RECAP4ME for Pre-Emptive situation 0:19 1st Technique : Knife to takedown Use armbar & your knife (forearm) 0:471:181:27 2nd Technique : Cradle to takedown Use armbar & your chest (to push) 2:012:112:45 3rd Technique : Wrist lock to takedown Use wrist#1 & PULL forward to takedown 2:55 Use wrist#2 & PUSH back takedown 3:11 Use wrist#3 & LIFT to takedown (not shown) Use wrist lock compression 3:55 4th Technique : push chin to stop opponent use chin 4:20 use chin 5th Technique : playstation 1 use 5:52 6th Technique : playstation 2 use 6:05 overview : 6:57
Thank you for pinning my comment. Should anyone like some additional understanding I found this video very helpful ua-cam.com/video/nwBFe6ZKAJs/v-deo.html
@Black Snow, I started studying hand to hand in JROTC and Tang Soo-Do my last year. On my first tour in Korea I continued to study Tang Soo-Do along with Judo. On my second tour in South Korea I started studying Hapkido. The only times I have had to use any of my training outside of class was against my bullying brother, my second tour in South Korea and the following year just before I left the Army. A guy in Korea tried to hit me over the head with a full beer bottle and reflexes, training kicked in and the other other guy struck me in the back for no reason as I walked by. I had a package for my 1st Sergeant and when I went back by him he offered his hand and tried to apologize. I took his hand but I don't know if he ever figured out how he made contact with the floor so hard. The next time he and his buddies saw me walking their way they made a big hole for me walk through. When I was young I was always small and I guess some people thought that I was a pushover.
Is krav maga something you can master fast? It seems basic..and simple. I ask because my wife and myself took several classes and are going to try traditional Israeli krav maga next week and we have so far explored krav maga,muai thai and to shin do. To shin do is great..I think it's definitely a different approach and I believe that a grappling or ground work/floor work art would be good to complement it.
Nice to see a demonstration of the moves. Too many videos are just people showing what they can do, not teaching others how to do it. This is good stuff
Nice techniques. I trained in Hapkido for five years. In street fighting, if you move quick enough, and use your opponent's momentum against them, you can be reasonably successful, but not always, when you are attacked at full speed. Best advice I ever had, from a Grandmaster, is learn three or four simple straight forward techniques, that you do well, that are effective, and train, not only your body, but your brain, to do them as second nature. Under extreme duress, our brains revert to our lowest level of training.
@RespecToe5677 That is something you will have to find out, as you train, what works for you. Find a good Hapkido instructor. The techniques in the video, is part of Hapkido, known as Ho Sin Sul.
Good video, clean and clear demonstration. A few comments if I may; even though the cradle is indeed very easy, it is almost too subtle for lower belts to get the hang of. Another thing I'd like to add with the wrist lock takedown; your opponent usually pulls their hand back towards their own body when you go to grab it so it is helpful to incorporate moving forward yourself in the same direction a quarter step so the hand doesn't escape. Lastly, I never thought of nae hae jin in any of its forms as an easy technique, Masters often forget how hard some techniques are for beginners to understand, :).
I've been learning Aikido for 5 years now and hapkido shares a lot of similarities with it. Although I would say hapkido seems more aggressive in that you make pre-emptive attacks as shown here, rather than wait for your opponent to make the first move.
Thank you guys for an other great video. Your videos is really educative and inspiring. It has actually inspired a lot of my own videos. Great work Keep it up!
I did hapkido for 2 years but am looking to start training again. The thing that gets me with hapkido is how hard it is to actually grab a person's hand when they are not compliant. I guess it's best to run away and only take a hand when they grab you?
Hapkido and Aikido have the same origin but developed in two different countries, Korea & Japan. Different style... I wouldn't say Hapkido is more effective version.. ^^ Aikido practitioners wouldn't agree with that. Hapkido circle is generally smaller than Aikido's. Since we do all sort of kicks too, it might be more practical in defending situations.
No full resistance. We do reasonable degree of resistance. If we do full resistance, that often cause an injury. Too much resistance, often too much force someone is applying....
@@ricksterdrummer2170 I mean that's just more to do with how Judo rules have developed, not that practicing joint locks with resistance is dangerous enough that you shouldn't practice them in stress testing, Judo competition is heading away from what it used to be. Standing joint locks are very difficult to lock in against a somewhat competent resisting opponent for a variety of reasons. You very rarely see them in MMA compared to ground based submissions for that reason. Especially because people can react in a variety of ways that make it impossible to actually lock a submission in unless you have serious experience doing them (they can pull, push, start striking with the other hand, etc).
@@AveSicarius wakigatame is my favorite technique to use in Tomiki Aikido. There's so many ways to counter techniques with wakigatame in sparring/randori. You can use wakigatame in Judo too if your opponent keeps stiff arming you. This happened with me before in randori with a 240 pound nidan.
I would like to comment on the wrist lock 🔒, it's a great technique, but who's to say the person you're doing that to won't clobber you one with his free hand 🖐, it's what I would do if someone was trying that on me.
These would be done a lot faster and a lot more aggressively however that's also not to say they haven't hit you back in multiple different ways and then proceed to break your wrist. If I'm that close and being fought I'm inflicting more pain where I can i.e. headbutts, knees strikes etc and then proceeding to wrist lock Takedown
@moepanetta9028 And my point is if they don't there's other ways you can make them cooperate. Hapkido isn't used by Korean police and military because its a peace loving style, no you can and will get hurt if someone is literally contorting your limbs and hitting you full force. My friend whose done army comabtives often likes to test what I've learned, I have to be careful because I come close to legitimately hurting him every single time.
Everytime I watch hapkido i can't help but notice the "opponent" has 0 guard, 0 foot work and just stands there and lets him execute the interpretive dance move
people are grabbed before and during a fight. People that grab want to control and overpower you. Police, military, and security grab the wrist to b we cuffed. Men grab women by the wrist to control them.
@@toddburnett4853 the general public doesn't have those types of reflexes to grab someone's wrist with that type of accuracy is almost impossible for someone untrained. if that's your first move... or even second... you might end up dead. attempting to do try that as your first resort against someone who has full intentions of hurting you is foolish, What if they have a shank on them? or a sharp object? you're going to try to grab their wrist? with your adrenaline rushing through your body... you will most likely miss. Tell you what experiment get a spoon... not anything that can break so not to cut yourself.. give it to your friend.. tell them to come at you half force to try to poke you or even use their fingers at any angle they want but straight... allow them to move around you... and if they really are moving with the intent to poke you with the spoon or fingers guarantee even 80% of the time they will make a strike on your body... as you try to grab their wrist... well guess what... real life.. you're dead or about to be... for those inexperienced or even experienced the body's natural instincts is to guard the body at any cost for example if you fall down on the ground about to hit your face what comes most of the time? it's your hand to brace your fall... if you're getting attacked with any object.. what does the body naturally do? puts up a hand including things that fall on your head... my point is you have a better chance of survival or less injury trying other self-defense, than trying to grab someone's wrist... it's not as easy as it looks for those with quick reflex's yes it works a little more often ok but for the majority that doesn't have those reflex's it's ignorant to state this will save you, I'm not stating stand there do nothing, but as stated before there's a better use of precious and limited time to get away or attack. The police and military are able to do it because they have trained over and over, along with more serious situations... how much of the general public have trained constantly and how do you know you will be just as effective with your adrenaline being a huge factor... that work with you or against you in your timing at catching a wrist?
@GotTreeFiddy 187 for you to break someone's body part you would need to reflex's to be able to catch their arm, wrist, hand, or even leg... I promise you people aren't just going to just leave it out for you to break. Most of the time people watch youtube of idiots who decide to become attackers and have zero idea what they are doing. Head to a dangerous part of the city at night and try out your wristlock... REALITY... you will end up in the hospital or in the grave. I honestly believe teaching people how to defend themselves is very important but to do any of this wrist lock or stating grabbing someone's punch is very dangerous to the general public. most people don't even know how to slip a punch... let alone grab someone... to think otherwise is just my opinion is ignorance.
@GotTreeFiddy 187 I thank you for your service and your expertise along with taking the time to respond. I was referring to the general public though not anyone with actual training or much knowledge. I apologize for any misleading or misunderstanding on my part. I just find some people on here and not stating the youtubers who are apart of this video to be very misleading to the general public. the average joe as you might put it so to speak. stated in a previous reply to another comment, I am all for those with actual practical knowledge of how to protect yourself in a real street fight but... for the average joe to be able to pull off a wrist grab... I just don't see it effectively done to the point the general public could protect themselves with it. That was my only thought and concern. I apologize again for not making myself clear.
@GotTreeFiddy 187 I've been a Martial Artist myself most of my life, I may look like I'm 22 to 25 but, I promise you I'm not, I do have my own unique abilities which are on my YT but.. yea not really important. As stated by those who go beyond Blackbelt... Blackbelt was just the beginning of my journey, not the end. I know the hard work and dedication you need to become an actual martial artist, I enjoy watching those fake ones out there for a good laugh but at the same time taking advantage of people and their money for their own selfish greed is wrong. Fakes need to realize they will end up hurting themselves really bad but more importantly those who follow them blindly. It might be their ignorance that leads them to their hurt, but it was their so-called master that leads them with arrogance perhaps to their own grave. I see Martial arts as 4 parts, the Spiritual, feeling self-worth, and striving to do better honing your skills. 2.Dedication 3. Honor. 4.Self Defense. for whatever skills and abilities you may claim to possess it means nothing to me if you don't have the respect, focus, and honor to help guide you. That's my true belief as cliche and cheesy as it may sound.
Of course, anyone wouldn't stand there and let you do the locks. With your opponent's resisting, you can do many other techniques using their response. Also, he/she would not know which techniques are coming. This tutorial shows the basic moves of pre-emptive attacks. You can also use these with strikes or kicks... Thank you for your comment though.
@@pjkz Oh, right. Tell me, did you ever use a wrist lock of pressure point in real life? Wrist lock technique from Tae-Kwon Do basically saved my life, and yes, they do work very well against resistance - matter of fact, the more resistance you get, the tighter the lock. You just have to move into the wrist lock *before* your opponent move to resist. They will, but they will be, essentially, locked. That's the point. They you can swipe their leg, kick in the groin, etc even if they resist enough to push you. Also, I did a pressure point on a giant of a man, 6'3, 350 pounds, lifted couple hundreds pound on leg bench, extremely athletic for his weight. I did for fun, he backed up pretty quickly from the pain. Try ramming a your finger between your collarbone and the side of your neck, just for fun. I was also invited at one of the best boxing gym in Canada and will call out any fake martial art, but this is self-defense, not fighting - there is BIG difference. There really is no need to fight much if you know these moves, there are no rules, it's not a ring. If you hit me from the left I can go forward and hit the back of your neck, push your face and lift your nostrils if you're smaller than me, attack the groin if you're taller than me. Had a couple gym goers with a black belt who tried me, but when there are *no rules*, good luck trying your bullshit combination. I had moves like this on me, it hurts for real. You don't know what the fuck you're talking about.
God bless and family comes first. Amen. God bless and let's eat. Amen. God bless and good. Amen. God bless and real. Amen. God bless and bless. Amen. God bless. God bless. Amen. God bless. God bless and I live in California. Amen.
I respect SKMA Hapkido, but I would like to state, against a fully resisting opponent's wrist locks off the bat will not work, you will get punched so many times plus you will have to catch the person hand in order to do that.
That's not the purpose of hapkido. You learn how to do it from a standing position and then you incorporate it to when they are are grabbing you then punching you and then trying to stab you. You first have to learn and be familiar with the technique before you can incorporate it into a defensive position. Like any martial art, you have to be familiar with the techniques at a basic level and then work your way up until they actually work
@@zacheaston6727 I can agree with you to a point, but here's the thing the majority of the people in this world don't have the time to learn all that. Effective and realistic and practical are the 3 fundamentals to keeping yourself safe and others if you have to engage in an altercation. The biggest first thing is awareness. if you think wrist locks are going to work against someone with a knife and full blood intent to kill the average person... I will have to strongly disagree in my opinion.
@@zacheaston6727 Then you suffer from the exact same problems as BJJ, you practice the technique in isolation, only to find out that the manner in which you learned it often needs to be adapted to be functional, which takes even more time. You should always be thinking of potential openings and threat's to a given technique or position, and teaching beginners that is almost more important than learning the technique itself. If you are looking to actually be able to fight with a given set of techniques you should observe the basic form, practice it a few times, then try to incorporate it into a live resistance sparring session or at the very least into live drills. This is how you learn the basis of effective fighting within a reasonable time frame with sacrificing technique. It's also how all combat sports train for competition, including MMA, because you want your fighters to be capable of using a given technique as quickly as possible. These techniques are very open to striking and you need to alter the technique to actually fit a given response, which only comes with the experience of actually using it in a live situation. Ramsey Dewey has a pretty good video he released today on just this type of technique.
We named our techniques PS 1 and 2 to help our members understand the skills easier and remember. When we hold the opponent's hand before doing joint lock, our hold looks like holding playstation joystick.
This is a tutorial for preemptive attack techniques, showing how to do them. Of course, all these should be surprise attack when you do them in real situation. It is same as your first punch, strike or kick. We can do straight attack using these or we can do deception punch or strike first and grab the arm do the techniques.
Okay but where's the "pre-emptive attack"? Your attacker is gently extending his arm to you to do your thing. Hardly a realistic demonstration usable in a real attack scenario.
I took a little hapkido in Korea...but honestly? It's not very effective in a fight! Great if someone grabs you...but if they are throwing punches? Yeah...
So punch them back? Lol striking is not a foreign concept in hapkido. The chin push at 4:41 for example can be a chin strike if the situation called for it
Make it illegal in all martial arts to teach BS technique. In knife attacks, show defense of rapid stabbing. We have short life on earth to learn bs techniques. Make sure techniques defeats bjj black belts too.
RECAP4ME
for Pre-Emptive situation 0:19
1st Technique : Knife to takedown
Use armbar & your knife (forearm) 0:47 1:18 1:27
2nd Technique : Cradle to takedown
Use armbar & your chest (to push) 2:01 2:11 2:45
3rd Technique : Wrist lock to takedown
Use wrist#1 & PULL forward to takedown 2:55
Use wrist#2 & PUSH back takedown 3:11
Use wrist#3 & LIFT to takedown (not shown)
Use wrist lock compression 3:55
4th Technique : push chin to stop opponent
use chin 4:20
use chin
5th Technique : playstation 1
use 5:52
6th Technique : playstation 2
use 6:05
overview : 6:57
Thank you for pinning my comment.
Should anyone like some additional understanding I found this video very helpful
ua-cam.com/video/nwBFe6ZKAJs/v-deo.html
Nice video just started studying hapkido after 9 years of krav maga hapkido is the perfect complement love it
have you ever tried krav on someone in a real situation, just wonder
@Black Snow, I started studying hand to hand in JROTC and Tang Soo-Do my last year. On my first tour in Korea I continued to study Tang Soo-Do along with Judo. On my second tour in South Korea I started studying Hapkido. The only times I have had to use any of my training outside of class was against my bullying brother, my second tour in South Korea and the following year just before I left the Army. A guy in Korea tried to hit me over the head with a full beer bottle and reflexes, training kicked in and the other other guy struck me in the back for no reason as I walked by. I had a package for my 1st Sergeant and when I went back by him he offered his hand and tried to apologize. I took his hand but I don't know if he ever figured out how he made contact with the floor so hard. The next time he and his buddies saw me walking their way they made a big hole for me walk through. When I was young I was always small and I guess some people thought that I was a pushover.
Is krav maga something you can master fast?
It seems basic..and simple.
I ask because my wife and myself took several classes and are going to try traditional Israeli krav maga next week and we have so far explored krav maga,muai thai and to shin do.
To shin do is great..I think it's definitely a different approach and I believe that a grappling or ground work/floor work art would be good to complement it.
Nice to see a demonstration of the
moves. Too many videos are just people showing what they can do, not teaching others how to do it. This is good stuff
Nice techniques. I trained in Hapkido for five years. In street fighting, if you move quick enough, and use your opponent's momentum against them, you can be reasonably successful, but not always, when you are attacked at full speed. Best advice I ever had, from a Grandmaster, is learn three or four simple straight forward techniques, that you do well, that are effective, and train, not only your body, but your brain, to do them as second nature. Under extreme duress, our brains revert to our lowest level of training.
Amazing Comment, any advice which ones so specialise 😅
@RespecToe5677 That is something you will have to find out, as you train, what works for you. Find a good Hapkido instructor. The techniques in the video, is part of Hapkido, known as Ho Sin Sul.
These are excellent. I appreciate that you show each move very slow and then do a close up.
Thank you
Good video, clean and clear demonstration. A few comments if I may; even though the cradle is indeed very easy, it is almost too subtle for lower belts to get the hang of. Another thing I'd like to add with the wrist lock takedown; your opponent usually pulls their hand back towards their own body when you go to grab it so it is helpful to incorporate moving forward yourself in the same direction a quarter step so the hand doesn't escape. Lastly, I never thought of nae hae jin in any of its forms as an easy technique, Masters often forget how hard some techniques are for beginners to understand, :).
Thank you for your comment, sir.
Awesome video! Thank you for sharing! I love to see people spreading the art in a beneficial way!
Thank you
I've been learning Aikido for 5 years now and hapkido shares a lot of similarities with it. Although I would say hapkido seems more aggressive in that you make pre-emptive attacks as shown here, rather than wait for your opponent to make the first move.
Man's still liking comments 2 years later 😂😂
@@sophz.a2697 He's a man of focus, commitment, sheer fucking will!!!
Both have their roots in Aiki Jiujutsu.
Excellent video! I started learning hapkido about a year ago, and really enjoy it
Amazing Hapkido! Thanks for sharing.
Thank you
Hello everyone, I hope you enjoyed our first training instruction video. Please subscribe our channel for more videos.
@research the facts Please visit our website www.skma.co.uk. You can find all the information you need. Thank you
God bless and keep the family first. Amen.
Very informative videos. Thank you, sir.
Amazing explanation. I will use these well some day
Thank you guys for an other great video. Your videos is really educative and inspiring. It has actually inspired a lot of my own videos. Great work Keep it up!
Thank you sir.
The shorter man's forearms look very strong.
Good vid, thanks!
Super helpful video to remember the basics!!
So so super hapkido is very good game
God bless and keep happy. Amen.
Thanks 🙏
Sir, I would like to learn this martial art, is there any online course providing by you, I want to join and learn more about the art
You can join and sign up our online programme at www.skma.co.uk. It is run by me. Thank you.
good job
I did hapkido for 2 years but am looking to start training again. The thing that gets me with hapkido is how hard it is to actually grab a person's hand when they are not compliant. I guess it's best to run away and only take a hand when they grab you?
Hapkido is great. If you already know Jiu-jitsu.
I love it.
Currently taking Aikido. Would you say this is like a more effective version?
Hapkido and Aikido have the same origin but developed in two different countries, Korea & Japan. Different style... I wouldn't say Hapkido is more effective version.. ^^ Aikido practitioners wouldn't agree with that. Hapkido circle is generally smaller than Aikido's. Since we do all sort of kicks too, it might be more practical in defending situations.
I would say hapkido is the aggressive version
cool
God I am happy and secure. Amen.
This looks like it's the same thing as Aikido, or Aiki-Jujitsu.
Do yall do full resistance when you practice?
No full resistance. We do reasonable degree of resistance. If we do full resistance, that often cause an injury. Too much resistance, often too much force someone is applying....
There’s a reason standing joint-locks were made illegal in Judo competition 🙃
@@self-defence okay, okay .
@@ricksterdrummer2170
I mean that's just more to do with how Judo rules have developed, not that practicing joint locks with resistance is dangerous enough that you shouldn't practice them in stress testing, Judo competition is heading away from what it used to be. Standing joint locks are very difficult to lock in against a somewhat competent resisting opponent for a variety of reasons. You very rarely see them in MMA compared to ground based submissions for that reason.
Especially because people can react in a variety of ways that make it impossible to actually lock a submission in unless you have serious experience doing them (they can pull, push, start striking with the other hand, etc).
@@AveSicarius wakigatame is my favorite technique to use in Tomiki Aikido. There's so many ways to counter techniques with wakigatame in sparring/randori. You can use wakigatame in Judo too if your opponent keeps stiff arming you. This happened with me before in randori with a 240 pound nidan.
Very ggood
Slippery samurai movements can fight that off
Good level 1 arm bar techniques... However, the "you don't want to break the bone" part kinda threw me off.
i wanna master the PS1
I would like to comment on the wrist lock 🔒, it's a great technique, but who's to say the person you're doing that to won't clobber you one with his free hand 🖐, it's what I would do if someone was trying that on me.
These would be done a lot faster and a lot more aggressively however that's also not to say they haven't hit you back in multiple different ways and then proceed to break your wrist. If I'm that close and being fought I'm inflicting more pain where I can i.e. headbutts, knees strikes etc and then proceeding to wrist lock Takedown
@@Holyhandgrenade-tx6xd that's exactly my point, nobody is going to cooperate with joint locks of any kind.
@moepanetta9028 And my point is if they don't there's other ways you can make them cooperate. Hapkido isn't used by Korean police and military because its a peace loving style, no you can and will get hurt if someone is literally contorting your limbs and hitting you full force. My friend whose done army comabtives often likes to test what I've learned, I have to be careful because I come close to legitimately hurting him every single time.
Everytime I watch hapkido i can't help but notice the "opponent" has 0 guard, 0 foot work and just stands there and lets him execute the interpretive dance move
👍
😃
But what about someone resisting?
More pressure and target the vital points if you have to
Mister Sammo Hung studied Hapkido in 1979 when a man cut his upper right lip with a broken Coca-Cola Glass Bottle.
So when in life does one let his wrist get grabbed like that without resisting ?
people are grabbed before and during a fight. People that grab want to control and overpower you. Police, military, and security grab the wrist to b we cuffed. Men grab women by the wrist to control them.
@@toddburnett4853 the general public doesn't have those types of reflexes to grab someone's wrist with that type of accuracy is almost impossible for someone untrained. if that's your first move... or even second... you might end up dead. attempting to do try that as your first resort against someone who has full intentions of hurting you is foolish, What if they have a shank on them? or a sharp object? you're going to try to grab their wrist? with your adrenaline rushing through your body... you will most likely miss. Tell you what experiment get a spoon... not anything that can break so not to cut yourself.. give it to your friend.. tell them to come at you half force to try to poke you or even use their fingers at any angle they want but straight... allow them to move around you... and if they really are moving with the intent to poke you with the spoon or fingers guarantee even 80% of the time they will make a strike on your body... as you try to grab their wrist... well guess what... real life.. you're dead or about to be... for those inexperienced or even experienced the body's natural instincts is to guard the body at any cost for example if you fall down on the ground about to hit your face what comes most of the time? it's your hand to brace your fall... if you're getting attacked with any object.. what does the body naturally do? puts up a hand including things that fall on your head... my point is you have a better chance of survival or less injury trying other self-defense, than trying to grab someone's wrist... it's not as easy as it looks for those with quick reflex's yes it works a little more often ok but for the majority that doesn't have those reflex's it's ignorant to state this will save you, I'm not stating stand there do nothing, but as stated before there's a better use of precious and limited time to get away or attack. The police and military are able to do it because they have trained over and over, along with more serious situations... how much of the general public have trained constantly and how do you know you will be just as effective with your adrenaline being a huge factor... that work with you or against you in your timing at catching a wrist?
@GotTreeFiddy 187 for you to break someone's body part you would need to reflex's to be able to catch their arm, wrist, hand, or even leg... I promise you people aren't just going to just leave it out for you to break. Most of the time people watch youtube of idiots who decide to become attackers and have zero idea what they are doing. Head to a dangerous part of the city at night and try out your wristlock... REALITY... you will end up in the hospital or in the grave. I honestly believe teaching people how to defend themselves is very important but to do any of this wrist lock or stating grabbing someone's punch is very dangerous to the general public. most people don't even know how to slip a punch... let alone grab someone... to think otherwise is just my opinion is ignorance.
@GotTreeFiddy 187 I thank you for your service and your expertise along with taking the time to respond. I was referring to the general public though not anyone with actual training or much knowledge. I apologize for any misleading or misunderstanding on my part. I just find some people on here and not stating the youtubers who are apart of this video to be very misleading to the general public. the average joe as you might put it so to speak. stated in a previous reply to another comment, I am all for those with actual practical knowledge of how to protect yourself in a real street fight but... for the average joe to be able to pull off a wrist grab... I just don't see it effectively done to the point the general public could protect themselves with it. That was my only thought and concern. I apologize again for not making myself clear.
@GotTreeFiddy 187 I've been a Martial Artist myself most of my life, I may look like I'm 22 to 25 but, I promise you I'm not, I do have my own unique abilities which are on my YT but.. yea not really important. As stated by those who go beyond Blackbelt... Blackbelt was just the beginning of my journey, not the end. I know the hard work and dedication you need to become an actual martial artist, I enjoy watching those fake ones out there for a good laugh but at the same time taking advantage of people and their money for their own selfish greed is wrong. Fakes need to realize they will end up hurting themselves really bad but more importantly those who follow them blindly. It might be their ignorance that leads them to their hurt, but it was their so-called master that leads them with arrogance perhaps to their own grave. I see Martial arts as 4 parts, the Spiritual, feeling self-worth, and striving to do better honing your skills. 2.Dedication 3. Honor. 4.Self Defense. for whatever skills and abilities you may claim to possess it means nothing to me if you don't have the respect, focus, and honor to help guide you. That's my true belief as cliche and cheesy as it may sound.
I just can't imagine anyone is gonna just stand there and let you grab their wrist while you do any of this
Of course, anyone wouldn't stand there and let you do the locks. With your opponent's resisting, you can do many other techniques using their response. Also, he/she would not know which techniques are coming. This tutorial shows the basic moves of pre-emptive attacks. You can also use these with strikes or kicks... Thank you for your comment though.
@@self-defence these techniques don't work against any kind of resistance even in the event that you manage to grab their wrist
@@pjkz Oh, right. Tell me, did you ever use a wrist lock of pressure point in real life? Wrist lock technique from Tae-Kwon Do basically saved my life, and yes, they do work very well against resistance - matter of fact, the more resistance you get, the tighter the lock. You just have to move into the wrist lock *before* your opponent move to resist. They will, but they will be, essentially, locked. That's the point. They you can swipe their leg, kick in the groin, etc even if they resist enough to push you. Also, I did a pressure point on a giant of a man, 6'3, 350 pounds, lifted couple hundreds pound on leg bench, extremely athletic for his weight. I did for fun, he backed up pretty quickly from the pain. Try ramming a your finger between your collarbone and the side of your neck, just for fun. I was also invited at one of the best boxing gym in Canada and will call out any fake martial art, but this is self-defense, not fighting - there is BIG difference. There really is no need to fight much if you know these moves, there are no rules, it's not a ring. If you hit me from the left I can go forward and hit the back of your neck, push your face and lift your nostrils if you're smaller than me, attack the groin if you're taller than me. Had a couple gym goers with a black belt who tried me, but when there are *no rules*, good luck trying your bullshit combination. I had moves like this on me, it hurts for real. You don't know what the fuck you're talking about.
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I respect SKMA Hapkido, but I would like to state, against a fully resisting opponent's wrist locks off the bat will not work, you will get punched so many times plus you will have to catch the person hand in order to do that.
That's not the purpose of hapkido. You learn how to do it from a standing position and then you incorporate it to when they are are grabbing you then punching you and then trying to stab you. You first have to learn and be familiar with the technique before you can incorporate it into a defensive position. Like any martial art, you have to be familiar with the techniques at a basic level and then work your way up until they actually work
@@zacheaston6727 I can agree with you to a point, but here's the thing the majority of the people in this world don't have the time to learn all that. Effective and realistic and practical are the 3 fundamentals to keeping yourself safe and others if you have to engage in an altercation. The biggest first thing is awareness. if you think wrist locks are going to work against someone with a knife and full blood intent to kill the average person... I will have to strongly disagree in my opinion.
@@zacheaston6727
Then you suffer from the exact same problems as BJJ, you practice the technique in isolation, only to find out that the manner in which you learned it often needs to be adapted to be functional, which takes even more time. You should always be thinking of potential openings and threat's to a given technique or position, and teaching beginners that is almost more important than learning the technique itself.
If you are looking to actually be able to fight with a given set of techniques you should observe the basic form, practice it a few times, then try to incorporate it into a live resistance sparring session or at the very least into live drills. This is how you learn the basis of effective fighting within a reasonable time frame with sacrificing technique. It's also how all combat sports train for competition, including MMA, because you want your fighters to be capable of using a given technique as quickly as possible.
These techniques are very open to striking and you need to alter the technique to actually fit a given response, which only comes with the experience of actually using it in a live situation. Ramsey Dewey has a pretty good video he released today on just this type of technique.
dont let someone hold your hand.....
playstation 2 that's a game system not martial arts?
We named our techniques PS 1 and 2 to help our members understand the skills easier and remember. When we hold the opponent's hand before doing joint lock, our hold looks like holding playstation joystick.
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Who just stands there and let’s someone do this to them? I’d like to see this applied in a real fight or even just a sparring situation
This is a tutorial for preemptive attack techniques, showing how to do them. Of course, all these should be surprise attack when you do them in real situation. It is same as your first punch, strike or kick. We can do straight attack using these or we can do deception punch or strike first and grab the arm do the techniques.
Action is faster than reaction
Okay but where's the "pre-emptive attack"? Your attacker is gently extending his arm to you to do your thing. Hardly a realistic demonstration usable in a real attack scenario.
I took a little hapkido in Korea...but honestly? It's not very effective in a fight! Great if someone grabs you...but if they are throwing punches? Yeah...
So punch them back? Lol striking is not a foreign concept in hapkido. The chin push at 4:41 for example can be a chin strike if the situation called for it
Nice choreography hapkido. But to me Wing Chun all the way.
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Make it illegal in all martial arts to teach BS technique. In knife attacks, show defense of rapid stabbing. We have short life on earth to learn bs techniques. Make sure techniques defeats bjj black belts too.