During my years of Hapkido….I had to learn sets of techniques…..then my teacher decided to approach it differently….the twist…the wring….the fold…etc… made total sense and that’s how I teach and train now.
THANKS VERY! MUCH FOR THIS AND OTHER HAPKIDO VIDEOS. The Hapkido locks and throws work extremely well ... regardless of the naysayers on this or other videos ... when used in the appropriate situation and opportunistically. Just practice a few or just one or two until you are very skillful with that one or two locks and/or throws ... maybe getting out of a grab or choke around your neck ... and see that this works when appropriate that is not every single situation. Sometimes you have to add a strike, punch, push, or kick to make some of them work depending on the opponents size difference and etc. If you are a sissy or girly-man (or extremely-gentle and feminine girl) then NOTHING will work be it Hapkido, Judo, Karate, Jujitsu, Kung fu, Chin-na, or flying a kite. Better to know a few locks than not. However, even a weak and very feminine girl can bend a thick man-finger backwards to escape some grabs or chokes etc. I love these Hapkido techniques even though my "style" is different. I'm very thankful to be able to study them on these videos and would join a class if I were young and had the time ... even though my style of quite different. That's a photo of me doing the flying kick for the school news paper with a high school student where I taught science a long time ago.
Hapkido has the knuckle strike to the back of the hand also along with an impressive array of locks and other techniques. My style is not Hapkido, but I find Hapkido to be a number one martial art for defense and subduing and try to adopt some or even much of it. These Hapkido videos demonstrated on this and other UA-cam videos and other videos are extremely useful as additions to my own martial art. I'm very grateful in spite of some naysayers who know nothing of what they are saying or writing.
Can't give a definitive answers but would say its probable. Think there are still more right handed people than lefties. Saying both people are right handed; one reaches out to grab the other is alt to counter also with their right creating a cross hand connection.. There are other things that set up cross hand connections also.. So no way to know but yes they happen..
Neither are common. A lot of this comes from a time when people carried swords and so an attacker might grab your hand to prevent you from drawing your sword. This is also why they would hang on to that hand even if you tried to release it as opposed to the natural reaction today of just letting go the moment you started to realize someone was trying to grab your hand. But outside of you carrying a gun or similar and someone trying to prevent you from accessing that... it's not a realistic attack scenario in the modern world, unless you consider and unwanted handshake an attack.
I love all this training, over and over, in slow mo. This will not work in real world on the street where there are no rules, and anything goes and average street fight lasts 8-15 seconds. This, like 90% of the martial arts taught today are for sport and tournaments and will. To get you anyplace in a REAL fight or life and death situation.
It works for anyone who actually spends time for extremely repeated training of each technique. You cannot judge whether it works or not by your imagination. Trust me! I was like you before. Go and train with the real master / expert who have used these techniques in his real life (not a SPORTs trainer). At first you have to be ready to get pain from practicing because you need to learn how a technique really works. I was asked to attack in real (on a free sparring basis) with any technique I thought it could injure the master (at that time I passed black belt 1st Dan from a school of combat karate training); but my whole body was twisted without seeing what happened to me until I fell down to the floor. Then, I chose to learn with the master. For these techniques, you need to practice over and over (not just watch it over and over) which I think more than ten thousand time (5 years) until your muscle becomes familiar with all attacker's probable released hits. You need to learn from getting pain from practice. And when you are back to see what you write this day, you would laugh at it out loud. I am not saying your comment isn't good; because I was like this before. I just want you to learn and know it by yourself (not just imagine on the possibility of the technique usages).
MasterCarguy44 yeah yeah. You know all in your eyes. Ever think that not all fights are started with an actual punch??? Sometimes an opponent will test someone before throwing a punch. And it’s possible that one of these maneuvers would counter that testing and eliminate the confrontation to escalate any further. Can’t stand you assholes that think you know everything. There’s so many damn variables in a potential fight and a person typically tries to train as best they can for any potential confrontation and for any scenario or physical strike that may arise
@@Dogger1230 I agree. These Hapkido locks, throws, and other techniques are useful in the appropriate situation. My on martial art benefits a lot from studying Hapkido locks, throws and escapes etc. That's me doing the flying kick for the school news paper with a high school student at the school where I taught science several decades ago. I would not mind taking a Hapkido class except I would not change my own style of fighting developed for many years. I cannot and do not want to change except to add some of the Hapkido locks and throws etc that I find are very useful. You just have to practice and know what you are doing instead of judgemental and overly criticizing about things you know nothing about like so many of the naysayers on this and other UA-cam videos. I find that most commenters by far have no idea about what they are commenting on be it martial art or anything else.
Total BS. Fights never start this way. This is lost in antiquity. Samurai did this to stop a sword draw. But why anyone would need self defense from someone grabbing your wrist, well, if you want to die, learn this nonsense.
This is not a self defense demonstration. This is a technique demonstration. They are not simulating Combat, but if you feel so inclined I can set up a fight with you in my instructor. Just come in the studio, we will let the class move to the side and have you guys fight, you gotta sign a waiver first so you cant press charges after your face gets rearranged
@@SurtierWood that makes zero sense. Ask any BJJ or Judoka, even Muay Thai, and you train the way you fight. If you need to press like that, trust me I don't need any forms. We can step outside your dojang and "talk." Just give me an address.
@@gregory4154 I know that you don't train in martial arts, you wanna know how I know that? Because you don't know what a demonstration is for. It's not like the movies where students beat the crap out of each other. I've trained in toekondo, jujitsu, kickboxing and hapkido, all the instructors demonstrate the strike, grab, takedown ECT FIRST so the students know what they are supposed to be learning, and then you train that technique with your partner. The same goes with boxing and every martial art.
@@SurtierWood actually that's what a taekwondoist says when he fights a Muay Thai fighter and gets beat down. Truly, you are NOT a fighter. That is the truth. You are vested in your own bullshat, literally. If you trained in BJJ tell me when you went into wrist grabs/ throws? Because that's new to me. I know it's hard but you are in a cult basically.
During my years of Hapkido….I had to learn sets of techniques…..then my teacher decided to approach it differently….the twist…the wring….the fold…etc… made total sense and that’s how I teach and train now.
After my 3 yrs of hapkido I’m back here
THANKS VERY! MUCH FOR THIS AND OTHER HAPKIDO VIDEOS.
The Hapkido locks and throws work extremely well ... regardless of the naysayers on this or other videos ... when used in the appropriate situation and opportunistically. Just practice a few or just one or two until you are very skillful with that one or two locks and/or throws ... maybe getting out of a grab or choke around your neck ... and see that this works when appropriate that is not every single situation. Sometimes you have to add a strike, punch, push, or kick to make some of them work depending on the opponents size difference and etc. If you are a sissy or girly-man (or extremely-gentle and feminine girl) then NOTHING will work be it Hapkido, Judo, Karate, Jujitsu, Kung fu, Chin-na, or flying a kite. Better to know a few locks than not. However, even a weak and very feminine girl can bend a thick man-finger backwards to escape some grabs or chokes etc. I love these Hapkido techniques even though my "style" is different. I'm very thankful to be able to study them on these videos and would join a class if I were young and had the time ... even though my style of quite different. That's a photo of me doing the flying kick for the school news paper with a high school student where I taught science a long time ago.
thank you show techniques wrist lock
Suggestion: When opponent secures cross hand grip that leaves the back of his hand open to a sharp strike with a judo knuckle.
Hapkido has the knuckle strike to the back of the hand also along with an impressive array of locks and other techniques. My style is not Hapkido, but I find Hapkido to be a number one martial art for defense and subduing and try to adopt some or even much of it. These Hapkido videos demonstrated on this and other UA-cam videos and other videos are extremely useful as additions to my own martial art. I'm very grateful in spite of some naysayers who know nothing of what they are saying or writing.
MY Master made us practice wrist grabs very often
Your master is a dumb sh-t.
Did the smaller guy exaggerate on the tapping with the pain on his face jumping up and down like a crazy person or do they just hurt that bad lol
Loved it
Техника захвата руки крест на крест Хапкидо.
Are cross wrist grabs more common then other wrist grabs?
Can't give a definitive answers but would say its probable. Think there are still more right handed people than lefties. Saying both people are right handed; one reaches out to grab the other is alt to counter also with their right creating a cross hand connection.. There are other things that set up cross hand connections also.. So no way to know but yes they happen..
Neither are common. A lot of this comes from a time when people carried swords and so an attacker might grab your hand to prevent you from drawing your sword. This is also why they would hang on to that hand even if you tried to release it as opposed to the natural reaction today of just letting go the moment you started to realize someone was trying to grab your hand.
But outside of you carrying a gun or similar and someone trying to prevent you from accessing that... it's not a realistic attack scenario in the modern world, unless you consider and unwanted handshake an attack.
Suggestions
1- PUT PHONE ON SILENT WHILE FILMING
2- do a couple dry runs first before you film this way you don’t look like what we saw in the video
I take Hapkito and this is the first thing you are taught.
This is the first way to die.
I love all this training, over and over, in slow mo. This will not work in real world on the street where there are no rules, and anything goes and average street fight lasts 8-15 seconds. This, like 90% of the martial arts taught today are for sport and tournaments and will. To get you anyplace in a REAL fight or life and death situation.
This is purely for the sake of repetition. It works if you work it.
I train with police officers who use wrist locks to subdue criminals who are resisting arrest all the time.
It works for anyone who actually spends time for extremely repeated training of each technique. You cannot judge whether it works or not by your imagination. Trust me!
I was like you before. Go and train with the real master / expert who have used these techniques in his real life (not a SPORTs trainer).
At first you have to be ready to get pain from practicing because you need to learn how a technique really works. I was asked to attack in real (on a free sparring basis) with any technique I thought it could injure the master (at that time I passed black belt 1st Dan from a school of combat karate training); but my whole body was twisted without seeing what happened to me until I fell down to the floor.
Then, I chose to learn with the master.
For these techniques, you need to practice over and over (not just watch it over and over) which I think more than ten thousand time (5 years) until your muscle becomes familiar with all attacker's probable released hits. You need to learn from getting pain from practice.
And when you are back to see what you write this day, you would laugh at it out loud.
I am not saying your comment isn't good; because I was like this before.
I just want you to learn and know it by yourself (not just imagine on the possibility of the technique usages).
MasterCarguy44 yeah yeah. You know all in your eyes. Ever think that not all fights are started with an actual punch??? Sometimes an opponent will test someone before throwing a punch. And it’s possible that one of these maneuvers would counter that testing and eliminate the confrontation to escalate any further. Can’t stand you assholes that think you know everything. There’s so many damn variables in a potential fight and a person typically tries to train as best they can for any potential confrontation and for any scenario or physical strike that may arise
@@Dogger1230 I agree. These Hapkido locks, throws, and other techniques are useful in the appropriate situation. My on martial art benefits a lot from studying Hapkido locks, throws and escapes etc. That's me doing the flying kick for the school news paper with a high school student at the school where I taught science several decades ago. I would not mind taking a Hapkido class except I would not change my own style of fighting developed for many years. I cannot and do not want to change except to add some of the Hapkido locks and throws etc that I find are very useful. You just have to practice and know what you are doing instead of judgemental and overly criticizing about things you know nothing about like so many of the naysayers on this and other UA-cam videos. I find that most commenters by far have no idea about what they are commenting on be it martial art or anything else.
Boo chae
No bro....drink a beer. Hope you survive if you tried this BS.
Total BS. Fights never start this way. This is lost in antiquity. Samurai did this to stop a sword draw. But why anyone would need self defense from someone grabbing your wrist, well, if you want to die, learn this nonsense.
This is not a self defense demonstration. This is a technique demonstration. They are not simulating Combat, but if you feel so inclined I can set up a fight with you in my instructor. Just come in the studio, we will let the class move to the side and have you guys fight, you gotta sign a waiver first so you cant press charges after your face gets rearranged
@@SurtierWood that makes zero sense. Ask any BJJ or Judoka, even Muay Thai, and you train the way you fight. If you need to press like that, trust me I don't need any forms. We can step outside your dojang and "talk." Just give me an address.
@@SurtierWood but I do admit I like the dancing and ballet. Looks pretty.
@@gregory4154 I know that you don't train in martial arts, you wanna know how I know that?
Because you don't know what a demonstration is for.
It's not like the movies where students beat the crap out of each other.
I've trained in toekondo, jujitsu, kickboxing and hapkido, all the instructors demonstrate the strike, grab, takedown ECT FIRST so the students know what they are supposed to be learning, and then you train that technique with your partner. The same goes with boxing and every martial art.
@@SurtierWood actually that's what a taekwondoist says when he fights a Muay Thai fighter and gets beat down. Truly, you are NOT a fighter. That is the truth. You are vested in your own bullshat, literally. If you trained in BJJ tell me when you went into wrist grabs/ throws? Because that's new to me. I know it's hard but you are in a cult basically.
коряво и без кузуши
Take down is not good