I miss you Master Kim. Your lessons help straighten out my life. I can't say if I was able to fulfill everything you taught me, but the things you taught me, I will always cherish 🙇♂️
To those who have watched the video and/or have decided to make an uninformed comment or opinion. I would like to share this with you. As a martial artist who has studied for more than 3 decades, although I am not a Hapkido stylist, I do know that Hapkido is practical. The logo on the back of the instructor's jacket (or "gi") is the Chinese and Japanese word for "energy" or "spirit" and is the second word in the name of this style "Hap-Ki-do." It is written the same as the Japanese word Aikido, although Hapkido has a greater variety of techniques than the Japanese Aikido. Hapkido has kicks, punches, flips, throws, and wrist locks among other things. I am sharing this info for those who don't know anything about Hapkido and assume that it is only has wrist locks or throws.
Sir, many of us have just as much time and experience in martial arts, as well. Who cares about that... It's a forum for open comments.. And no system is complete, yes? They all work in unison. Why does everyone have to prove that they are so awesome. Ego kills
Thank you, for your information. I mean, I dont know nothing about that shit, so I dont know if this art is a legal art. Although its a beautiful art. But, your words say me that I will try that on my town with some Hapkido master. 😂 😂 Thx.
I agree, because there are a lot of bad ones out there. Especially the ones who like to bad mouth other styles and instructors. Those are the ones that should be avoided.
To the people who say these techniques don’t work because there’s no resistance. I trained stand up self defense techniques in jiujitsu (doesn’t matter same principle) and there was no hard resistance why? Because if they resist their joint would break! I applied them in real life twice and it saved my ass
I'm proud to say I was a jr lvl black belt in Hapkido at 13 it took about 3-4 years I think. I went to the dojo 3 times a week. Im in my 40s now, but I remember some arm locks and pressure points. I still have some muscle memory from doing the forms over and over for those 3-4 years as a young teen... Maybe I'll start it up again one day. I miss practicing my forms at 7 am on a cold concrete basement floor. My sensei Master Kyo was an 8th Dan from South Korea I believe.
Stop stalling n get back too it when I was in the Marines many years ago I studied Shotokan n achieved a brown belt but then I walked away cause life got in the way n I regret it to this day now I just started jui jitsu n it’s hard on me at 52 my body doesn’t move like it use to so if u have the notion don’t waste time cause that’s one asset you don’t have enough of
It's never too late. I did kickboxing as a kid and 20something year old and then took a 25 year break. I've been studying Matsubashi Ryu Karate and Koryu Uchinadi for 3 years now at 46 years old. Recently got my 4th Kyu (Blue Belt)
Part of Hapkido is what water principal which requires being flowed and balance in hips and feet doing techniques. Reasons behind water flow development in HapKido is bring a technique to opponent. Your opponent bring your technique out during interaction in Hapkido that what makes learning and being good in Hapkido challenging and practice is different then other style who value hardness over water. To create the water Principle is very hard for strength in NOT strength in a direct line but in circle form of movement using strength as force of action. Balance is key to develop water flow circulation in movement as shape your body. Leaning Hapkido is one point then refining it down to simplest action his the highest level state of person. It is about the person them self relationship to their abilities within Hapkido techniques. It is great ART for mind body and breath.
@@Shadowrulzalways the demonstration assistants don't react naturally. Try those techniques on uncooperative opposition such as wrestling, BJJ, Judo, combat Sambo, etc.
@@blitskreegdeantioch5851 I have. And it made it even worse. Being uncooperative will only do more damage to them than the person doing the technique. You seem to not get it. Understand, Judo and BJJ have wrist lock techniques. And Hapkido comes from both Aiki-JuJutsu and Judo.
Very good instruction, the negative comments are usually from folks that do not understand these are techniques taught for various applications, only good training and practice by the student will make any system effective. Thanks for sharing
Hapkido is brutal. When I trained, it’s designed to actually destroy joints, not just put them in locks (jujitsu) or throw (aikido). Person grabs you with right hand. You immediately elbow strike with the left, then wrap your left arm under the persons right arm just above the elbow as you grab the left wrist with your right hand. Pull up left, push down right and boom… you just broke his elbow. That’s hapkido.
@Jörmungandr I’ve trained extensively in hapkido as well as jujitsu, so yeah I get what you’re saying. The way I was trained in hapkido was to be as brutal as possible. My base was TKD and I picked up my black belt in that in the very early 90s. That’s back before it became a sport and we would spar full contact and we were pretty rough w/ one another. Hapkido was a great art to compliment TKDs close fighting deficiencies. Ironically, I no longer train or practice any of that, tho it’s muscle memory. Today I train MJER iaijutsu. My preferred style of self defense is a .357 magnum 😜
@@Shadowrulzalways Both Japanese jujutsu and BJJ. More extensively on the Japanese side of things, tho. I’ve trained hapkido more than either, however. I also have dans in karate and iaijutsu.
Listen, Hapkido is a very aggressive martial art, like anything else, with practice comes perfection! This technique is very effective! Wrist locks can submit an assailant immediately upon blocking an attack!! What you see on the video is simply for beginners, try it out for yourself. It's not difficult but the system will challenge you. Hapkido is not for everyone though but if you do like it you'll know it because you'll feel yourself being immersed in the art.
Charles Viars, have you ever tried a wrist lock in a real attack? Well, it won’t do crap. You’ll break their wrist and they won’t even realize it because of the adrenaline! Besides I’ve never heard of an attack where someone comes up and grabs your wrists!
@@me3851 I said some games of the very begining ...😉 But the real stuff is on the streets and you can't go down to the floor, to the soil because some gang ,I mean another gang that could stabb you meanwhile you are very happy playing to the locks and the "mataleon"...🤣😂😎😎😎😋😂
@@denramamon2703 yeah, you're right. it benefits its sale to mostly uninformed consumers. As a Martial Art, becoming an Olympic sports ruins you even as sales boom. Judo is now taught as an Olympic sport and almost never as a MA. Some in BJJ are trying to make it an Olympic sport it will be more markeatable, while other leaders in BJJ are fighting it so it does not become even more sport oriented. Hapkido seem really cool.
Hapkido is actually a quite challenging martial art. The Judo style throws, joint locks, flashy kicks, high jumping rolls and falls, are too much for some. as far as the fantastic TKD kicks, most of us can do those kicks as well, but they are not focused on to the extreme as they are in TKD because frankly, they are not very practical or efficient. But, they bring in young students in. In addition to flashy kicks, we have many far Less flashy kicks, designed for sweeps and throws. But, I think the main reason is that we are not an Olympic sport, and never will be. There is also no universally accepted mechanism to pressure test. It is also quite easy to be injured. But, I would say it is certainly one of the most complete systems out there. Aiki Jujitsu, from which Hapkido spawns, combined with powerful Korean style kicks, really only lacks western style boxing techniques, which in my mind, is necessary to add to one’s training. We have take downs, kicks, throws, chokes, joint manipulations of all types. In fact, I think our joint locks of legs, knees, ankles, and feet pretty much nullify the guard. If I get a foot, it’s done. And, they freely give them to me. The problem with Hapkido is not Hapkido. It is how Hapkido is practiced by schools. It needs to be soft because most people are soft, and because they need to make money to stay open. If it’s too hard, no one keeps doing it.
Эти приемы может и эффективны если под них подставляться. Но когда тебя атакуют руками и ногами на сумасшедшей скорости меняя уровни атаки вы просто не сможете сделать захват тем более если удары реверсные . Проверено на себе за 42 года занятий боевыми каратэ.
I am a 1st degree black belt in hapkido but I am now currently training full-time in muay thai,brazilian jiu jitsu and sambo I remember when my hapkido master was living at the time before he passes away I remember he demonstrated the goose neck lock on me that was one of the most painful locks I have ever been in I still use hapkido to a certain degree in muay thai the only thing I use in my muay thai from hapkido is just the kicks and leg trips mostly that's about it I still know hapkido but my main striking style is muay thai.
Wow great instructor! I’ve taught for 15 years and still get amazed by watching others teach too. Those joint locks hurt but you have to feel pain to understand it.
Hapkido, if mastered provides a large array of techniques to deal with any situation. It sort of teaches you how far you can go if needed to save your life. However, my teacher always said stay off the ground at all costs. Even though some techniques might cause your body parts to touch the ground. Hapkido with ground techniques such as BJJ will ensure you have the upper hand always in a self defense situation. Hapkido is made to stop threat or give an attacker months to think twice about attacking someone while they are healing from their injuries if they can. If you want to look at it from a realistic stand point, Hapkido is deadly... Sounds harsh but knowledge of self defense is what will save your life and that is most important.
Only ever teach it if it works majority of time in sparring with dynamic resisting opponent..... So so many techniques that look good/effective fail when applied in this situation.... Always question your training... That is good practice. Its not disrespectful to question effectiveness, it should be welcomed
The resisting in sparring is unrealistic as well. The opponent train with you and know exactly what you want to do. The same is with mma fights. Before a fight they watch all the fights of the opponenent and know exactly their techniques. In a real street fight the aggressor wont know your techniques and its also faster.
It is basically Daito Ryu Aiki-Jujitsu. It has many old style jujitsu type throws, locks, strikes, and chokes as well as advanced kicking techniques. Normally a class would consist of rolling, break falls, basic kicks and stretching, Judo type throws, followed by self defense techniques, which were similar to Aikido joint locks, only they were combined with throws and striking techniques, utilizing elbows, knees, fist, or feet. Such techniques were called “finishing techniques” designed to incapacitate the opponent. Then more stretching and advanced kicking drills. Always ended in light contact sparring from day one. To me it only lacks western style boxing techniques. The ground fighting techniques are certainly there. It was just seldom emphasized as most students just wanted to do the cool exciting stuff. Getting thrown on the floor and choked didn’t seem to interest most students back when I taught. I think it’s just the reality of trying to grow school memberships. Like BJJ these days starting on the ground. Apparently, people still don’t like being slammed in the ground.
I trained with masters in this type of setting 40 years ago. Still carry what i learned today. Taught my kids to circle block. Nuts nose solerplex. Counter with 3 strikes.
The teacher in martial arts this cas hapkido, was for my opinion, a cat playing with a mouse ... àh,ah,ah,...aaaàhh !! No, very professional because he knows the vital points of human body ! Many thanks, Grillo.
@@jesspeters1213 This would never work on anyone but... well... someone stupid, drunk, or inexperienced enough to grab you like that however, if they did, imagine what judo offer...
There's only one problem with properly applied joint locks. They are based on the notion that the person would rather go along with it to avoid the pain. Some will resist just to dare you to cause at least minimum damage. And some will do it, because they won't mind the pain.
A bit of an old comment but I'm going to bite because this was stupid. Part of these locks is that more you push back more it hurts. When you see these people tilt or move towards a specific direction it's because they're in a lot of pain and they move instinctively towards that general line of direction. Seriously, if you've ever experienced it you'll know, unless you have nerve damage you're not going to say you don't feel pain. The smarter thing would have been if you mentioned the reaction time and practice required to use this in an actual setting I'm saying this comment is stupid because you're talking out of your @$$ and know jack from what you just said
@@XXX3155 ever try this in a street attack under stress. Bet your heart would be beating out of your chest. Try grabbing a wrist when your about to get a punch in the face. Fights don't usually battle over wrist control like here in these demonstrations. I'm honestly not trying to be an asshole. I've trained in hapkido and TKD (1st Dan) but fighting and assaults are dirty not respectful or artistic.
Man Hapkido is an amazing martial art ! . Some of the throws and joint manipulation techniques are absolutely frightening , but at 47 years old, I’m just not a fan of the jumping , spinning, fancy kicks that are such a big part of the art form. I’m not sure what roll those kind of kicks would play in a real life street self defense situation. But the throws, take downs, and joint locks of Hapkido make it a really great art for self defense
MR SPOOKY HOLLER You are right about that, that is the reason why I don’t like any of the fancy techniques. Reality is much different than a training facility, therefore if you apply the techniques in the street you MUST use simple moves with much of accuracy and speed. Peace!
I love the gentle and easy flowing moves of this martial art. Steven Seagal displays these moves in his movies but does them in a more aggressive manner. 😎👍
It is. Hapkido is a hybrid martial art with lots from Japan. Founder GM Choi lived in Japan for 30 years. After liberation of Korea he brought it back home - a hybrid of Karate (or in Korean they call it Tang Soo Do the open-hand striking art), Judo, and Aikijujutsu (ancestor of Aikido), among other things, including other Korean martial arts like Taekkyeon, and TKD kicks. etc. It's not just one style of techniques.. It has many. (check the wiki page at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hapkido ). That's why it's a very Comprehensive Martial Art (see ua-cam.com/video/EXJJzhuMRqU/v-deo.html ), not a "Mixed Martial Art" (MMA is virtually a trademark of Gracie's BJJ), but it's more of a Hybrid/Comprehensive art. In fact, the Korean word "Hapkido" is practically a direct translation from the Japanese word "Aikido". The "ki" and the "do" have the same meaning (and spelling/sound of course); the only difference is that "ai" in Japanese means "together, unify" (and also "love"), and "hap" in Korean means "weave, coordinate". And actually, if you look at definitions in Google Dictionary, you will see that Aikido translates as "together/unify"(ai) "spirit"(ki) "way"(do), or "way of adapting the spirit"; and Hapkido translates as "weave/coordinate"(hap) "energy"(ki) "way"(do)", or "way of coordinated energy". So, Aikido (or Aikijujutsu) is pretty much an ancestor art to Hapkido. BUT, the difference between the two over all is that Aikido uses more soft/inner ki (spirit) than compared to Hapkido's more hard/outer ki (energy). We tighten up muscles more and shout more (outer) because we not only redirect energy/momentum like Aikido does, but we also use harder counter techniques. Aikido uses defensive techniques with as minimal effort or muscle power as necessary, by instead utilizing the opponents attack/direction/momentum against them, for purpose of self-defense and control or evasion, without the intent to counter necessarily with a violent attack. Its premise is to self-defend and counter-control without ever truly violently hurting the opponent. Hapkido uses these techniques, AND the same ideal/philosophy as well, with respect to human life, but we counter-control with much stronger intent and power, and if needed, (counter) attack with very much deadly violent force, depending on the situation. We can go soft, or we can go hard. :) We actually break boards in Hapkido, since it includes striking art/techniques, unlike Aikido. We also have defense against weapons (guns, knives, etc.) just like in Aikido, but we also have counters which take the gun or knife away and USE IT AGAINST the opponent, cutting major arteries for example. We study anatomy and all the pressure points for purpose of exploitation during counters. It's a very powerful art with a rich history, including celebrities like Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung, Angela Mao, and deep within politics, and training of special forces, green berets, secret service, CIA/FBI, law enforcement; it has a body guard training component; etc. etc. If you wanna see a Hapkido bad ass, check out Chris Garland. His master is GM Ji Han-jae, student of Founder Choi, and was the bad guy in Bruce's Game of Death. My grandmaster comes from GM Kim Jin-pal, via GM Pham of Vietnam who was in charge of Kim's school there after the war. GM Kim has been all over the world with schools. I'm very proud to be a Kim Jin Pal Hapkido practitioner here in Houston. I just got my black belt after 3 years. And I'm just getting started! :) Cheers.
I'll tell you a funny story. I had watched some Aikido videos one day before my Hapkido class. It was an Aikido master showing how to roll.. doing rolls. It's very graceful, Aikido.. soft and smooth.. effortless. So, in my Hapkido class, during our rolling exercises, I tried to do one roll Aikido-style. So, instead of getting in fighting position, then stepping and using power and tightening muscles and shouting while rolling, like we do in Hapkido (using outer/hard ki), I instead relaxed my body, had my right leg already leading, calmly/softly extending my right arm out, and then after short soft inner meditative preparation, went for the Aikido style roll (you know, where it's like a smooth 'C' curve along your body side, smooth, graceful, and you come up fully standing, no problem?). Well, during the roll, my left pinky somehow got caught in between a couple of my toes!! (LOL, I'm so embarrassed about this). And, my small(pinky) distal phalanx (tip of my pinky) got HYPER-EXTENDED!! My pinky finger was crooked!! But I finished the class, no problem. I had capsulitis for weeks, though; having to constantly exercise it so the ligaments don't freeze up during healing. What had happened was, because I didn't use hard ki to tighten up my body, muscle, hands or FINGERS, nor used shouting, I was more prone to injury!! So, that's also one other thing we also learn & train in Hapkido -- PROTECTION, as in, HOW TO TAKE IT, and TAKE IT HARD!! We have tolerance/endurance training exercises. In Japanese Judo, and other martial arts (perhaps Aikido too I'm sure), they call it "ukemi". Ukemi is the art of falling, being throw, or being the "attack dummy", without being injured. This is not just for the safety of being a training partner (or "uke") in a class/school, but can be used/trained for serious real world street application too.. It really makes you TOUGHER!!! I'm not sure what Aikido has for making one TOUGH. But anyway, to finish my story -- if I had used Hapkido's hard/outer ki, and tightened my muscles, put ki into my joints and body, and shouted, I would have protected my joints, my hand, my fingers, my pinky more. :P :D :)
@@djkc7486 We have Ukemi too.. But in my school we remain pretty soft :p It is all on basis of knowing your body and how to keep it in one piece during practice..
@@thijsgeurts5003 That's what it's all about! Self defense, that is. Keeping in one piece, and building tolerance & toughness, being able to take most anything, no matter your body type. Muscles and ki give power and strength; but ukemi and ki give toughness and protection. Even a weakling can have toughness (a la, Steve Rogers, Captain America, "I could do this all day" while getting beat up by the bully). :P Also, the attacking partner in training has just as much responsibility, and is just as important (or more), than the one defending or being tested. If the sparring partner that is giving the attack and taking the counters, takedowns, falls and/or flips (with ukemi) does not do it properly and give it their all, it's a disgrace/dishonor/misrepresentation of the art and of their master.
If you enjoy this style and is your hobby or whatever, that is great. As long as you do not believe it is a good style for self defense, because it can put you in harm's way moreso than without it Looks great in the movies!
Depends. If you run into the run of The mill hothead with no fighting skills, I imagine some of these techniques would work. If you run into an mma guy, then maybe not. If you run into a guy with an edged weapon, doesn’t matter- you will be dead with any style except gun-fu.
LOL at the people saying joint locks would never work in a real situation. Cops all over the world use joint and wrist locks against thugs, and you can’t get any more real than that.
The problem is these are static attacks. The guy is playing along willingly and exaggerating how "incapacitated" he is by any technique. The air elbow didn't even come within 3 inches of his face and he flung himself back with fake force.
Good demonstrations however it appears the camera operator does not listen to the audio as it is being recorded. The mic is picking up too much extra noise & it is very detrimental to the final production. Maybe an external mic that only picks up in Directional mode would be advised. Then we could hear just the expert & his comments with the students would be heard. Directional mikes are good for Focusing upon what's in front of you & keeping the instruction on point.
Con la adrenalina, las circunstancias, suel mojado, varios atacantes, etc.. Pero si funcionan no como en el video, pero como se dice como te trinque ya no te escapas se siente mucho dolor pero necesita mucha practica, y siempre primero se golpea y después se reduce.. A mi me ha funcionado en la calle, el que da primero da dos veces
Como quisiera de veras q en una pelea callejera pasará eso de verdad pero no sé q pasa la gente no queda imposibilitada al contrario te dan con lo que tengan
Iori Yagami si practicas mucho, por muchos años, podrás aplicar algunos de los conceptos del arte marcial, los cuales debes adaptarlos a la situación, pero antes de eso, necesitas al menos 10 años de practicaba bajo la dirección de un buen instructor o maestro.
Aww cmon... Aikido is a very good martial art, but no one realize that aikido is a very spiritual art,, beyond the techniques. Avoiding every dammn situation, so its not a fighting art.
Hapkido, aikido and aikijujitsu spend way too much time on wrist grab techniques. Wrist grabbing was a common attack in feudal Japan because if I could grab your wrist and stop you from drawing your sword I could attack you with mine. We are not carrying swords anymore. Yes, people could still grab your wrists, but if you review street fight videos on UA-cam I’m sure it’s pretty hard to find an example. Training time is better spent learning how to defend against strikes, headlocks, and other more common attacks. Additionally one of the problems with Hapkido ( and several other arts) is the amount of time spent on compliant drills. Great way to introduce and learn a technique but if you don’t learn to apply it under pressure against a fully resistant opponent is value is greatly attenuated.
Yes and no. You made a good point regarding the way of training “ No sparring (no resistance) vs sparring (pressure / resistance) However, the issue is each student’s goal is different from one another, so school owner should set their program as how they want to run their school.
I feel you don't really know what Hapkido is. A lot of the common attacks you mention is covered in Hapkido. The locks are part of the Art, there's also throws and strikes. It's actually an amalgamation of three different martial arts combined - the striking is from Taekon, the traditional Korean martial art, the throws from Judo, and locks from jujitsu (also, an actual combat based jujitsu from a bona-fide samurai clan). The other issue about resisting opponents is that these can hurt...a lot. I don't think people understand the amount of pain it causes when a simple technique is applied - it hurts a lot and if done incorrectly can be problematic to say the least. I know the whole MMA craze sort of made people think that "realism" is important but there's limitations. There's a reason why you can strike the way you do in MMA - it hurts but it won't cause serious immediate damage
@@XXX3155 The joint locks and throws are from Daito-Ryu Aiki-JuJutsu. Japanese JuJutsu styles all have mostly throws and such for serious combat. Judo is a much more safer form of JuJutsu. Aiki-JuJutsu uses locks more but also have much more to them. Hapkido is 90% Aiki-JuJutsu but with striking and some Judo.
@P N Yes that is correct, but NKRJA IS ONLY 40 years old. But NKRJA system incorporates Old style JuJitsu along with Kenpo and Kodakan Judo which until someone has 3 arms and 3 legs the names will change but 98% of Wazas are all similar 😊👊
Причина не эффективности таких приёмов в их долгом применении, то есть на одно единственное движение атакующего причём в очень статической форме минимум 4 движения защиты, причём динамика скорости каждого движения разная, что заранее создаёт проблему его исполнения. Нужно просто признать это. Причем основа боевых практик не в ожидании нападения, когда ждёшь обязательно чего нибудь дождешься пропущенного удара к примеру.
Self defence techniques are easy when you have a compliant opponent that holds still for you while you apply these techiques that require fine motor skills.
I miss you Master Kim.
Your lessons help straighten out my life.
I can't say if I was able to fulfill everything you taught me, but the things you taught me, I will always cherish 🙇♂️
On point: Exemplary, respected comment.
To those who have watched the video and/or have decided to make an uninformed comment or opinion. I would like to share this with you. As a martial artist who has studied for more than 3 decades, although I am not a Hapkido stylist, I do know that Hapkido is practical. The logo on the back of the instructor's jacket (or "gi") is the Chinese and Japanese word for "energy" or "spirit" and is the second word in the name of this style "Hap-Ki-do." It is written the same as the Japanese word Aikido, although Hapkido has a greater variety of techniques than the Japanese Aikido. Hapkido has kicks, punches, flips, throws, and wrist locks among other things. I am sharing this info for those who don't know anything about Hapkido and assume that it is only has wrist locks or throws.
Sir, many of us have just as much time and experience in martial arts, as well.
Who cares about that... It's a forum for open comments..
And no system is complete, yes?
They all work in unison.
Why does everyone have to prove that they are so awesome.
Ego kills
Thank you, for your information.
I mean, I dont know nothing about that shit, so I dont know if this art is a legal art.
Although its a beautiful art.
But, your words say me that I will try that on my town with some Hapkido master. 😂 😂
Thx.
Hapkido is just Korean Aiki-JuJutsu. It has Judo and other things added in. But the base of the art is Daito-Ryu Aiki-JuJutsu.
On point: exemplary respected comment!
This guy looks very humble. it's hard to find a right teacher.
I agree, because there are a lot of bad ones out there. Especially the ones who like to bad mouth other styles and instructors. Those are the ones that should be avoided.
To the people who say these techniques don’t work because there’s no resistance. I trained stand up self defense techniques in jiujitsu (doesn’t matter same principle) and there was no hard resistance why? Because if they resist their joint would break! I applied them in real life twice and it saved my ass
Which style of JuJutsu? I trained in Judo and Atemi-Ryu JuJutsu.
Hapkido is a very powerful and great martial art!
I'm proud to say I was a jr lvl black belt in Hapkido at 13 it took about 3-4 years I think. I went to the dojo 3 times a week. Im in my 40s now, but I remember some arm locks and pressure points. I still have some muscle memory from doing the forms over and over for those 3-4 years as a young teen... Maybe I'll start it up again one day. I miss practicing my forms at 7 am on a cold concrete basement floor. My sensei Master Kyo was an 8th Dan from South Korea I believe.
geometric art u never forget and learned some other styles including spetna simple fast brutal and anything is a weapon
Where were you able to study Hapkido. I dont think I have ever seen a studio/academy in the US
Stop stalling n get back too it when I was in the Marines many years ago I studied Shotokan n achieved a brown belt but then I walked away cause life got in the way n I regret it to this day now I just started jui jitsu n it’s hard on me at 52 my body doesn’t move like it use to so if u have the notion don’t waste time cause that’s one asset you don’t have enough of
Sometimes they're mixed in with taekwondo schools
It's never too late. I did kickboxing as a kid and 20something year old and then took a 25 year break. I've been studying Matsubashi Ryu Karate and Koryu Uchinadi for 3 years now at 46 years old. Recently got my 4th Kyu (Blue Belt)
Hapkido is a great self defence art.The motor skills of this instructor .Is clean and smooth.
A practical and worthwhile video.
the leg sweep at the 2:10- 2:17 mark is sick.. im a big believer in basics and simplicity.. cheers
HomeBizNetworks.com ..absolutely, I agree 100%
Your video has +1Million views Master Kim.
💯👊
nice, this instructor has very fluid movements.
Part of Hapkido is what water principal which requires being flowed and balance in hips and feet doing techniques. Reasons behind water flow development in HapKido is bring a technique to opponent. Your opponent bring your technique out during interaction in Hapkido that what makes learning and being good in Hapkido challenging and practice is different then other style who value hardness over water. To create the water Principle is very hard for strength in NOT strength in a direct line but in circle form of movement using strength as force of action. Balance is key to develop water flow circulation in movement as shape your body. Leaning Hapkido is one point then refining it down to simplest action his the highest level state of person. It is about the person them self relationship to their abilities within Hapkido techniques. It is great ART for mind body and breath.
This Master is a tough man..
Just absolutely amazing..!
Nothing says effective like a docile compliant student for an technical example.
@P N noncompliant, untrained people don't react at all to these technics like students in class setting.
Yes
If you resist, those joint locks will only break your arm. The idea is to not resist those techniques because you will only be hurting yourself.
@@Shadowrulzalways the demonstration assistants don't react naturally. Try those techniques on uncooperative
opposition such as wrestling, BJJ, Judo, combat Sambo, etc.
@@blitskreegdeantioch5851 I have. And it made it even worse. Being uncooperative will only do more damage to them than the person doing the technique. You seem to not get it. Understand, Judo and BJJ have wrist lock techniques. And Hapkido comes from both Aiki-JuJutsu and Judo.
Always a pleasure seeing people practice! Thank you
amazing!!!
EXCELENTE VIDEO. 👍👍
Very good instruction, the negative comments are usually from folks that do not understand these are techniques taught for various applications, only good training and practice by the student will make any system effective.
Thanks for sharing
Thank you for your kind words. 🙏
Cool man. I wanna learn these
Thank you again Sabum for sharing and great techniques
Hapkido....first time I've seen this practice d...it reminds me of aikido.... looks an amazing martial art
Hapkido is brutal. When I trained, it’s designed to actually destroy joints, not just put them in locks (jujitsu) or throw (aikido). Person grabs you with right hand. You immediately elbow strike with the left, then wrap your left arm under the persons right arm just above the elbow as you grab the left wrist with your right hand. Pull up left, push down right and boom… you just broke his elbow. That’s hapkido.
@Jörmungandr I’ve trained extensively in hapkido as well as jujitsu, so yeah I get what you’re saying. The way I was trained in hapkido was to be as brutal as possible. My base was TKD and I picked up my black belt in that in the very early 90s. That’s back before it became a sport and we would spar full contact and we were pretty rough w/ one another. Hapkido was a great art to compliment TKDs close fighting deficiencies. Ironically, I no longer train or practice any of that, tho it’s muscle memory. Today I train MJER iaijutsu. My preferred style of self defense is a .357 magnum 😜
@@Vaille32 Which JuJutsu? I trained in Japanese JuJutsu and Judo.
@@Shadowrulzalways Both Japanese jujutsu and BJJ. More extensively on the Japanese side of things, tho. I’ve trained hapkido more than either, however. I also have dans in karate and iaijutsu.
@@Vaille32 Nice. 👍
Love it
Those are some super smooth moves! The man is a Master.
Great to watch.
I happened to come across ths again. (Mostly) solid techniques against unrealistic attacks. These masters need to evolve.
Well, it looks fancy!
This grandmaster is awesome
Sir u r super m ur fan.
Best Sensei..
Good falls. Well done taking those techniques.
Well trained ukes
Well crafted moves good for demo...
Listen, Hapkido is a very aggressive martial art, like anything else, with practice comes perfection! This technique is very effective! Wrist locks can submit an assailant immediately upon blocking an attack!! What you see on the video is simply for beginners, try it out for yourself. It's not difficult but the system will challenge you. Hapkido is not for everyone though but if you do like it you'll know it because you'll feel yourself being immersed in the art.
Charles Viars, have you ever tried a wrist lock in a real attack? Well, it won’t do crap. You’ll break their wrist and they won’t even realize it because of the adrenaline! Besides I’ve never heard of an attack where someone comes up and grabs your wrists!
@drachim See some of the first UFC...
Hapkido guys did a good work winning easily some of those matches.
@@simonscardino4135 they got their asses kicked
@@me3851 I said some games of the very begining ...😉
But the real stuff is on the streets and you can't go down to the floor,
to the soil because some gang ,I mean another gang that could stabb you meanwhile you are very happy playing to the locks and the "mataleon"...🤣😂😎😎😎😋😂
@@simonscardino4135 ok. Which matches did they do well in?
I have never understood how the hell McDojo styleTae KWON Do is found on every corner but a Hapkido studio is so hard to find.
Taekwondo benefits from being an olympic discipline
@@denramamon2703 yeah, you're right. it benefits its sale to mostly uninformed consumers. As a Martial Art, becoming an Olympic sports ruins you even as sales boom. Judo is now taught as an Olympic sport and almost never as a MA. Some in BJJ are trying to make it an Olympic sport it will be more markeatable, while other leaders in BJJ are fighting it so it does not become even more sport oriented.
Hapkido seem really cool.
Hapkido is actually a quite challenging martial art. The Judo style throws, joint locks, flashy kicks, high jumping rolls and falls, are too much for some. as far as the fantastic TKD kicks, most of us can do those kicks as well, but they are not focused on to the extreme as they are in TKD because frankly, they are not very practical or efficient. But, they bring in young students in. In addition to flashy kicks, we have many far
Less flashy kicks, designed for sweeps and throws. But, I think the main reason is that we are not an Olympic sport, and never will be. There is also no universally accepted mechanism to pressure test. It is also quite easy to be injured. But, I would say it is certainly one of the most complete systems out there. Aiki Jujitsu, from which Hapkido spawns, combined with powerful Korean style kicks, really only lacks western style boxing techniques, which in my mind, is necessary to add to one’s training. We have take downs, kicks, throws, chokes, joint manipulations of all types. In fact, I think our joint locks of legs, knees, ankles, and feet pretty much nullify the guard. If I get a foot, it’s done. And, they freely give them to me. The problem with Hapkido is not Hapkido. It is how Hapkido is practiced by schools. It needs to be soft because most people are soft, and because they need to make money to stay open. If it’s too hard, no one keeps doing it.
Эти приемы может и эффективны если под них подставляться. Но когда тебя атакуют руками и ногами на сумасшедшей скорости меняя уровни атаки вы просто не сможете сделать захват тем более если удары реверсные . Проверено на себе за 42 года занятий боевыми каратэ.
А говорят карате не работает...
Interesting joint lock from Hapkido 👍
Good Master
"bim" bam" "booom" 💥😅
Love this. I did wtf tkd for 19 years and we learned a little bit hapkido on the side. Cool martial art💪♥️
Idk what is it but if its learnt with tkd its trash
@@emilspasov4356 hah, 😅 I agree. I don't think I've ever learned anything of value at all
Always ready to be beaten. This will help to retain and try something different with help of basics. Shukriya sir
Nice, very nice
I am a 1st degree black belt in hapkido but I am now currently training full-time in muay thai,brazilian jiu jitsu and sambo I remember when my hapkido master was living at the time before he passes away I remember he demonstrated the goose neck lock on me that was one of the most painful locks I have ever been in I still use hapkido to a certain degree in muay thai the only thing I use in my muay thai from hapkido is just the kicks and leg trips mostly that's about it I still know hapkido but my main striking style is muay thai.
On point: exemplary respected comment!
Wow great instructor! I’ve taught for 15 years and still get amazed by watching others teach too. Those joint locks hurt but you have to feel pain to understand it.
Hapkido, if mastered provides a large array of techniques to deal with any situation. It sort of teaches you how far you can go if needed to save your life. However, my teacher always said stay off the ground at all costs. Even though some techniques might cause your body parts to touch the ground. Hapkido with ground techniques such as BJJ will ensure you have the upper hand always in a self defense situation. Hapkido is made to stop threat or give an attacker months to think twice about attacking someone while they are healing from their injuries if they can. If you want to look at it from a realistic stand point, Hapkido is deadly... Sounds harsh but knowledge of self defense is what will save your life and that is most important.
Judo or Japanese JuJutsu. BJJ is not King of the ground. Where do you think BJJ came from? 😂
But from Hapkido being deadly, I couldn’t agree more. 👍
In any fight i never tried to grab oponents hands. Rather punch in face. . Or duble or single leg .
Nice techniques but i dont undersrand why should a pissed of opponent grabb my both hands?
greecostyler It is just one of many possible scenarios:) 🙏
It is fairly common for pissed off people to grab your arms or hands
@@fritzkreisler2330 No its not
Me gusta practicar hapquido y combinar con taekuando
Great teacher. Who is he?
Greatest
Only ever teach it if it works majority of time in sparring with dynamic resisting opponent..... So so many techniques that look good/effective fail when applied in this situation.... Always question your training... That is good practice.
Its not disrespectful to question effectiveness, it should be welcomed
Jim Murrell No pain no gain. IMHO First hand experience is the best way to learn things, especially those who have a ton of questions.🙏
Thats why free style sparring is important. Having the fight gene helps.
@@davemarshall706Sparring..practising..lets not bring in wanky words like free style & not sure what you mean by the fight gene..the killer instinct?
The resisting in sparring is unrealistic as well. The opponent train with you and know exactly what you want to do. The same is with mma fights. Before a fight they watch all the fights of the opponenent and know exactly their techniques. In a real street fight the aggressor wont know your techniques and its also faster.
You need to be quick to make these techniques effective. If your opponent is not expecting a joint lock, then it’s totally easy to get the lock in.
Looks like a blend of traditional karate and aikido to me.
It is basically Daito Ryu Aiki-Jujitsu. It has many old style jujitsu type throws, locks, strikes, and chokes as well as advanced kicking techniques. Normally a class would consist of rolling, break falls, basic kicks and stretching, Judo type throws, followed by self defense techniques, which were similar to Aikido joint locks, only they were combined with throws and striking techniques, utilizing elbows, knees, fist, or feet. Such techniques were called “finishing techniques” designed to incapacitate the opponent. Then more stretching and advanced kicking drills. Always ended in light contact sparring from day one. To me it only lacks western style boxing techniques. The ground fighting techniques are certainly there. It was just seldom emphasized as most students just wanted to do the cool exciting stuff. Getting thrown on the floor and choked didn’t seem to interest most students back when I taught. I think it’s just the reality of trying to grow school memberships. Like BJJ these days starting on the ground. Apparently, people still don’t like being slammed in the ground.
I trained with masters in this type of setting 40 years ago. Still carry what i learned today. Taught my kids to circle block. Nuts nose solerplex. Counter with 3 strikes.
My Grandmaster is standing in the background
I like the Master's gi!
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
The teacher in martial arts this cas hapkido, was for my opinion, a cat playing with a mouse ... àh,ah,ah,...aaaàhh !! No, very professional because he knows the vital points of human body ! Many thanks, Grillo.
Wow... When you know what your opponent is doing next. Would you do when your don't know your opponent is doing...?
Kazama Muramasa ???
Kazama ! It's true, everything combined is easy. 👎
You take what comes at you. Train long enough you react using muscle memory. It's the same with most martial arts.
@@hapkidouniversity3954
With all those black Gei's you don't know who is a black belts.
@@jesspeters1213
This would never work on anyone but... well... someone stupid, drunk, or inexperienced enough to grab you like that however, if they did, imagine what judo offer...
There's only one problem with properly applied joint locks. They are based on the notion that the person would rather go along with it to avoid the pain. Some will resist just to dare you to cause at least minimum damage. And some will do it, because they won't mind the pain.
A bit of an old comment but I'm going to bite because this was stupid. Part of these locks is that more you push back more it hurts. When you see these people tilt or move towards a specific direction it's because they're in a lot of pain and they move instinctively towards that general line of direction.
Seriously, if you've ever experienced it you'll know, unless you have nerve damage you're not going to say you don't feel pain.
The smarter thing would have been if you mentioned the reaction time and practice required to use this in an actual setting
I'm saying this comment is stupid because you're talking out of your @$$ and know jack from what you just said
@@XXX3155 ever try this in a street attack under stress. Bet your heart would be beating out of your chest. Try grabbing a wrist when your about to get a punch in the face. Fights don't usually battle over wrist control like here in these demonstrations. I'm honestly not trying to be an asshole. I've trained in hapkido and TKD (1st Dan) but fighting and assaults are dirty not respectful or artistic.
I trained in ju jit su Alot of takedown and locks we do. But a nice demo on here
I also train BJJ and I love a lot. Thank you.
Man Hapkido is an amazing martial art ! . Some of the throws and joint manipulation techniques are absolutely frightening , but at 47 years old, I’m just not a fan of the jumping , spinning, fancy kicks that are such a big part of the art form. I’m not sure what roll those kind of kicks would play in a real life street self defense situation. But the throws, take downs, and joint locks of Hapkido make it a really great art for self defense
Not all fancy techniques work against resistance. Its easy to get caught up in prefalling students
MR SPOOKY HOLLER You are right about that, that is the reason why I don’t like any of the fancy techniques. Reality is much different than a training facility, therefore if you apply the techniques in the street you MUST use simple moves with much of accuracy and speed. Peace!
@Crown Commando your comment is so real! Love it dude! You said it so well!
Are kicks to opponents knees realy effective???
If you would like, I can give you a free trial class; there, you can have firsthand experience. 🙏
Yes..they are. Anything that takes the opponents base away is effective.
합기도 멋진 운동이지요!
I love the gentle and easy flowing moves of this martial art. Steven Seagal displays these moves in his movies but does them in a more aggressive manner. 😎👍
My take on this is don't just stand there do something. Great respect to the Hapkido master. Big fan of Billy Jack movies!
HAPKIDO is a really good martial art.
This looks an awful lot like aikido. The joint locks, the take downs very familiar
And quite painful if you have ever had them applied
It is. Hapkido is a hybrid martial art with lots from Japan. Founder GM Choi lived in Japan for 30 years. After liberation of Korea he brought it back home - a hybrid of Karate (or in Korean they call it Tang Soo Do the open-hand striking art), Judo, and Aikijujutsu (ancestor of Aikido), among other things, including other Korean martial arts like Taekkyeon, and TKD kicks. etc. It's not just one style of techniques.. It has many. (check the wiki page at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hapkido ). That's why it's a very Comprehensive Martial Art (see ua-cam.com/video/EXJJzhuMRqU/v-deo.html ), not a "Mixed Martial Art" (MMA is virtually a trademark of Gracie's BJJ), but it's more of a Hybrid/Comprehensive art.
In fact, the Korean word "Hapkido" is practically a direct translation from the Japanese word "Aikido". The "ki" and the "do" have the same meaning (and spelling/sound of course); the only difference is that "ai" in Japanese means "together, unify" (and also "love"), and "hap" in Korean means "weave, coordinate". And actually, if you look at definitions in Google Dictionary, you will see that Aikido translates as "together/unify"(ai) "spirit"(ki) "way"(do), or "way of adapting the spirit"; and Hapkido translates as "weave/coordinate"(hap) "energy"(ki) "way"(do)", or "way of coordinated energy". So, Aikido (or Aikijujutsu) is pretty much an ancestor art to Hapkido. BUT, the difference between the two over all is that Aikido uses more soft/inner ki (spirit) than compared to Hapkido's more hard/outer ki (energy). We tighten up muscles more and shout more (outer) because we not only redirect energy/momentum like Aikido does, but we also use harder counter techniques. Aikido uses defensive techniques with as minimal effort or muscle power as necessary, by instead utilizing the opponents attack/direction/momentum against them, for purpose of self-defense and control or evasion, without the intent to counter necessarily with a violent attack. Its premise is to self-defend and counter-control without ever truly violently hurting the opponent. Hapkido uses these techniques, AND the same ideal/philosophy as well, with respect to human life, but we counter-control with much stronger intent and power, and if needed, (counter) attack with very much deadly violent force, depending on the situation. We can go soft, or we can go hard. :) We actually break boards in Hapkido, since it includes striking art/techniques, unlike Aikido. We also have defense against weapons (guns, knives, etc.) just like in Aikido, but we also have counters which take the gun or knife away and USE IT AGAINST the opponent, cutting major arteries for example. We study anatomy and all the pressure points for purpose of exploitation during counters.
It's a very powerful art with a rich history, including celebrities like Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung, Angela Mao, and deep within politics, and training of special forces, green berets, secret service, CIA/FBI, law enforcement; it has a body guard training component; etc. etc. If you wanna see a Hapkido bad ass, check out Chris Garland. His master is GM Ji Han-jae, student of Founder Choi, and was the bad guy in Bruce's Game of Death. My grandmaster comes from GM Kim Jin-pal, via GM Pham of Vietnam who was in charge of Kim's school there after the war. GM Kim has been all over the world with schools. I'm very proud to be a Kim Jin Pal Hapkido practitioner here in Houston. I just got my black belt after 3 years. And I'm just getting started! :) Cheers.
I'll tell you a funny story. I had watched some Aikido videos one day before my Hapkido class. It was an Aikido master showing how to roll.. doing rolls. It's very graceful, Aikido.. soft and smooth.. effortless. So, in my Hapkido class, during our rolling exercises, I tried to do one roll Aikido-style. So, instead of getting in fighting position, then stepping and using power and tightening muscles and shouting while rolling, like we do in Hapkido (using outer/hard ki), I instead relaxed my body, had my right leg already leading, calmly/softly extending my right arm out, and then after short soft inner meditative preparation, went for the Aikido style roll (you know, where it's like a smooth 'C' curve along your body side, smooth, graceful, and you come up fully standing, no problem?). Well, during the roll, my left pinky somehow got caught in between a couple of my toes!! (LOL, I'm so embarrassed about this). And, my small(pinky) distal phalanx (tip of my pinky) got HYPER-EXTENDED!! My pinky finger was crooked!! But I finished the class, no problem. I had capsulitis for weeks, though; having to constantly exercise it so the ligaments don't freeze up during healing. What had happened was, because I didn't use hard ki to tighten up my body, muscle, hands or FINGERS, nor used shouting, I was more prone to injury!! So, that's also one other thing we also learn & train in Hapkido -- PROTECTION, as in, HOW TO TAKE IT, and TAKE IT HARD!! We have tolerance/endurance training exercises. In Japanese Judo, and other martial arts (perhaps Aikido too I'm sure), they call it "ukemi". Ukemi is the art of falling, being throw, or being the "attack dummy", without being injured. This is not just for the safety of being a training partner (or "uke") in a class/school, but can be used/trained for serious real world street application too.. It really makes you TOUGHER!!! I'm not sure what Aikido has for making one TOUGH. But anyway, to finish my story -- if I had used Hapkido's hard/outer ki, and tightened my muscles, put ki into my joints and body, and shouted, I would have protected my joints, my hand, my fingers, my pinky more. :P :D :)
I have no Aikido experience.
@@djkc7486 We have Ukemi too.. But in my school we remain pretty soft :p
It is all on basis of knowing your body and how to keep it in one piece during practice..
@@thijsgeurts5003 That's what it's all about! Self defense, that is. Keeping in one piece, and building tolerance & toughness, being able to take most anything, no matter your body type. Muscles and ki give power and strength; but ukemi and ki give toughness and protection. Even a weakling can have toughness (a la, Steve Rogers, Captain America, "I could do this all day" while getting beat up by the bully). :P
Also, the attacking partner in training has just as much responsibility, and is just as important (or more), than the one defending or being tested. If the sparring partner that is giving the attack and taking the counters, takedowns, falls and/or flips (with ukemi) does not do it properly and give it their all, it's a disgrace/dishonor/misrepresentation of the art and of their master.
If you enjoy this style and is your hobby or whatever, that is great. As long as you do not believe it is a good style for self defense, because it can put you in harm's way moreso than without it
Looks great in the movies!
Depends. If you run into the run of
The mill hothead with no fighting skills, I imagine some of these techniques would work. If you run into an mma guy, then maybe not. If you run into a guy with an edged weapon, doesn’t matter- you will be dead with any style except gun-fu.
These techniques do work. I would love it of you went to the man himself and challenge him.
Suppperrr !!!
Is the Grandmaster Jin?
LOL at the people saying joint locks would never work in a real situation. Cops all over the world use joint and wrist locks against thugs, and you can’t get any more real than that.
The problem is these are static attacks. The guy is playing along willingly and exaggerating how "incapacitated" he is by any technique. The air elbow didn't even come within 3 inches of his face and he flung himself back with fake force.
Top ⚡#TROVAOTREZE
Hapkido is very good
Good demonstrations however it appears the camera operator does not listen to the audio as it is being recorded. The mic is picking up too much extra noise & it is very detrimental to the final production. Maybe an external mic that only picks up in Directional mode would be advised. Then we could hear just the expert & his comments with the students would be heard. Directional mikes are good for Focusing upon what's in front of you & keeping the instruction on point.
Master Christopher Chandler 2nd black belt in hapkido sun moo Kwan vary pond
It’s great for Bollywood movies..
This guy right e teacher excent zenkio
Dónde está el mando de la Play station, yo me pido el de azul
👍
JOHNFRA Plesse write in English I don’t understand your language.
Can HapKiDo be used against boxing?
humanyoda Absolutely!
easily...
I'd like to see a video with a demo.
watch ufc
U should watch ufc Matches . They are using Hapkido Techniques. Hapkido is formed of Judo, Aikido, Taekwondo ..
Con la pasividad del atacante se pueden hacer 100 técnicas pero en la realidad difícilmente le podría salir una como lo marca
Con la adrenalina, las circunstancias, suel mojado, varios atacantes, etc.. Pero si funcionan no como en el video, pero como se dice como te trinque ya no te escapas se siente mucho dolor pero necesita mucha practica, y siempre primero se golpea y después se reduce.. A mi me ha funcionado en la calle, el que da primero da dos veces
Это чисто маркетинг
Who allows cutoff uniforms to a seminar? Other then that, nice technique.
Como quisiera de veras q en una pelea callejera pasará eso de verdad pero no sé q pasa la gente no queda imposibilitada al contrario te dan con lo que tengan
Iori Yagami si practicas mucho, por muchos años, podrás aplicar algunos de los conceptos del arte marcial, los cuales debes adaptarlos a la situación, pero antes de eso, necesitas al menos 10 años de practicaba bajo la dirección de un buen instructor o maestro.
В чём прикол? То же айкидо, только в другой форме. Победить можно если только противник даст руку.
Современное не тоже. Совсем другой принцип.
@@mykolanick1190 современное что?
Come to q vele tudo match and let us see.
Thats like a theater.....always
Todos los ataques empiezan cogiendo la mano al maestro ,, eso en una pelea real no existe ,,
Efectivamente me parece un poco una cagada,,,,,,,,,, ridiculo 😃😃😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😆😆
Much better than aikido. In my book.
Aww cmon... Aikido is a very good martial art, but no one realize that aikido is a very spiritual art,, beyond the techniques.
Avoiding every dammn situation, so its not a fighting art.
I've done a lot of Marshall arts that is real.
There some practical moves there. Mix that with western boxing.
What was with some of those gi's? 🤣
could the average hapkido student use this in a real street fight where stufff is happening fast and random. or even against a MMA fighter?
You do realize they teach this in the military too. It depends on the “average”.
Compton slap.
Hapkido, aikido and aikijujitsu spend way too much time on wrist grab techniques. Wrist grabbing was a common attack in feudal Japan because if I could grab your wrist and stop you from drawing your sword I could attack you with mine. We are not carrying swords anymore. Yes, people could still grab your wrists, but if you review street fight videos on UA-cam I’m sure it’s pretty hard to find an example. Training time is better spent learning how to defend against strikes, headlocks, and other more common attacks. Additionally one of the problems with Hapkido ( and several other arts) is the amount of time spent on compliant drills. Great way to introduce and learn a technique but if you don’t learn to apply it under pressure against a fully resistant opponent is value is greatly attenuated.
Yes and no.
You made a good point regarding the way of training “ No sparring (no resistance) vs sparring (pressure / resistance)
However, the issue is each student’s goal is different from one another, so school owner should set their program as how they want to run their school.
I feel you don't really know what Hapkido is. A lot of the common attacks you mention is covered in Hapkido. The locks are part of the Art, there's also throws and strikes.
It's actually an amalgamation of three different martial arts combined - the striking is from Taekon, the traditional Korean martial art, the throws from Judo, and locks from jujitsu (also, an actual combat based jujitsu from a bona-fide samurai clan).
The other issue about resisting opponents is that these can hurt...a lot. I don't think people understand the amount of pain it causes when a simple technique is applied - it hurts a lot and if done incorrectly can be problematic to say the least.
I know the whole MMA craze sort of made people think that "realism" is important but there's limitations. There's a reason why you can strike the way you do in MMA - it hurts but it won't cause serious immediate damage
@@XXX3155 The joint locks and throws are from Daito-Ryu Aiki-JuJutsu. Japanese JuJutsu styles all have mostly throws and such for serious combat. Judo is a much more safer form of JuJutsu. Aiki-JuJutsu uses locks more but also have much more to them. Hapkido is 90% Aiki-JuJutsu but with striking and some Judo.
Korean Hapkido is there way of showing Japanese or Nippon Ketsugo Ryu Jujitsu,, Professor Larry Hilton 60 yrs Martial Arts practitioner Jujitsu 👍
@P N NKRJA FEDERATION IS IN 5 COUNTRIES, WHATS BRANSON ETC??
@P N Yes that is correct, but NKRJA IS ONLY 40 years old. But NKRJA system incorporates Old style JuJitsu along with Kenpo and Kodakan Judo which until someone has 3 arms and 3 legs the names will change but 98% of Wazas are all similar 😊👊
where you control the head the body will follow :)
geometric art chango nieto
That is a universal rule for all combat and has been proven in the real world
Na mate chop the tree down at the knees
🤔👍
Причина не эффективности таких приёмов в их долгом применении, то есть на одно единственное движение атакующего причём в очень статической форме минимум 4 движения защиты, причём динамика скорости каждого движения разная, что заранее создаёт проблему его исполнения. Нужно просто признать это. Причем основа боевых практик не в ожидании нападения, когда ждёшь обязательно чего нибудь дождешься пропущенного удара к примеру.
Muy bueno
Как в кино
El problema es agarrar una mano veloz....
Self defence techniques are easy when you have a compliant opponent that holds still for you while you apply these techiques that require fine motor skills.
Hello billy jack