Saturday, May 15, 2010

What is a Korean martial art that is just like Aikido?

Hapkido is a koren art very similar to aikido , but its not entirely the same , its not as circular as aikido. However both the founder of aikido and the founder of hapkido learned under the same teacher. The difference with hapkido is that it has korean roots and you will see a lot of kicking techniques similar to those in taekwondo.|||Hapkido is like a mixture of Aikido, Taekwondo, and judo. A good standing style.|||Hapkido is the twin of Aikido,and they are connected historically.

What is the difference between aikido and hopkido?

aikido is japanese and is a soft grappling style with few strikes and emphasizes ki and philosophy. hapkido is a korean self defense art similar to japanese jujitsu as it includes strikes, kicks, throws, grappling, weapons, and emphasizes hold escapes and weapon defenses. interesting note the kanji for both arts is the same|||I used to study hapkido. Yes Hapkido is the Korean version of aikido but it can be described as a combination of Tae Kwon Do %26amp; Aikido. While I sat in my daughters aikido classes, I always felt Hapkido was the more complete art. It has strikes, kicks, joint locks, throws and pressure point strikes. It stress both offense and defense, while aikido is basically just defense.|||similar techniques.. came from the same art.. and other arts... move different though and hapkido has strikes in almost every type of it... alot of aikido ryu%26#039;s dont have strikes hapkido and hapkido has more judo type throws...... i dono what hapkido has in terms of %26quot;breath throws%26quot; but aikido has alot... breath throws are non jointlocking timing harmonized throws|||Aikido is used to harmonize defense and hapkido is almost the same thing but focuses more on dodging pressure points and vital areas.


Best answer please? What do u study?

Know any any aikido,kali, escrima schools near leesburg, FL?

I greatly appreciate it if any one could help|||http://maps.google.com.au/maps?hl=en%26amp;um=...





http://www.alltheweb.com/search?advanced...





Richard Jackson


Location: Leesburg, VA


Phone: 703/779-0471


Email: richjackson@martialartskoncepts.com


Martial Arts Certifications Apprentice Instructor, Jeet Kune Do Concepts %26amp; Jun Fan Gung Fu under Guro Dan Inosanto


Apprentice Instructor, Filipino Martial Arts of Kali, Escrima, and Arnis under Guro Dan Inosanto





http://www.alltheweb.com/search?advanced...|||check the yellow pages in your phone book


try %26quot;martial arts%26quot;





it%26#039;s really hard to find on the internet:P

What qualities and characteristics of an Aikido (or any type of martial arts) instructor impress you most?

With any martial art I look to see if the person can do the techniques well but using very little strength. If someone has mastered the techniques he should be able to accomplish things so that it looks like he is using almost no effort. Watching things like their shoulders will tell you a lot about the persona abilities. If they raise and tense their shoulders it indicates that they are using strength rather than perfect technique. This hold true in most martial arts. When my student are doing a technique and tightening their shoulders, I do this. I have them stand behind me and place their hands on my shoulders. I then do the technique to someone and let them feel if my shoulders tighten or raise. That gets the point across very quickly. Good technique does not require the application of strength. That is why the founder of Aikido being a tiny old man could do such amazing things to attackers. This principle holds true in many other arts.|||I second what pugpaws stated.





I also look for... if he can explain well the points he%26#039;s trying to impress, isn%26#039;t a biggot, or cruel to the students, and has the ability to remain calm and centered all the time.

Where can i get a good aikido class in north philadelphia area?

I can only recommend Warren%26#039;s Red Tiger


Taekwon-do in N. Philly because my kids been going there for a year now. Located at Frankford and Columbia near the Berks station of el.





215-634-5218 Closed this weekend for tournament and next weekend closed for holidays, so call Monday through Thursday. Website below will give you more information

Monday, November 16, 2009

Is Aikido supposed to hurt so much?

Ok, I just had my very first Aikido lesson yesterday, and the minute we wrapped for the hour I felt crazy soreness in my thighs. I could barely make the walk back to my dorm (wincing the whole way, nearly collapsing a few times cuz I couldn%26#039;t hold myself up properly), and it hasn%26#039;t gotten any better today. I%26#039;ve been limping about all day, and I%26#039;m in severe pain going up AND down stairs, and when I%26#039;m kneeling down. I%26#039;m just hoping this kind of pain is normal for first time, out of shape Aikido beginners, and whether or not it%26#039;s going to hurt less once I%26#039;ve been training for a while? Did I overdo it in my first lesson or something?





I mean, I%26#039;m worried because my next class is only tomorrow night (two nights a week) and I don%26#039;t think that%26#039;%26#039;ll leave enough time to rest my legs and get them back to normal. I probably won%26#039;t even last through the lesson :(... *gulp*|||Get ready for an essay! LOL





First off - ask yourself this: is the pain from just working muscle groups you don%26#039;t normally work or is it from an injury?





Second - Yes, this is very normal. Everyone I%26#039;ve ever seen start class (be it Aikido or when I was a kid, Karate) was sore the next day. Its just like any other activity... If you are not used to the work out, your body takes a while to adjust.





Third - pain is not your enemy - its a learning tool to help you understand your body%26#039;s limitations. You have to accept a bit of pain before you get to know the line between being ok and being injured and its good to know where that line is. That%26#039;s one of the points of training.





You have to be willing to give a little pain to learn what that line in another person feels like to you as the person performing a technique.





Where is that line between compassionate control and needless malice? Its the line between injured and not injured - its not the line between pain and no pain.





Fourth - Dealing with pain - whether its from injury, a paper cut or anything else. As a kid, I was sparing with another student my age in karate, we both went for a punch and our fist collided. We both broke fingers and were in huge pain at the time. Sensei walked over to us and leaned over our agonized 14 year old bodies and said %26quot;Pain is nothing more than intense pleasure.%26quot; He then smiled and walked away.





We both just kind of sat up and looked at each other. The statement Sensei had made was so baffling at the time to me that my mind stopped listening to my body and just tried to analize what he had said. All of a sudden, I had forgotten about the pain I was feeling because I was concentrating on something else rather than letting the pain dominate my mind.





We both finished class - I guess neither of us wanted to quit for whatever reason. Then our dads took us to the clinic and we got splints. Call it mind over matter, call it masochism, call it stupidity still, it was a powerful lesson.





My current Sensei said the other day that to really learn Aikido, you have to at some point become a bit obsessed with it.





There is the power of the mind for you. If you stop because of injury, that is smart, but if you stop because of pain, you are never going to learn to differentiate between the pain from soreness and pain from injury.





I%26#039;ve never forgotten these kinds of comments I%26#039;ve heard through the years and I think my ability to judge between pain and actually injury has gotten better because of it. The mind is the big part of pain really. Its not that it isn%26#039;t there, but if you allow your body to dictate how your mind deals with pain, you will not be able to deal with pain. Yes, its unpleasant, but I%26#039;d rather deal with the worst physical pain than a minor emotional pain any day of the week. Besides, the more you train, the less minor pains will bother you. Injuries, sure, but pain, no.





Fifth - Ukemi - the art of %26#039;taking the fall%26#039; so to speak. Underrated in importance quite often from what I see written on the internet.





When you are training, your job as Uke is to take the fall, but that doesn%26#039;t mean to just give it to your partner. Sensei CONSTANTLY talks about the art or Ukemi being the other half of Aikido. Ukemi is about moving to a safe place, protecting yourself and admitting that your own safety is more important than trying to %26#039;win%26#039;. In fact, if you walk away unharmed, you won as self defense is SELF defense which doesn%26#039;t necessarily require destroying the attacker.





Let me ask you this - if you were in a fight and had to choose between getting a punch in there while breaking your arm, what would you choose? If you would break YOUR OWN arm by making a stupid move, you are in for lots of injuries. If on the other hand, you hold the punch to save yourself, you will avoid being injured.... AND in a position to reverse the situation.





I would say that as a beginner (at least this is how it was for me for a while) Its all about taking it easy because the techniques are difficult and the Ukemi more so - push yourself to the point of pain so you can learn, but not so far that you get injured. Its a fine line, but that%26#039;s the point of training, to get better and better at that balancing act. Learn the mechanics, think about foot placement. Think about the step one, step two, step three aspect. Your body hasn%26#039;t integrated the techniques much yet so let it do so!





Your senior students should be aware of this and adjust far more to protect you. If they are not taking inexperience into account, sooner or later, you will get injured - don%26#039;t train with those people.





Bottom line - don%26#039;t look for the throw or look for the fall - let it happen naturally. Its just going to take a while for your body and brain to learn how to handle that so just ease up and give it time.





On the other hand.............





If its just general soreness, don%26#039;t worry about it. My first class put me in the same boat. Now I can honestly say that I haven%26#039;t been sore from physical activity for years. My body is just used to it now I guess - just as your will be.





It didn%26#039;t take long either - at the beginning, I trained about twice a week - after a month, I wasn%26#039;t sore anymore. Now I train around 4 to 8 times a week depending on my schedule and still no soreness. Results may vary, but stick with it and you will get there.





Don%26#039;t let the inner ghosts (your worries apprehensions and such stop you - that is what loosing is because true victory is victory over yourself - THAT is the real lesson that will serve you in all aspects of your life)





The %26#039;Way%26#039; IS the goal. The path IS the destination, and the only way to fail to follow the %26#039;Way%26#039; is to stop training. Its not about rank or skill its about tenacity and determination - the inner ghosts (like pain for one or the %26quot;what%26#039;s the point, I suck at this and am never going to be Bruce Lee%26quot; kinds of thinking - the %26quot;Am I going to make it through the next lesson? the %26quot;I haven%26#039;t given my legs enough rest.%26quot; - the %26#039;:(... *gulp*) are the real enemy and they never give up. Defeat them and you have passed the truly important tests of character and spirit. They will be back, but you have defeated them once, you can defeat them again.





Welcome to a different way of thinking - I hope it helps you to know you aren%26#039;t alone.|||Glad to help and good luck with your training - it only gets more and more fun! Report Abuse
|||I never got to write a comment on this one, but I think you did a very good job Justin explaining this to her. A+ in my book for an answer, ive been a Sensei 28 years now and that was a great answer. Report Abuse
|||it%26#039;s very possible that you%26#039;re just sore because you%26#039;re not used to the type of physicality that%26#039;s involved in Aikido or Martial Arts in general.





Once your legs feel better, try stretching befor you go to class, or just before class starts.





after about a week or two, you should adjust pretty well to the discipline.





you%26#039;ll be alright it just takes getting used to, especially if you%26#039;ve never had any prior Martial Arts experience, but the stretching should help you a little more.|||You may have overdone it the first time..You%26#039;ll need to warm up properly and maybe walk/Jog/Swim to get into condition,cos You%26#039;ll need it for any martial arts training...|||Don%26#039;t worry. I%26#039;m a first dan in taekwondo (first degree black), but I remember my very first martial art class. I had pretty much the same experience you did. I gets better though. Just drink plenty of water to flush out your muscles. Your muscles just aren%26#039;t used to martial arts yet. After awhile, about 2 months, the hurting will stop. Make sure to stretch and warm up well and get plenty of sleep. Before going to your next lesson, I suggest stretching alot before you even go, then tell your instructor about your concerns.





:-)|||You%26#039;re using muscles you haven%26#039;t really used before, and you%26#039;re going to be sore until you get them into shape. Same thing happened to me in aikido, but it gets better over time.

Is Aikido a good martial art?

I was thingking about taking aikido... that or taekwondo...


what do u think?|||Depends on what you personally feel comfortable using and can adapt to,but my choice would be aikido as it is similar to my base style Jiu-jitsu but with more emphasis on evasion ,locks and throws.





Just my humble opinion best wishes :)***|||it%26#039;s a great martial art if you have the patience to master it.


aikido is very technical, which makes that it will usually take you 6-8 years before you really master the basics of the art to a level that%26#039;s fairly practical. aikido is all about evasion and using the opponent%26#039;s initiative. the techniques taught in aikido are usually very hard to really master practically, but if you master them they can cause serious damage. but the philosophy of aikido is peace.|||the better question to ask is:





%26quot;Is Aikido the right art for me?%26quot;





You can go around in circles alll day contemplating if a given style is the right one for you BUT the only way to know is to check out local dojos and give them a try.





The only way to know is to DO. The only way to DO is to actually watch a class then give it a try for a month or so.





Beware schools that don%26#039;t cator to that idea. Relish schools that do regardless if you end up as a student or not.





The style isn%26#039;t important... the school isn%26#039;t directly important (its justs a lens)... The student IS important.





The lesson is where the value is at - the environment is just that - the environment in which the lesson is taught.





Learn nuclear physics in a bathroom or learn high fashion in a highrise penthouse.. what%26#039;s really more useful and valuable?





Your answer to that question, Stephen Hawkings or paris hilton, respectively, speaks volumes.





























Martial ARTs (ie - jutsu, method, practice, art) is paris hilton.





Martial WAY (ie - do, way, practice, mind-set) is Stephen Hawkings.





paris hilton is the superfluous





Stephan Hawkings is real understanding|||Aikido is a very good martial art, but the ability to unlock the secrets of Aikido lie with the teacher and the student. As much of Aikido is based on Chin Na, I have not seen many aikido places so if you find one with a good schedule, great.





TKD places I am more wary of, too many are strip mall belt factories. Near my home we have the oldest TKD schools in the USA, they turn out a good product.





This all depends on your goals, what do you want from a martial art ?|||I suggest you try them both out. I dabbled in Aikido when I was a fair bit younger and found it too passive for what I wanted from an art (So I went to Muay Thai) . As I%26#039;ve gotten older I realise it is a very effective style f you have the time and dedication to learn it. This is not an art you will pick up and become a %26quot;weapon%26quot; with quickly. It%26#039;s more of a journey.





TKD - As someone else pointed out, check into the schools as unfortunately a lot of the substance has been replaced by %26quot;pumping students out%26quot;. (I received a flyer in the mail just recently for a new school near me which %26quot;promises%26quot; you will be a black belt within a year!)





Good luck with finding the style for you.|||depends on who%26#039;s expression of it your studying... but its sposed to take 10 years to %26quot;master%26quot; the basics... and i think good teachers of it are few.. i do an aikido type art and can talk for days bout it but its best for you to go expierence it and decide for your self you may think its sh!t... or you may think its the sh!t|||it is and to is tkd. it is not the system that makes the fighter but rather the fighter that makes the system. ask yourself what do you hope to gain from studying a martial art and then make your decision. tkd can be used in competition. as far as I know there are no competitions for akido. I%26#039;m pretty sure its just learned for self-defense|||I really don%26#039;t think you%26#039;d like it, it is useful, but takes many yrs. to use, where as most karate systems have techniques that can be used right away. Now any martial art at it%26#039;s highest levels can be unbelieveable, but my point is you need have have something that can use early in the game, I%26#039;d like to be able to defend myself within my own lifetime. BOTTOM LINE, find some form of karate.|||The best way to decide which martial art to take up is to go visit a dojo. Many dojos will even let you try a few classes before making a decision. Both Aikido and TKD are fine styles. Go and see which is the best for you. Good luck.|||aikido would be great for you .........it emphasizes evasion and circular/spiral redirection of an attacker%26#039;s aggressive force into throws, pins, and immobilizations as a primary strategy rather than punches and kicks