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Kody, The use of padding has proved to act against the person who practices the art and against the art... It is a very polemic subject, however this is my opinion. You only need a face mask. Boffers have caused more injuries than any other simulator... when practitioner pad up, they pass the responsibility and consciousness of violence to the padding not to themselves... what happens next is they start to hit each other and don´t feel anything so they increase force and continue to do not take responsibility for their actions... still they don´t acknowledged that they are getting hit, and continue to increase levels of force until suddenly the padding reaches protection break point and someone gets really hurt, and all the time people did not worked on not get hit (developing skills, reading the source literature). Not padding so much does three things make you conscious that you are getting hit so you can work on developing skills, and helps you develop control, and makes you and you partner responsible for your practice... As an aside note you need to develop control to do masterful technics... makes sense? how you do all this is another matter...
History has shown us that when we focused on tournaments the art was lost as it became a sport not a martial art, how by doing today tournaments they will not transform the little art we have reconstructed back into a sport?
John Farthing wrote:There is still a marked difference between the goals, objectives and training paradigm of Martial Artists and Athletes.
Our Medieval and Renaissance forebearers knew to train as though their lives depended on the art, because it quite literally did! So, while the combat sports tournament competitor trains to win prestige and glory without fear of death, the true martial artist trains with the understanding and paradigm of "If I do not win, someone dies" (Me, my family, etc.).
John Farthing wrote:... the result is that those training for tournament remove many martially sound and historically valid techniques. Conversly, Our goals within the ARMA are to reconstruct the entire art, maintaining a true martial spirit. We do not shy away from, disallow or discourage techniques such as those listed above from being employed, and neither did our historical counterparts!
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So, while the combat sports tournament competitor trains to win prestige and glory without fear of death, the true martial artist trains with the understanding and paradigm of "If I do not win, someone dies" (Me, my family, etc.).
It is this 'Kampfgeist' or 'Martial Spirit' that separates the tournament players from the real martial artists. The only questions that remain are, "What are your goals and objectives?" and "Which type of practitoner are you?"
Jorge Cortines wrote:Hi all!!!And in my opinion this is why the Masters that knew this kind of damage was the risk if you get hit, they never talk about what to do if you get hit...
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