 Wing Chun vs. Boxing. This is a very big topic that a lot of people talk about. So let's discuss about Wing Chun vs. Boxing. And yes, we are giving away these free DVDs, a seller rated Wing Chun System Quick Start DVD, normally retailing for 129 bucks. But, enter the contest. All you need to do is to subscribe, click the notification bell, and like and comment on this video, and you'll enter automatically into the draw. Every week, we're gonna give away a free video. So, good luck. So I've got my friend here, Will. He's done boxing. He's training Wing Chun now. So tell us what your experience is. I find with boxing, if I was to get into a conflict with someone, it can go a lot longer than I would like. So if my wind isn't where it needs to be, person is a lot tougher or whatever, or has some experience, then yeah, it could be a nice long fight. And it's not something I wanna deal with. So how about Wing Chun? Wing Chun is, basically I can end it quick. I can go in as soon as it starts up. You literally already have it in your mind, what you're gonna do. So there's only a couple of different things most people will do when they come into a fight. And for everything with Wing Chun is designed to basically end the fight right away. So you can not only walk away, but you'll walk away and still have a lot of wind and, you know, we're good. That's good because in a street fight, most of the time now you're gonna be facing more than one person, right? Two or three people. Exactly. So if you're gonna be, you know, sparring it out with one guy, you know, using all that stamina, think about sparring with two or three guys that have three times more stamina, right? Exactly. You're not Superman, right? Yeah. How can you do that? So in Wing Chun, what you're saying is that, you know, it's designed to finish the fight and end it quickly as fast as possible. So because you may be fighting more than one guy. And most likely you are because these days, people don't have honor. They don't fight one-on-one anymore. They bring their friends. They're not, you know, they're only tough when they're with their friends. Yeah. Okay? Yeah. But there's some advantages to boxing. I don't want to like catch boxing. I love boxing. And the good thing about boxing is that if you go to any main boxing dream, you know, they don't complain, right? People are there to fight and they're there to learn how to punch and they don't care about getting hit, right? I find that a lot of martial arts classes and people are just scared of getting hit, right? And they don't train to, you know, against people who are actually trying to hit you. Yeah. What do you think about that? No, definitely. With boxing, like still, even though I'm doing Wing Chun, like I love boxing, the science behind it, it's, I mean, you can almost kind of throw it into martial arts sense because there's a science behind it. And taking that and adding on to that knowledge with the Wing Chun, I find it's kind of easy to start adapting. The only difference is the fact that you're a lot more tense when you're a boxer versus Wing Chun, which is more fluid and loose. So, yeah, like as far as taking the hits and things like that, yeah, I feel like I can deal with a little bit more than other people, you know, basically because I've been hit hard few times. So, yeah, I come in with the mind state of expecting to get hit to hurt. So, yeah. So I think the benefit of training in boxing is you have people that are actually trying to hit you. You know, even if it's a big glove, you can feel the impact. Oh, yeah. And you, so like if your stuff doesn't work, then it's proven it doesn't work, right? Because in Wing Chun, okay, they do this. They don't hit each other, right? Just hit the air and stop their punches and say, yeah, I just hit you like that. And if you train like that, you expect the fight to end up like that. One of my combatant's trainers told me and he's been teaching the SWAT team people. He's been teaching the special forces. He's been in the military, you know, he's trained the military and such. And he says that the way you train is the way you fight, okay? Because if you program yourself, those reflexes in your muscles and you program to do that, stop your punch in front of the target, and the chances are when you're getting the fight, you're just gonna do that. You're just gonna punch the air. So that's something that you need to adjust if your training is lacking in that area, right? But in boxing it's good because you actually get punched, right? You put you on the gear and maybe, you know, you can say, you know, we're just gonna do 50% power, right? But still, you're gonna feel what it feels like to get hit. Yeah, and you need to feel that. You need to feel that to understand, not only to understand if you can take the punch, but to learn how to not take the punch, to learn how to dodge it, to learn how to, whether it's parry, like whatever you're doing, but you need to actually get hit first to learn how to avoid getting hit. Yeah, so. Yeah, you gotta appreciate, you know, how the self-defense technique works when you get hit. You know, you have to know how it doesn't work. In order to know how it works. Yeah, right? So I think that's the benefit of learning how to, you know, if you don't have a Wing Chun class, you know, why not go to a boxing class and learn something from that too? Why not go to a Muay Thai kickboxing class and learn something from that too? I think we can all learn something from everything. Yeah, 100%. Yeah, so I'm not the kind of guy that says, Wing Chun is the best martial arts in the world. You know, I really love it. And I don't think any martial art is the best martial art in the world. I think that the martial art that's best for you is the best martial arts for you, right? So you gotta find, you gotta do some research and it takes a time. I mean, I've been training for 10 years and then I'm always learning new things from other people from different styles. So the guy who says, okay, what's better, Wing Chun unboxing? Well, you have to think about, okay, the person to ask that, their intelligence level is not the highest because you're thinking which one's better, right? A person with a higher intelligence would say, okay, Wing Chun versus boxing, what can I learn from each one? And how can, what can I take from each one and adapt it to my own and use it? Well, who's the user? Like you have somebody who's an amateur Wing Chun practitioner versus a professional boxer. That professional boxer is going to really look great going against somebody who only knows Wing Chun a little bit. So you have to look at the person, what their knowledge is of whatever art it is that they're doing. Yeah. And the thing with Wing Chun students, right? Most of them are training, most Wing Chun people are training twice a week. That's it. One do boxers, even amateur boxers, they don't even have a professional or even hobbyist boxers, what do they do? They train almost every day, right? In the morning, they're jogging. In the morning, they're doing their stamina training, they're doing weight training, right? And then Wing Chun guys, what do they do? Most of the time, they just go and do the classes a couple of hours a week and then they do cheese salads, they can like this for two hours or just do it for two hours. That's all the training they do. So you compare someone who's trained for 10, 20, 30 hours a week in boxing and compare someone who trains in Wing Chun for four hours a week, right? Do that for a year or two. It doesn't matter if the technique, it's not about technique anymore, you see? It's not about style anymore, it's just about training and how much you do it. But you probably say, okay, what if the guy who trained Wing Chun, you tell me, what do you think about a guy who would train Wing Chun 10, 20, 30 hours a week or 40 hours a week against a boxer who trained four hours a week? Who do you think after a year, who do you think is gonna be better? Who do you think is gonna be a better fighter? Who do you think is gonna win a fighting match if that's gonna happen, right? You tell me, right? You think it's gonna be a Wing Chun guy or the boxer? And what do you think? So I wanna hear your comments about what do you think about Wing Chun versus boxing or any other martial arts for that matter and make a comment in the comment session. Tell us what you think, tell us what is your feedback and then we'll see you soon.