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Uploaded by on Dec 17, 2006

cult and the con video one

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  • @Darkfenian If you instructor was not actively training at a CMQ school at the time he fought it probably was not a test of this true potential in CMQ since your strength and conditioning falls off quick when not training consistently and to max effort. He was probably fighting mostly on his MMA training if that were the case. I'd like to see a 3rd degree or higher CMQ instructor in peak form with a year of MMA cross training fight in the UFC. That would be interesting.

  • @como651 He was a first or second degree black belt in CMQ and started MMA when he was in his mid 30's. So he was up there in age a bit. After that he focuses more on self defense. You would be amazed on how much ground fighting changes when you add eye gouging. I want to do MMA myself but I've been busy with college and want to focus more on my studies though I do keep up with the forms techniques when I get the chance. When I graduate and have a steady income I'll try mma competitions.

  • @Darkfenian Was your instructor in his peak CMQ physical condition when he fought in MMA? What belt was he? I remember some 3rd degree instructors or higher from the 80s who literally felt like their bodies were made of iron. Most of the instructors I know that left CMQ did not continue their CMQ training seriously and they got soft. I'd like to know how effective an actively training higher belt in CMQ would be in MMA competition if they learned some practical fighting too.

  • @como651 Well GSP and Machida are both influenced by their traditional backgrounds. My instructor did some amature mma and was moderately successful though granted he had help from his Sambo training. I look at traditional martial arts in MMA like people use boxing. If you go into a mma match only useing boxing you will most likely get beat but if you incorporate the punching techniques into and mma style you can be very good.

  • I can say this much about this school.  The physical training was excellent. You will develop your body in a way you don't get from a typical gym workout. However, the training is expensive and only gets more expensive as you progress. The problem is that apart from good exercise, health and fitness benefits, this school teaches little fighting application. There is little free style sparring, bag work and grappling all of which are needed to develop you for real world fighting.

  • @JonGZBOS What will you do if you wake up one day realizing you missed out on a million other things you wanted or to do or gave up because you followed the advice of the school. This school has deprived a lot of good people of their youth, education, family, friends, money and time they can never get back. Anything that robs you of balance in your life is not good.

  • Has anyone in Chung Moo Quan ever competed in MMA tournaments and how effective was it? I always thought the training was good and made a person strong and athletic but it did not teach you how to fight in any practical sense. That was one of the reasons why I lost interest in training there apart from the ethical reasons.

  • @Darkfenian How many pro level MMA fighters use traditional martial arts training like low forms, kata and mental forms in their routines? I always thought the physical conditioning was excellent and built your body in a way you can't get out of a typical boxing or health club gym. I still use my CMQ training as part of gym workout. I can't achieve the same muscle hardness and functional strength with weights as I do with CMQ training.

  • Oom Yung Doeis korean reading of 「陰陽道」

    「陰陽道(onmyodo)」is japanese curture。

    「陰陽道」is not martialarts。

    自然哲学思想(Natural philosophy thought), the 陰陽五行説(Yin, Yang and five elements combination theory) that were born in ancient China as the origin,

    Natural science and a system of the black art that it accomplished original development in Japan are Yin Yang method(陰陽道).

  • The first martial arts I was taught was Chung Moo Quan and I never had any problems like that. My instructor was 3rd generation from Kim. It gave me a strong foundation not in just technique but understanding why you do things and how to apply it. This lead me and my instructor to study Sambo and namely ground fighting. I have used my Chung Moo Quan training in MMA, in the streets, and with military and law enforcement and have had sucess. I'm nost speaking for any school but my own.

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