@bryanzoll86 Wasn't it Goju Ryu that was displayed in Karate Kid? Because in the first one, many of the basic blocks he taught him could be found in Tensho, and in part 3, he taught him Seiunchin. As I understand it, those are Goju kata, are they not? Or would it be more appropiate to view them all as Naha-Te
@naumutroi As I understanfd it, Pangai-Noon is the original name of the kung fu Uechi Sensei learned in Fujian. He named it Pangai-noon Todijutsu, which his students later changed to Uechi Ryu.
Beautiful videos. However, I don't understand why they call this "pangai noon". There is no pangai noon anymore.The system that Kanbum Uechi learned in China didn't even have that name. Aparently, it was so secret that Kanbum Uechi did not even give the real name of it, and in a generic way he called it "pangainoon". When he returned to Okinawa he reorganized the whole thing and made it more "soft". This is the system that we know as Uechi Ryu. That is what we have. The real pangai noon is lost.
Historically the break with Pangai Noon Ryu happend fairly early on in the Uechi Family Karate System. There was a group that wanted to incorporate Kobudo in to the art. As Kobudo is typically more of a series of training taught to the commoners there was a class issue. At least according to Alan Dollars book, I believe. The Uechi Family were from a Samurai Caste and did not want to integrate the Kobudo into their art. So the knick name suited the first divergent groups break.
@barranco057 You're right there is no such style as Pangai Noon; existing today or recorded in the past. However, there is a term in the Fujianese language (don't know which one of its many dialects) "Pan-ngi-nang" which means "half hard-half soft." Also, Kanbum Uechi did apparently refer to the original style as "South Group Mantis Fist" - which doesn't really help when you think about how many versions of southern Praying Mantis there are.
When it comes to sport doctors are full of crap intellecutals that constantly say to you you can't do stuff ...
How many athletes have I seen in my life who completely broke all the rules and pushed the limits doing things what all those armchairs would say it is not possilbe ...
@DuykRuyk if it wasnt for UFC you woulnt know what an armbar is this guy would drop you before you had him on the ground and used your armbar or whatever
@786myfist Funny how everyone thinks of UFC whenever somebody mentions armbar. I learned Jiu-jitsu way before the UFC was started. Btw, I don't do just jiu-jitsu I do other stand up styles as well.
A physician acquaintance (doctor) once made a remark to me about "conscious tensing" of the body. He said it could cause unwanted and painful cramps eg stomach and/or neck cramps, etc.
In short, he claimed that it's not a good way of training the body. What about you guys, especially practitioners of Uechi Ryu have to say about this statement?
@jessevoidable You aren't always tense, it exhausting to the muscles. A tense crane strike from my exp. is slow (ever seen how someone throws the upper body forward with a punch and its slow?). Tense muscles in the leg during a snap kick really don't allow it to snap out as well either. Hope this answers your question that It isn't all hard. :)
@jessevoidable a load of crap! He's probably an overweight middle aged nerd who would have been draining blood out of patients if he/she were born a hundred years ago.
@jessevoidable if you just tense for the hell of it, yes. martial arts tension exercises are usually also mobility, posture and muscle control exercises, which, if done correctly, paying attention to the body (and also being informed beforehand of the correct way to practice them), can actually reduce things like neck cramps (which are usually caused by bad shoulder posture, in my experience, due to, among other things, imbalances in the shoulder joint musculature).
If you have see the Karate Kid...then you have seen Uechi-Ryu
bryanzoll86 2 weeks ago
@bryanzoll86 Wasn't it Goju Ryu that was displayed in Karate Kid? Because in the first one, many of the basic blocks he taught him could be found in Tensho, and in part 3, he taught him Seiunchin. As I understand it, those are Goju kata, are they not? Or would it be more appropiate to view them all as Naha-Te
deek77 1 week ago
Why is this the first time I am hearing of Uechi-Ryu?
KingKrimson89 2 weeks ago
im thinking that pangai noon is Uechi O-Sensei's name for Fukien Shaolin Gung Fu
naumutroi 7 months ago
@naumutroi As I understanfd it, Pangai-Noon is the original name of the kung fu Uechi Sensei learned in Fujian. He named it Pangai-noon Todijutsu, which his students later changed to Uechi Ryu.
deek77 1 week ago
@deek77 yes, that is correct.
naumutroi 1 week ago
@naumutroi Thanks, pardon me if I spelled anything wrong.
deek77 1 week ago
@deek77 of the okinawan-japanese styles it is perhaps arguably the closest to its original chinese inspiration.
naumutroi 1 week ago
that old man can FUCKING KILL YOU!!
Calebmoyer 7 months ago 2
Beautiful videos. However, I don't understand why they call this "pangai noon". There is no pangai noon anymore.The system that Kanbum Uechi learned in China didn't even have that name. Aparently, it was so secret that Kanbum Uechi did not even give the real name of it, and in a generic way he called it "pangainoon". When he returned to Okinawa he reorganized the whole thing and made it more "soft". This is the system that we know as Uechi Ryu. That is what we have. The real pangai noon is lost.
barranco057 1 year ago
@barranco057
Historically the break with Pangai Noon Ryu happend fairly early on in the Uechi Family Karate System. There was a group that wanted to incorporate Kobudo in to the art. As Kobudo is typically more of a series of training taught to the commoners there was a class issue. At least according to Alan Dollars book, I believe. The Uechi Family were from a Samurai Caste and did not want to integrate the Kobudo into their art. So the knick name suited the first divergent groups break.
Suuntzuu 1 year ago
@barranco057 You're right there is no such style as Pangai Noon; existing today or recorded in the past. However, there is a term in the Fujianese language (don't know which one of its many dialects) "Pan-ngi-nang" which means "half hard-half soft." Also, Kanbum Uechi did apparently refer to the original style as "South Group Mantis Fist" - which doesn't really help when you think about how many versions of southern Praying Mantis there are.
elu296 1 year ago
I love Uechi Ryu!
uechiblu3000 1 year ago
When it comes to sport doctors are full of crap intellecutals that constantly say to you you can't do stuff ...
How many athletes have I seen in my life who completely broke all the rules and pushed the limits doing things what all those armchairs would say it is not possilbe ...
RexBaselio 1 year ago
I bet I could arm bar him and he'd feel it.
DuykRuyk 1 year ago
@DuykRuyk if it wasnt for UFC you woulnt know what an armbar is this guy would drop you before you had him on the ground and used your armbar or whatever
786myfist 9 months ago
@786myfist Funny how everyone thinks of UFC whenever somebody mentions armbar. I learned Jiu-jitsu way before the UFC was started. Btw, I don't do just jiu-jitsu I do other stand up styles as well.
DuykRuyk 9 months ago
@DuykRuyk
Well just with the comment "if i armbar this guy blah blah", ofc ppl is gonna think UFC and overconfident assholes and keyboard warriors.
OVERCAPITALIZE 7 months ago
@OVERCAPITALIZE If only there was a way I could prove my authenticity over the internet. Oh right, there isn't.
DuykRuyk 7 months ago
@DuykRuyk
videooooooooooooooo. ~_~
OVERCAPITALIZE 7 months ago
@OVERCAPITALIZE I am Poor. As in no money.
DuykRuyk 7 months ago
A physician acquaintance (doctor) once made a remark to me about "conscious tensing" of the body. He said it could cause unwanted and painful cramps eg stomach and/or neck cramps, etc.
In short, he claimed that it's not a good way of training the body. What about you guys, especially practitioners of Uechi Ryu have to say about this statement?
jessevoidable 1 year ago
@jessevoidable nothing... apparently. But people seem to do well
jjhaywood 1 year ago
@jessevoidable You aren't always tense, it exhausting to the muscles. A tense crane strike from my exp. is slow (ever seen how someone throws the upper body forward with a punch and its slow?). Tense muscles in the leg during a snap kick really don't allow it to snap out as well either. Hope this answers your question that It isn't all hard. :)
uechiblu3000 1 year ago
@jessevoidable a load of crap! He's probably an overweight middle aged nerd who would have been draining blood out of patients if he/she were born a hundred years ago.
jimibel 1 year ago
@jessevoidable if you just tense for the hell of it, yes. martial arts tension exercises are usually also mobility, posture and muscle control exercises, which, if done correctly, paying attention to the body (and also being informed beforehand of the correct way to practice them), can actually reduce things like neck cramps (which are usually caused by bad shoulder posture, in my experience, due to, among other things, imbalances in the shoulder joint musculature).
asd748wsx 1 year ago