Ki Power Demonstration - Morehei Ueshiba - 1 of 5
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Morihei was the real Miyagi
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Anybody watching this vid who thinks it's a bunch of silly people putting on a show or some old man doing parlor tricks, READ about this man. He is a TRUE legend. His unbelievable accomplishments as a warrior is the stuff kung-fu fantasy legends are made of, yet his later personal spiritual experiences and revelations show there's is MUCH we can all learn from Master Ushiba. Things that would heal this planet if even 50% of humans on the earth took it to heart and lived his practical teachings.
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@StuBackbreaker26 An eighteenth century poet.
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ki? hahaha
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one thing is sure: you will never experience anything spectacular in life when sitting all day infront of the computer. then you better stick to imaginary worlds in computer games.
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the ad at the bottom really messes with the vid.
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I wrote "Early UFC". There were no rules, only "fines" (decreased prize if you gauge or bite).
There was a lot of hair-pulling, groin-hitting, some biting and eye gauging and head-stomping.
The smallest guy won 3 out of the first 4.
That's martial ART - a skill honed to the extreme applied.
Funny how you mix the Jutsu and the Do.
"Traditional" Karate and Aikido are 20th century amalgams.
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@RonnySayfan You cannot compare traditional martial arts with the UFC altered styles. What you fail to mention in your analysis is that UFC is Sport. It is restricted within the confines of legal rules. Traditional martial arts have been used to kill period. Many traditional martial arts were the precursors to modern day military systems such as traditional karate, jiu jitsu, aikido, and other such styles.
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Really?? "traditional martial arts that did well in the octogon".
which?
Judo, granted. BJJ, of course. Anything else?
The pattern that emerged in the early UFC's proved that grappling overwhelms striking.
whenever two "traditionals" met, the bigger guy won (usually without the finesse heralded as the traditional styles' "way").
when a grappler vs. striker fight was on - the grppler would usually win, regardless of his size dis-advantage.
There were, of course, exceptions.
Im sticking to aikido no matter what anybody says
Kenshin1080 2 years ago 67
In my personal experience with martial arts, and the study of Ki, I've found that (at least for myself, obviously unable to speak for others) that you have to have a very focused mind, while at the same time, have an aware and open mind in order to understand how the energy of Ki can manifest itself.
fightingchance2001 2 years ago 16