Solid Sir !!...yes even in our class we teach our students to always have one arm up and the other down....we call it a CHECK .. We do a lot of the Parry’s to !! Good techniques 💯👍🏽!! 👊🏽 Salute Sir....Hai !! Thank you 🤙🏽🇬🇺🇲🇵🤙🏽!!
I don't understand why so foreigners had to train with this. As a Filipino, we do this stuff with sticks during our childhood. Maybe now it's bit different because people these days have cellphones and stuff. The only difference is we don't do any fancy knife dancing we just like trying to hit each other and let the adrenaline flow and we just do the moves instinctively and naturally without any prior training. Prolly that's because of our traditional games that develop our speed and coordination, i just found asking myself why foreigners(Westerners specifically)generally needed to have training to develop their speed and other skills that is so natural to eastern people i find that quite interesting.
I found skateboarding to be perfectly natural and have taught others to skate but when I first started training in kajukenbo they kept correcting my stances. Then later studying under a wushu master in Yang Tai Chi I again had to learn basic foot work and specifics of the art. Now as an eskrimador and MMA practitioner I find especially the older I get the more important foot work and basic fundementals are essential to keeping me rooted and spry.
We agree with what you're saying. From experience, the western mindset is very science and logic driven. So they need a step-by-step system/template to develop certain attributes instead of going by instinct. It's like the old school fighters used to say, "you either you get it, or you don't get it." When training, you have to train non compliancy at times, but for training safety everything has to be broken down into drills, scenarios and patterns.
@@steveng8251 Thanks for sharing your experience. Yes, some martial arts styles are really dogmatic with what they teach, that you have to do things a certain way. But if it doesn't feel natural where it effects your base, structure and movement, why do it? You can't copy another fighter/martial artist because they move based on their own self.
My first encounter with stick fighting in my childhood years .... was when I was trying to block my ass from getting spanking from my mom 💯 !! Stick fighting since ever since 🤣🤣 .
That's a good question. Since there are many interpretations of the term "dirty boxing" it's difficult to find a definitive book that encompasses it as a whole. We've only seen one book available online as digital e-book: www.mkguniversity.com/courses/old-school-panantukan-training-manual-e-book
There are variances of this within the Philippines, but became more popular in the US when Filipino Eskrimadors made their way Stateside. There's a couple of Yaw-Yan schools in Cebu which is another great striking art.
@@FMAPulse in mma you should go for the head or the solar plexus if you do the outside gunting because even if your opponent retracts his arm and you missed the slap you at least hit your opponent and don’t go for the bicep when doing the outside gunting because it’s not that effective if you don’t have a weapon with you
in "da paket"!!!
Front, back or side paket? LOL!
Solid Sir !!...yes even in our class we teach our students to always have one arm up and the other down....we call it a CHECK .. We do a lot of the Parry’s to !! Good techniques 💯👍🏽!! 👊🏽 Salute Sir....Hai !! Thank you 🤙🏽🇬🇺🇲🇵🤙🏽!!
Thank you for your support. Sorry we just saw this comment now. As long as it works, go for it :)
Mabuhay fellows!!!
Great stuff
I love it
Salamat po
Salamat! Let us know if you want us to cover any other topics or basics. We'll try our best to answer it and do a video covering that topic. Cheers!
Amazing video, master. Can I borrow your technique and applied to the little things I know in Karate do? Greetings from Venezuela and God bless you
Go for it! It's a FMA technique taught within certain groups. It's not necessarily mine. Blend it in with whatever you know. Greetings from Chicago.
I don't understand why so foreigners had to train with this. As a Filipino, we do this stuff with sticks during our childhood. Maybe now it's bit different because people these days have cellphones and stuff. The only difference is we don't do any fancy knife dancing we just like trying to hit each other and let the adrenaline flow and we just do the moves instinctively and naturally without any prior training. Prolly that's because of our traditional games that develop our speed and coordination, i just found asking myself why foreigners(Westerners specifically)generally needed to have training to develop their speed and other skills that is so natural to eastern people i find that quite interesting.
I found skateboarding to be perfectly natural and have taught others to skate but when I first started training in kajukenbo they kept correcting my stances. Then later studying under a wushu master in Yang Tai Chi I again had to learn basic foot work and specifics of the art. Now as an eskrimador and MMA practitioner I find especially the older I get the more important foot work and basic fundementals are essential to keeping me rooted and spry.
We agree with what you're saying. From experience, the western mindset is very science and logic driven. So they need a step-by-step system/template to develop certain attributes instead of going by instinct. It's like the old school fighters used to say, "you either you get it, or you don't get it." When training, you have to train non compliancy at times, but for training safety everything has to be broken down into drills, scenarios and patterns.
@@steveng8251 Thanks for sharing your experience. Yes, some martial arts styles are really dogmatic with what they teach, that you have to do things a certain way. But if it doesn't feel natural where it effects your base, structure and movement, why do it? You can't copy another fighter/martial artist because they move based on their own self.
My first encounter with stick fighting in my childhood years .... was when I was trying to block my ass from getting spanking from my mom 💯 !! Stick fighting since ever since 🤣🤣 .
@@franksantos4680 We were all there once LOL! As the saying goes, "my first FMA teacher is my mom."
Respected sir 🙏, thanks
Once you parry the hand, why not just go for the face instead of the arms?
Safety first when we train beginners, that's why we go for the arm first. Ideally yes, you want to hit the jaw or temple line.
any books to help self learning?
That's a good question. Since there are many interpretations of the term "dirty boxing" it's difficult to find a definitive book that encompasses it as a whole. We've only seen one book available online as digital e-book:
www.mkguniversity.com/courses/old-school-panantukan-training-manual-e-book
Is there a school in cebu
There are variances of this within the Philippines, but became more popular in the US when Filipino Eskrimadors made their way Stateside. There's a couple of Yaw-Yan schools in Cebu which is another great striking art.
This tactic with a pocket stick/ metal pen would be brutal.
Indeed, any short blunt object would work just the same. Keys are always available :)
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Thank you for your support :)
Thats not a philly. Its a comstock. Common mistake though as they look very similar.
Are guntings use in a MMA environment?
Not that we've seen as of yet. If its a foreign move, most won't experiment with it.
Less effective with gloves on. Also less effective when opponent is wearing winter clothing (padding). Works great in hot climates.
@@Eric3Frog Agreed.
@@FMAPulse in mma you should go for the head or the solar plexus if you do the outside gunting because even if your opponent retracts his arm and you missed the slap you at least hit your opponent and don’t go for the bicep when doing the outside gunting because it’s not that effective if you don’t have a weapon with you
👍👍👍👍👍👍
Thank you :)
FMA Pulse 🙏
Suklay i can demonstrate it.