 and after his Tai Chi dance. Shake your hands. Shake your hands. Don't hit him if you roll the bell. No biting. No hair grabs. Are you ready? You ready? He's got his Tai Chi stance. Yeah. Opening it up. So when does the police tell you? Wow. Yes, I beat the guy that's like kippy years old. Don't tell me we're gonna fight again. No, that's it. That's it. That's it. That's from one angle. There's another video from another angle. That's pretty much it. Is that when he was going to the hospital? No, he's fine. How'd they even do that? Wow. Everybody's amazed that... This is even happy. This guy... He's just in shock. He's never been punchy before in his Tai Chi training. Well, I like the uniform. The uniform is amazing. He won in the style. 10 points. Wow. Alright, that's the depend of it. 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. Yeah, so what do you think about this video? What do you think? M&M vs Tai Chi? I think those... Those two words should never be put together. Wow. My question is... Yeah, because we look like... A lot of people there. Dude had no game plan whatsoever. That's it. Okay, so M&M vs Tai Chi, what do you think about this video? Do you think M&M... Do you think Tai Chi is better? Or M&M is better? Probably not a good question to ask, right? So, come back and we're gonna give you some more comments about it. So, here's a review of what I think the strategy of the Tai Chi guy had. Like, lack of strategy. Or maybe he had a strategy. Alright. So, in Tai Chi, he's probably doing this, opening up his stance. It's like this opening up stance. Because he's baiting for the guy to punch. But it's probably a backfire, right? Yeah. It only works when you're fast enough. And obviously he was a fast enough. I'm baiting for him to punch in the middle and boom! I got punched and then basically after that it's over. The guy's really back trying to recover from that first punch and then there's a whole barrage of punches after that and he doesn't have any defenses against that. So, if he was faster, maybe he could have done that. So, because in Tai Chi, we have the strumming the lute, right? It's up and down. So, he had the strumming the lute posture a little bit too high. So, he opened up all this and all he had to do, the guy had his fist down here, right? Well, he had to do it with the spoon. How can you parry that? You have to be that fast. And the other thing he's doing is leaning back like this. He's already setting himself to be knocked over. So, he wasn't fast enough, first of all, to parry this. So, he got punched. Boom! And already I'm pulling backwards and then just a few. There's no way I can defend against all these barrages of punches. So, technically, that was what I think happened. What do you think? So, the guy got his first punch, first jab, knocked him back and in Tai Chi, you don't actually hit when you train. So, we probably didn't know how to recover from a hit in the first place. We tried to use some ankles, but it didn't work well. We tried to do some angles to move around. But too slow. Just the MMA guy was just a lot faster and he was a lot more non-telegraphic with his jab. Boom! It's very hard to... Okay, in Tai Chi, what they do is they push hands, right? They push hands, it's that slow, right? And they train against punches that come in like this. The punch is coming like this. Oh, yeah, I can parry it and I can do this, right? It's good to train the sensitivity, to train the movement, the connectivity and the balance of your body and it's really good. You develop an attribute of being rooted. You develop an attribute of being able to flow and blend with the energy. But the problem is that they don't train to fight. It's just the drills. They're confusing that, oh, I'm really good at push hands. I can really be good at this drill. But then, they don't train to fight. They think that the drill is the fight. That's the problem, right? And a lot of people in Wing Chun have this problem to do. What do they do? They do this. What is this? Is this a fight or is this a drill? Cheesaw. It's a drill. So they think that, oh, yeah, I'm really good at Cheesaw. But then confuse the drill with learning how to fight. Learning a drill doesn't mean that you're going to learn how to fight. Learning a drill will develop an attribute. What's the attribute that's being trained when we do Cheesaw? We're doing the attribute of learning how to create sensitivity. It's an attribute. It's a skill. But it's not how to fight. So I think, I don't know what this class you guys are going to do. Maybe he might train more to figure out what he is not doing, right? What's missing in his training, right? Yeah. And then if he really worked hard and figured out what's missing in his training and then add that in his training, maybe he might get better in chances of fighting an MMA guy, right? No. No, probably not. Don't take a lot of training, right? But the key is this, right? Look at MMA. MMA, for a minute, a long time, all the grapplers were winning. Yeah. And then all the people, all the strikers were losing. And then they're saying, no striking works in MMA, right? Yeah. Back before. But now you see all the strikers are now winning. Yeah. They're dominating MMA now. So what did they do? Is it because, you know, they're better or something? Possibly. But what they did was they changed the strategy, right? Yeah. They adapted to what was happening in the MMA arena, right? They say, okay, how do I fight a grappler with striking? And they figured it out, and now they're dominating. Maybe the grapplers will come up with a new strategy and say, okay, now how do you figure out how to fight the strikers? Yeah. So it's really like, what is that guy's entangy training? Is he training to fight against an MMA guy? Or is he training just to fight against other Tai Chi guys? Right? Same thing in Wing Chun. Are you training to fight against MMA guys? It's completely different training than fighting against someone on the street for self-defense. It's totally different, okay? Because they're shaking hands, okay? They were prepared, even in that match, right? They shook hands. There was rules and shit like that. But in a real fight, people come and you, boom, they don't care. There's no guard. There's no time to prepare. There's no cameras. Nobody's going to help you get up. No one's going to wipe your blood off your face. It's just you by yourself. Probably against a lot of people, maybe two or three attackers, and you're going to be scared. It's completely different from a real fight. So what are you going to train for? Are you going to train to fight MMA guys? If you do that, then train against MMA guys, right? Are you going to train Tai Chi and learn how to develop your balance for health and for sensitivity and grounding and rooting? There's a lot of stuff that benefits a lot of attributes that you can develop with Tai Chi, but are you training that for that? Or are you going to train against to fight in competitive matches? Or are you going to train it for self-defense? So you're going to decide, if you're studying martial arts, what is the goal that you want to train for? So people are saying, is MMA or Tai Chi better? I don't think that's really the question, right? The real question is, what do you, as a martial artist, want to train for? And how are you going to train? And how are you going to adapt to what you want to achieve? Exactly, 100%. So that's my take on this video, and it's a ridiculous match. I don't even know why the guy would do that. So it never happened. Maybe he gives cocky. He said, yeah, my Tai Chi is so powerful. I got this vintage, so-and-so seafood master and such. I've been practicing for 20 years, and I'm going to beat the crap out of this. When a guy is so cocky, he can't even beat me. And obviously, I put it wrong. Vintage doesn't matter. All that matters is training. People think that they can account with their history, or with their lineage, or with their background. None of that matters. When you're fighting, it's just heavy training. What can you do? Does it work or not? Yeah, I think that's what anything. Whether you're boxing, whether you're a wrestler, whether you're a martial artist, I think it's with anything. You have to be prepared for what you're going to do for one when you come up against an opponent and what that opponent actually knows. Yeah, like in a match, you know what the guy is capable of. You know basically what his style is going to be. But on the straight, you don't know. You don't know how trained they are. You don't know what style they are. You don't have time to watch his videos and see what his moves are. You don't have time to spar and dance around and see how he's going to react to your attacks or defenses. So in the street, in self-defense, you have to be able to react right away. You have to have moves that work most of the time. You can't say, okay, what are you going to do that? I'm going to do this. What are you going to do that? You need moves that you just have to react to that are going to work most of the time. Well, not all of the time, because you can't predict everything. But you need moves that are going to work most of the time. And you use those, and you use the ones that have the highest chance of success. That's the best strategy if you want to learn self-defense, which is different from competitive matches. Because competitive matches, you can see what the guy is doing. You have an idea of what kind of attacks he's going to use, what strategies he's going to use, because MMA is pretty much the same thing. And you have that framework to work with. You know what's going to happen. You know there's someone who's going to stop the fight if they have to. But not in self-defense. It's a completely different way of training. So I want to know what do you guys think about this video? What do you think about training in general, and Kung Fu, and martial arts, and Wing Chun? What are your comments? What are your suggestions? What is your feedback? So subscribe to this channel to get more full stuff and more talks like this. And we'll see you soon in the next video.