3 year period), to mainly observe. However, before I could make my final determination of whether to join or not (Again, I wanted to wait until I had finished my advanced degrees), the school basically closed down.

    My initial impresson of the school was good. I liked the way the classes were conducted, the school itself was beautiful, and the atmosphere was nice and condusive to learning the art. However, one thing that really raised a red flag for me, and apparently bothered other students that I talked with, was that Sensei Phelps was rarely ever there! Out of the five times I went to observe, he was only present once. Additionally, the one time he was present I was the only visitor, and he did not bother to acknowledge me, introduce himself, or even make himself available to answer any questions I had about the school. After talking to some of the white belt students, I was told that Sensei Phelps was so busy being a Pastor and attending to his other outside responsibilities, that he rarely made it to class, and that the majority of the classes were taught by Lance Wisdom (I still remember his name to this day, because it sounds so cool : )), and also Steve McGovern. The last time I went to observe I overhead someone saying that Steve had been deployed and would not be back for a while. Im not sure if he came back before the school closed its doors. The other thing that bothered me alot about the school is what I witnessed the one time Sensei Phelps was present. He basically spent about 30 minutes of class time bashing other martial arts, saying why Saito Ninjitsu is so superior to every other martial arts. At one point he was literally making fun of TKD martial artist who "dance around the ring like boxers" in competitions. Sensei Phelps then went on to justify to the students why they never see him performing any of the "rolls" or ground work himself. I didnt have the entire context of why he was addressing the issue, but I surmise that someone had questioned why they never see him doing the "rolls" and "brake falls" that he requires them to do????
    He said something to the effect of him already earning his credibility, and that he didnt need to prove it to anyone. The whole dialogue was really weird and uncomfortable, almost like he was indirectly confronting one of the students who called him out on it.

    Other than that, I thought the school was pretty cool, and I was very likely to join had it not shut down.

    I have since found out that Master Maui Saito is now teaching the original Saito Ninjitsu in Arizona, which was great but also dissappointing since I dont live there.

    However, after perusing Maui's website I came across an part of the website that displays a letter discrediting Sensei Phelps and putting him on a "Renegade List"!!!! Wow. Im not quite sure what that means for those who studied under him such as Mr. McGovern? It sounds like from the "Renegade" letter that Phelps was overstepping his boundaries in some way, and not teaching the art as originally intended. This is MERELY MY PERSONAL OPINION of what I gathered from the letter on Maui Saitos website.

    I remember Lance Wisdom as being an excellent martial artist, and from what I could tell Steve McGovern was very good too. It would be unfortunate and unfair to punish either of these guys because of Phelps being listed as a 'Renegade".

    However, after reading this thread in its entirety it, Im slightly dissappointed by the way Mr. McGovern has handled all of the criticism on this board against his school.

    I find it interesting that he has spent so much time defending his school against the OPINIONS of those who post on this board. If his school is adequate, he need waste no time defending it by responding to opinions that he doesnt agree with. Thats red flag number one.

    Red flag number two is threatening legal action over an alleged copyright violation. If there is indeed a copyright violation, there is no need to address it publicly on this board. You simply excercise your intellectual property rights via a competent IP attorney.

    Red flag number three is challenging a poster to come to your Dojo and prove himself. I thought Saito Ninjitsu taught a quiet confidence? Challenging an anonymous poster on a message board to a confrontation seems a bit beneath a seasoned martial artist.

    Red flad numer four is referring to the same anonymous posters in a derogatory manner, for example, "Duh, moron" is not something that a respected martial artist should ever say to anyone.

    Martial Arts are supposed to teach self discipline, composure, confidence etc. In my opinion, it almost sounds like someone is just posing as Mr. McGovern under a fake posting name, because the kind of defensiveness and immature dialogue does not seem becoming of those who have studied Saito Ninjitsu.

    #2
    Originally posted by DHume View Post
    Martial Arts are supposed to teach self discipline, composure, confidence etc. In my opinion, it almost sounds like someone is just posing as Mr. McGovern under a fake posting name, because the kind of defensiveness and immature dialogue does not seem becoming of those who have studied Saito Ninjitsu.
    Someone who has "never taken part in Martial Arts" should refrain from opining on what they are meant to teach. As a courtesy to a noob though, I'll let you in on something: Martial arts teach fighting. Some styles, even more bluntly, teach killing. If a student can gain "self discipline, composure, confidence, etc." that's great, but all those things should be secondary considerations.

    As far as defensiveness and immaturity go, if you continue to visit TMA schools, you'll find that an appalling number of "masters" are self-deluded, self-absorbed, insecure children who wear their 15th-degree safety blankets around their bloated waists.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by dougguod View Post
      Someone who has "never taken part in Martial Arts" should refrain from opining on what they are meant to teach. As a courtesy to a noob though, I'll let you in on something: Martial arts teach fighting. Some styles, even more bluntly, teach killing. If a student can gain "self discipline, composure, confidence, etc." that's great, but all those things should be secondary considerations.

      As far as defensiveness and immaturity go, if you continue to visit TMA schools, you'll find that an appalling number of "masters" are self-deluded, self-absorbed, insecure children who wear their 15th-degree safety blankets around their bloated waists.
      Why should I refrain from opinining on what every single school I have ever visited has told me within the first 15 minutes of talking with the instructors? I have literally been told the same thing at every school, that participating in martial arts is supposed to teach you discipline, composure and self confidence, in addition to self defense.

      On another note, exactly which styles teach killing?

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by DHume View Post
        Why should I refrain from opinining on what every single school I have ever visited has told me within the first 15 minutes of talking with the instructors?
        You need to read the rules and lurk more. There is so much wrong with this "I heard but, have never expereinced" statment it is laughable.


        I have literally been told the same thing at every school, that participating in martial arts is supposed to teach you discipline, composure and self confidence, in addition to self defense.

        On another note, exactly which styles teach killing?
        All legitimate arts do.

        It is the teacher that determines the focus.


        Murrieta, CA: Tenkobushi Temple? - No BS MMA and Martial Arts

        Comment


          #5
          tl;dr + STFU n(00)b

          In conclusion, DHume, your theoretical hypotheses based on your uneducated observations can only be remedied by training. Until then, your opinion means little, this is by no means an attack, just an educated observation.
          GET A RED BELT OR DIE TRYIN'.
          Originally posted by Devil
          I think Battlefields and I had a spirited discussion once about who was the biggest narcissist. We both wanted the title but at the end of the day I had to concede defeat. Can't win 'em all.
          Originally posted by BackFistMonkey
          I <3 Battlefields...

          Comment


            #6
            Short and sweat
            boxing is the best for hands
            no ninja shit can pull off most of the techniques with the speed and testing boxing has.
            Trust me watching is completely different then actually getting hit. I'm sure while watching UFC I could say oh come on all you gotta do is close the gap and hook him and you win.... But it aint that easy.
            PS

            NOOBNOOBNOOBNOOBNOOB

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by DHume View Post
              On another note, exactly which styles teach killing?
              IIF is right. Any style, in theory, can kill if used properly, or improperly. A punch that would stun when delivered to the jaw might kill if delivered to the temple. A choke held for x-seconds results in unconsciousness but a choke held for x-plus-seconds results in death. A highly trained practioner of any system can choose the level of harm he/she inflicts, including lethality. Unfortunately, a reckless, untrained novice in any style may be unable to not do irreparable harm in the heat of the moment.

              What I was referring to however were not the majority of styles, which teach a range of defensive force levels to meet a range of offensive force levels, but systems designed with the mindset that a conflict would inevitably end in death. I was thinking of, in this category, authentic koryu "battlefield" styles that were used by warriors for whom "Kill or be killed" was not a bumper sticker but,in some eras, a day to day job description. I would also include a lot of the Fillipino martial arts, particularly the blade-based ones. I don't train in FMA's so I, like DHume, may be making erroneous assumptions, but it seems to me that once one or more adversaries pull a knife you're at, or at least approaching, a point where opting to not kill the other guy is more problematic than opting to do so. If I've fallen for FMA hype about Illustrisimo and his contemporaries, please correct me.

              One final thing, DHume. All your posts thus far reflect an interest in ninjutsu. If you insist on enrolling in a ninja dojo you are going to hear a lot of talk about assassination, sentry elimination, and techniques that are so uncontrollably deadly that they can't be used in competition or even practiced in class above mime-speed. If the word "killing" concerns you, you may want to settle for a "mere" sport style like mma, boxing, muay thai, or one of the bjj schools you've supposedly visited.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by DHume View Post
                Why should I refrain from opinining on what every single school I have ever visited has told me within the first 15 minutes of talking with the instructors? I have literally been told the same thing at every school, that participating in martial arts is supposed to teach you discipline, composure and self confidence, in addition to self defense.
                Because you don't know enough about the subject to realize you're being bullshitted. In other words:

                "Why should I refrain from opinining [sic] on what every single used car lot I have ever visited has told me within the first 15 minutes of talking with the salesmen? I have literally been told the same thing at every lot, that the cars here were owned by old ladies and driven only on Sundays, and that I don't need to get them inspected."

                Comment


                  #9
                  Why was my entire post removed? What up with that?

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by DHume View Post

                    I chose BJJ because I believe that most "real life" fights end up on the grown very quickly,
                    I chose a Taurus 24/7 .40 cal for the fin grip so only one person ends up on the ground. :qleft5:

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by TheRuss View Post
                      Because you don't know enough about the subject to realize you're being bullshitted. In other words:

                      "Why should I refrain from opinining [sic] on what every single used car lot I have ever visited has told me within the first 15 minutes of talking with the salesmen? I have literally been told the same thing at every lot, that the cars here were owned by old ladies and driven only on Sundays, and that I don't need to get them inspected."
                      ^^^^
                      This.

                      No need to discuss further.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by GirlJock View Post
                        I chose a Taurus 24/7 .40 cal for the fin grip so only one person ends up on the ground. :qleft5:
                        Completely logical train of thought . That is like serious self defense 101 .

                        1st step :Drop the fantasy world and learn how to defend yourself with hard training against full resistance .*

                        2nd step : Shoot lots of guns and take lots of gun classes . Not special SWAT TactICAL XTREME ROPES COURSE FIREWALK shit ... but the local classes you can find through your county sheriff's department and gun ranges .

                        3rd step : Buy a pistol you like and apply for permit to carry it **





                        *I mean I guess you could be a totaly spineless paranoid bitch and skip step one .



                        ** you will more than likely also end up with a shotgun and/or rifle for the house and zombies .

                        Comment


                          #13
                          For a relatively short time (maybe 5 years or so) I have seen way too many of these ninja LARP retards.

                          This neither surprises nor angers me. Have fun in your pajamas swinging around a douche-saber, fag.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Great, thanks for all the useless info you bunch of queers.

                            Your responses have confirmed that MMA is the place for me. I bet after a month of MMA training, I could kick the shit out of any of you gayboys.

                            What a bunch of fucking pussies.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              hi-five

                              Comment

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