Hey guys. There's a lot of great tapes and websites out in the market today covering alot of martial aspects from weapons to fighting fitness.
Can you learn martial arts from electronic media?
I don't think there is a clear cut answer to this one.
If you want to get sport specific training and conditioning advice, I think its a big YES or if you are just looking for a different way to stay in shape. I think there's a great market out there for electronic media about sport-specific conditioning because you can be far away and still efficiently build your attributes if you are motivated and have the right equipment.
If you are learning MA forms/kata, I think it could be possible but you will still miss out on having an instructor watch every angle and critique what you are doing.
If you are looking to learn a new martial art, I would have to say maybe but probably not. The reason why some people might be able to learn a new martial art is if it is a martial art that is closely related to an art they have allready been training in with professional instruction and to a decent level.
For example, can an NCAA wrestler teach himself judo if he gets a video and a willing training partner (YES). Can an offcially wranked karate black belt learn Tae kwon do (YES). Can a well trained FMA guy pick up silat from a credible online source (YES).
When it comes to learning a martial art that is significantly different than your own, I think its a maybe. Could the NCAA wrestler teach himself silat from a video? It depends....he might have awesome balance, explosive speed and sensitivity but silat seems like it requires more fine motor skills in my opinion.
If you have no martial arts training (and no athletic background) I would have to say no.
If you cannot get professional instruction in an art and cannot get the realism of training partners when learning a totally different or new art, videos and online sources will not be a good substitute.
Can you learn martial arts from electronic media?
I don't think there is a clear cut answer to this one.
If you want to get sport specific training and conditioning advice, I think its a big YES or if you are just looking for a different way to stay in shape. I think there's a great market out there for electronic media about sport-specific conditioning because you can be far away and still efficiently build your attributes if you are motivated and have the right equipment.
If you are learning MA forms/kata, I think it could be possible but you will still miss out on having an instructor watch every angle and critique what you are doing.
If you are looking to learn a new martial art, I would have to say maybe but probably not. The reason why some people might be able to learn a new martial art is if it is a martial art that is closely related to an art they have allready been training in with professional instruction and to a decent level.
For example, can an NCAA wrestler teach himself judo if he gets a video and a willing training partner (YES). Can an offcially wranked karate black belt learn Tae kwon do (YES). Can a well trained FMA guy pick up silat from a credible online source (YES).
When it comes to learning a martial art that is significantly different than your own, I think its a maybe. Could the NCAA wrestler teach himself silat from a video? It depends....he might have awesome balance, explosive speed and sensitivity but silat seems like it requires more fine motor skills in my opinion.
If you have no martial arts training (and no athletic background) I would have to say no.
If you cannot get professional instruction in an art and cannot get the realism of training partners when learning a totally different or new art, videos and online sources will not be a good substitute.
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