Quote: (02-13-2012 05:17 AM)Aliblahba Wrote:
The first rule of fighting: There are no rules in fighting.
Learning in a dojo or ring teaches you too many rules, for obvious reasons. What they can't teach is the mindset to win. You have to gain that from experience. At that point it's less about what you've learned, and more of the intensity brought to the fight.
I fight to maim someone. The point is for that person to never confront me again. Ear-biting, eye-gouging, groin strikes aren't commonly taught in the dojo. You also can't show someone how to use a broken bottle in a training environment. These are techniques you have to go over in your head a million times, as not to forgot when the adrenaline starts pumping. The more you think about it the more chance you'll have of success.
In the end though it goes like this: No girl is going to fuck you when you walk into the bar with two black eyes, a crooked nose, and swollen lips. Avoid fighting at all costs.
Wing Chun Kung Fu, everyone hates on Kung Fu and with the rise of MMA, it's now all about BJJ, boxing, wrestling, and Muay Thai.
Now, all those are very effective disciplines, that are worth studying, but like you said, at the end of the day they are all sports with rules, that won't always apply in the streets.
I've been taking a hybrid style called "Lau Kune Do", it's mostly based on Wing Chun with a lot of Hun Gar (shaolin) mixed in, for about the past 6 months.
We learn a lot of stuff that's meant to end a fight as quickly as possible, quick eye jabs, strikes to the throat, kicks to the groin, etc.
No one likes a dirty fighter, but if you're in a situation where you're being attacked by a guy who is 5 in taller and 60 pounds heavier, you're going to have to neutralize that size advantage, eye jab him, kick him in the groin, deliver a downward elbow to the back of his head, when he lunges forward, etc.