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Going for my 1st Kyu Karate tonight and I’m bricking it a bit, so I thought I’d take my mind off it by starting a thread… errr…
Anyway. 53 years old. Got a hernia. Getting over a knee ligament injury. Kumite opponents are all Dan Grade and 20 years younger than me. What could possibly go wrong?
Anyone else like getting slapped about for fun?
My hand are registered as lethal weapons. I could tell you which discipline but then I'd have to kill you....
The names Mitty, Walter Mitty...
Can I be the first to say strike first, strike hard, no mercy?
I'm considering going to the Kung Fu class at my local community hall.
I am a nunchucks mirror master!
yoga? I did a bit of Thai boxing, Lau Gar and a bit of freestyle karate kickboxing years ago but was never any good at them. Didn't do anything else for about 15yrs then discovered yoga in 2010. Fell in love with it. I've been to various different classes, Vinyasa and Sivananda but my favourite is Satria which is Indonesian, the yoga form of Pencak Silat.
People will do anything to avoid a Monday Night Pub Ride nowadays
I'm a black belt in wacky-****y
just remember...."be water my friend"
Can I be the first to say strike first, strike hard, no mercy?
You can, but we'll all do that so the opening exchange can get a bit lively. Going to try and draw them in and catch them with a leading hand punch.
My son is grading too, the other week he split my lip in the first couple of seconds. The git.
Can I be the first to say strike first, strike hard, no mercy?
Got the T-shirt...

https://www.lastexittonowhere.com/catalogue/cobra-kai-full-chest-print_11010/
Another classic

https://www.lastexittonowhere.com/catalogue/hans-martial-arts-tournament-1973_8943/

I did Wado Ryu until my early 20s; got my first Dan. Also tried some some Lau Gar and Wing chun. Old with knackered joints I got quite into Tai Chi for a while which I ready enjoyed, but moved away from the instructor iiked.
We trained pretty old school when I did it. I loved it, but my body seems not to have 😂
Good luck with the grading.
12 years/sandan of Goju Ryu under an instructor who was a student of Morio Higaonna. I used to train maybe five or six times a week but that seems like a whole other life time ago now. The dojo was initially down the Walworth Road in Camberwell then moved to in and around what was the Heygate Estate (also off the Walworth Road).
I used to really enjoy the sparring but hate the press ups! Each dan grading is etched indellibly in my memory!
Did four years of TKD waaaaaay back in the dim and distant and enjoyed it (apart from the press-ups). I switched to ninjutsu when I moved back to Suffolk and realised that I preferred not having to actually kick and punch people; it's much easier to let them do the work and use their energy againt them.
I keep thinking I should do something like that again, maybe ju-jitsu, but I live in the country and town is a log way to go for a chance to get covid.
but hate the press ups!
I really enjoyed the circuit training style warm up (shuttle runs / press ups etc) when I did Kick Boxing at Uni (> 30 years ago now).
Did karate as a teen, then Kung Fu at uni and into my mid 20s, then Tai Chi Chen in my late 20s. Then kids came along and I've not done any since. Now approaching 50 and I fancy a bit of Wing Chung, but living in rural Shropshire there's no chance of that happening. Alas I will never be Ip Man.
53?
With a hernia?
With a dodgy knee?
...you sure about this! 🤪
My 13 year old nephew is a black belt in Kung Fu.
I did Taekwondo a few years ago in Edinburgh.
It was pretty full on, broken jaws when sparring etc.
Offered to fight some of those UFC's frauds but they declined.
It was all good though, as most of us were earning £300k+.
What's Glupton up to these days, him and his millionaire CEO mates were pretty handy weren't they?
I used to do Karate as a kid. Same as every other youth in the 80's after watching Karate Kid I guess.
Think I did a few belts before getting bored, orange maybe. Realised pretty soon that they were never gonna teach us how to do the flying kicks over buildings that we'd seen in the ninja films. So bought a Commodore 64 and Double Dragon instead.
So anyway, a few years ago was involved in an almost set-to drunken skirmish with some obnoxious drunktards walking through the city centre late at night, and my body automatically assumed the position. The stance! Whatever it's called, you know, sideways on, leading leg bent at the knee, leading hand up and flat, other hand at the waist in a fist. It was so weird, I was like - where did that come from!?
Thought about taking up martial arts again as an adult, but really, I don't want to pay to have some dude's foot in my face. And I got talking to a guy recently who's like tenth dan or something and his entire head looked like a cauliflower... I mean, if that happens when you're awesome, what happens when you're rubbish?
Can I be the first to say strike first, strike hard, no mercy?
Oh, I actually DID strike first didn't I? 🙂
I have some knowledge of...Baritsu

Judo when at school, boxing up to about 20 and then Karate until my mid 20's getting to brown. I changed more due to the set of friends i met rather than the actual sport. Loved them all.
53?
With a hernia?
With a dodgy knee?
…you sure about this!
No, it's a f***ing stupid idea.
48 here, I went to a ju jitsu class in January - had headaches for ten days after, and my middle finger is still swollen. 🙁
I did 10 years ju jitsu.
Muay Thai.
Grew up doing karate. Did some boxing. Tried bjj but hated it. kick boxing in UK and a bit here in Oz but switched to muay thai in Oz with a chap who also teaches cqb and stuff, ex aus sas and still teaches ADF personnel around Oz. Although I've not been for a few months and my conditioning is shocking atm but covid has but the kybosh on classes. Will be back at it when I'm back from my hol. Bloody love it. The drills, the combos and the "I'm going to vomit" kick drills. (100 left, switch 100 right) He does strength and conditioning twice a week after the sessions but I'm utterly rooted after that (type 1 diabetic). Pad work and bear full contact sparring. My left side is my strong point for kicks and knees, my right side for punches. Either side for elbows and being tall and a bit bony, I love getting in close for a good cross elbow. I actually prefer elbows to a good cross or uppercut. Being tall too a nice jumping knee is pretty devastating. Left leg liver kicks and my lanky teep kicks. Got a heavy big bag in the garage. I'd have a blast now but it's midnight here and it's piss the missus off this late!
That karate stance was beaten out of me doing thai which is more square on than angled vent knee. Keep your rear hand down and you'll get a head kick so quick. I also hated the way karate was taught... "Thry do thid, you do this"
I've met Geoff Thompson a few times and the fence is a superb technique. Also, he said learn to hit first time f00kin hard. He's also a bloody nice bloke.
I'm 46
My boys 10 and just got his yellow in karate.
Fencing.
I started age 9 and went to 15. I placed in the Scottish competitions.
Started again at Uni, won the Glasgow open ( none of the really decent people turned up that year. I got a right thumping and didn't make it to lat 8 the next year).
I got. Blue for it from the uni, we made it to the last 8 of the British uni teams. If we had won that fight we would have got expenses to fight the next round in England. Very exciting!
After that I made it to the last 4 of the west Australian open and moved to England
The competions is much harder down here as there is a much higher population density.
Great points.
You can have a proper full tempo fights all weekend and might get a bruise. I cannot imagine the state of you if you tried that at kungfu or anything that doesn't involve bendy swords.
Minus points
Super niche. While there are competions and you can fight others there is a lot of traveling involved. If you don't like someone, you still bump into them 20 years on! Most folk are nice,
A few years Bujinkan a lifetime ago.
It taught me a lot about avoiding the kind of people who take it all a bit too seriously.
Fun though.
I train Wing Chun and Kali pretty much every day; have done for the past 6.5 years.
At some point I'll no longer be a novice.
I was a TKD obsessive ~30 years ago, loved various aspects of it, but there's absolutely no way I'd try to go back to it now at 48 having not done any training/stretching of that nature for ~25 years!
Kickboxing (billed as modern karate) - did it for years until a brain injury in the ring as I was training for my 2nd Dan forced me to stop. I really miss the feeling it gave me.
Hai Karate...
I'm rubbish but smell amazing 😉
1st Kyu 2nd Class.
I'll take that.
Lost a bit of skin on my knuckles and feet and my shins are covered in bruises.
Pads, stances and kumite were good. Kata was horrible. Got dumped on my arse 3 times, knock someone else over twice.
Absolutely beat, but never felt more alive!
Son got a 2nd, daughter got a 3rd. Proud of the pair of them.
I've always been interested in Fencing. It seems like a high-energy contact sport without the injuries like you say. Is it something that one could start as a complete beginner mid 40's? There happens to be a club local to me and been thinking about getting in touch, but no point if I'd be completely out of my depth. Another thing I've often thought about Fencing; it doesn't seem to me like it should be good for you being so, one-sided. Not sure I'm making much sense... I mean, aren't you just exercising one half of your body? Or do you swap round? Also, is all the lunging hard on the knees? I've avoided squash for this reason.
Congratulations! I'll never forget the feeling of passing my black belt. Celebrated in A&E with a broken bone in my hand after the breaking wood bit went wrong...
I ended up doing 4 black belts (in TKD) but I've recently stopped training and miss it often.
Something that stayed with me was this quote: getting a black belt is like learning an alphabet. Now you're ready to start learning the language.
Just Thai nowadays along with normal boxing. Did karate for 10+ years in my younger days, a few years of MMA and jits.
Ju-jitsu for a few years. My training partner and I were the only beginners so we stuck together for years. Problem was, he was 6'4" and had spent the previous 10 years bodybuilding. I was 5'10" and had spent the previous 10 years cycling. I used to get thrown all over the place... I was permanently injured! Still, it helped my technique and bottle. Over 20 years ago now but I still remember some of it.
It came in useful when one of my patients assaulted me and got me in an arm lock... I was out in seconds and briefly had them in a devastating lock. Remembered where I was and let him go pdq!
Did Wado-ryu for two or three years, quite a long time ago, Steve the Sensai was amazingly good, but I stopped after a while, I could never put enough into it to really develop. Did Tai-chi for a while as well, and I really enjoyed that, but the classes stopped for reasons to do with the sports centre in town, and there’s no class available in the evening anywhere local, classes are always in the day, which is useless.
Shame, I’d like to do it again - we did a sword form, with really nicely made wooden Chinese-style straight swords, I’ve still got mine.
I've got tons of kung fu / samurai / ninja films on DVD and Blu Ray. Does that count?
Wado Ryu for around ten years now for me... I'm 50. Started at 40/41 ish with my daughter; she gave up pdq, but I just kept going!
Work, family, Scouting and various niggles means I've never made fast progress, and had to take a 2 year or so break until recently due to dodgy knees. It has been getting back into cycling after stopping karate that has strengthened up my knees enough again to start back to it!
Only now I'm trying to balance work, family, Scouts and cycling alongside karate 😉
Grading in June, I think, I may finally move on from the green that I got 5 years ago to purple...
Although my progress has been comically slow, full of challenges, gaps, and setbacks, I still enjoy the whole thing and I don't worry too much about the colour around my middle - I just try to learn, refine and do my best each time. I've made many good friends and learnt lots about myself and my capabilities. And I'm really glad I'm back to it 🙂
Does getting in a scrap in a taxi rank every Saturday cut it?
Feeling a bit second hand this morning :-/
Got kicked in the calf which is causing some discomfort. However, if you can't take a joke don't join the club.
OSS!
I trained Muay Thai in Manchester from 8-19 with an absolute legend of a man who changed my life called Master Sken.
Picked up Krav Maga for a few years in London, now have a bag in the garage and have resorted back to Muay Thai training albeit on my own.
The thought of getting in any kind of a scuffle these days fills me with dread!! 😀
The pain will fade harry as will the bruise eventually. Hope it went well?
I've done Judo since about 6 or 7 and was quite competitive at school and Uni. Carried on in adult life and now coach as well. Its a great form of all body exercise and encourages you to keep flexible as well. Have made lifelong friends through it and I'm really happy my eldest seems to like it too!
I'm off the mat with a shoulder injury but stepped on it again on Monday after 5 months off and the feel of the tatami underfoot was just great.
I think most martial arts give you self confidence, discipline and to progress you have to be able to work well with others.
Oh and the knowledge that in the street the best form of self defence is to leg it!
Ameri Do tae....Master Ken is my teacher
Used to do Judo but these days i find a good hard slap will diffuse most situations.
but these days i find a good hard slap will diffuse most situations.
How did it feel winning a Oscar?
its what i've been training for!
Hope it went well?
Yeah, went very well. Quite pleased. My Kata is weak, but the rest was as good as I could have expected. Did 5 rounds of Kumite. Was like a bar fight at the end when everyone was knackered as there were 5 pairs all going at it at the same time.
I don't do anything any more and haven't for a long time. I spent 4 years training Mauy Thai, then JKD and Kali with Collin Sherred and Phil Norman at the School of Fighting Arts in Poole in the early 90's. They had just qualified as instructors under Dan Inosanto at the time. I remember it fondly, but have no desire to start training again -I'm just not angry enough anymore!
HEMA, training in sabre fencing based on the works of Roworth.
I'm ninth dan black belt in 'Itchy fanny' . Basically dont mess
My 10yo daughter has just started something called Choi Kwang Do. It's Korean I think. She appears to be enjoying it (first grading tomorrow) and the control that the teachers have over a room of 50 children is wonderful to see. No shouting or telling off - just total concentration and almost silence for an hour. Very impressive.
Well done Harry. I used to be so much better at the randori than the kata too. Coaching helps you break down the techniques which after many years have become just part of muscle memory and makes it easier to manage the kata. That an a good Uki who makes everything look good!
I'm feeling a bit bereft nowadays. I'd always described myself as a martial artist, having trained consistently in various things since the mid 90's. Covid, a knee problem and arthritis has called time on it all though.
I started off in Shotokan Karate, which was gradually replaced with Muay Thai (which has given me my arthritic left foot). That was replaced with Judo, which I did for about 10 years (and has left me with arthritis in my other foot, from stubbing toes on mats and kicking ankles instead of sweeping). I really enjoyed grappling, so I was always going to end up doing BJJ. Did a bit in the gi for a while with Marcos Nardini, but trained much more no-gi, getting to purple with a 10th Planet gym. Covid brought that to a halt.
I do miss it all a bit. Not sure that going back to jits is a good idea: as a 50 year-old, out of practice purple belt with knee problems, I'd just be a walking target for the white and blue belts that think they have something to prove. I'm toying wiht the idea of something like Krav, but there seems to be a lot of dross.
Expert in No Kan Du.
Does that count?
Always had an interest in martial arts and love some of the ridiculous films with Tony Jaa etc.
Partly wanted to for the fun/exercise side of it but also with a mind to actual self defence... Krav Maga probably best for that but also wanted to learn Aikido for some reason. Read about it in a book I think haha.
So, um, nothing.
Fencing.
I started age 9 and went to 15. I placed in the Scottish competitions.

Effective. Get through that ye bastards!
Did Wing Chun for a few years as a yoot. Loved the speed and simultaneous simplicity/complexity of the techniques. Actually applied a small amount of it in a scuffle at university and it was very effective.
Keep meaning to revisit it as physically I'm only headed in one direction. Maybe I will!
@longdog What are your thoughts rev WC v other disciplines? Anyone out there done Wing Chun and other arts? Would be really interested in your thoughts.
A few years Bujinkan a lifetime ago.
Genbukan for a while in my 40s until abdominal surgery stopped play. Wado Ryu and kickboxing in my teens.