[QUOTE=uki;972907]the street and the ring are not even comparable nor worthy to be in the same sentence… the ring is for entertainment where “fighters” have to abide by a set of rules and regulations, with the outcome, at times, decided by a panel of judges… again, the street and the ring are entirely different enviroments…
i have clarified the two enviroments for you. :p[/QUOTE]
Uki is 100% correct.
On the street you fight wannabe losers that THINK they can fight, in the ring you fight well trained and conditioned fighters that KNOW how to fight.
[QUOTE=sanjuro_ronin;972910]Uki is 100% correct.[/quote]there’s a good mate.
On the street you fight wannabe losers that THINK they can fight, in the ring you fight well trained and conditioned fighters that KNOW how to fight.
no wonder winners in the ring don’t fight in the street.
[QUOTE=uki;972914]there’s a good mate.
no wonder winners in the ring don’t fight in the street. :p[/QUOTE]
You need to expand your circle of MA people, you don’t seem to know many fighters do you?
And fighting off people trying to steal your mushrooms doesn’t count.
[QUOTE=sanjuro_ronin;972917]You need to expand your circle of MA people, you don’t seem to know many fighters do you?[/quote]i work with masons that use block hammers and shovels to lay out would be perps.
And fighting off people trying to steal your mushrooms doesn’t count.
i eat them too fast for anyone to be able to steal them.
[QUOTE=Lucas;972912]Doesnt Lee Chiang Po generally speak from a life encounter viewpoint and not sport?[/QUOTE]
Well, you have me there. Sparring would indeed help you learn to a point. I did some sparring as a kid with my brothers, all larger and stronger than myself. I did learn a lot in putting my technique to test during sparring. The word fighting does not actually equate to me as sparring. So I tend to respond to it in the only way I think. When I think of fighting, I am also thinking it is a situation where you can not afford to lose. The cost would be much greater than just being beaten.
I have a son that is now 43 years of age. I started him at 10 years, and by 21 he was pretty much done. I can not stand up to him any more as he is much stronger and faster. We sparred a lot. But it was not even close to actually fighting. I would never strike him in a way that I could harm him and he would not strike me in such a manner. I considered sport fighting as a young man, but I decided it was not for me. The people that excell at such sports are usually also exceptional, and I am in no way exceptional. Few of us are. And fewer of us will ever become champions of such a sport simply because we are not exceptional.
the street and the ring are not even comparable nor worthy to be in the same sentence… the ring is for entertainment where “fighters” have to abide by a set of rules and regulations, with the outcome, at times, decided by a panel of judges… again, the street and the ring are entirely different enviroments…
Quote:
2 different environments.
i have clarified the two enviroments for you.
way to answer someone else’s post.
my bad uki should have put 3 different environments my sentence structure was a little off. it should have been street/ring/sparring and 3 different environments but my bad didn’t look at post after i typed it. :rolleyes:
arent you late for your masonic mushroom cult of internal masters meeting for juggling someones balls?
[QUOTE=Dragonzbane76;972980]arent you late for your masonic mushroom cult of internal masters meeting for juggling someones balls?[/QUOTE]is this where one inserts a mom joke?