I never learned aikido, but truthfully i have always been interested because i did a bit of japanese jiu jitsu for a few years. It was good to see these techniques be broken down the way they were presented here.
6:33. Yes, there is always someone else waiting. But it's actually better to go slower. You ever play tag, when you have a tree or a table? It's not possible to ever catch someone when they have an obstacle to hide behind, and that's just with a static obstical. Aikido, you have the ability to make the tree (uke) move where you want the tree to be (or you can move yourself relative to the tree like before, or a combination there of). But if you just drop uke, you clear the path for the next attack, you give up your obstruction. It's best to keep the path convoluted. That's the real power behind these standing manipulations that you're performing so well. If you can keep uke standing, you can keep him in the way, and you can deal with next attack with more optionality. In fact, this is how you scale to taking on an entire mob if you have to.
13:15. Most of the techniques you've demonstrated so far (such as sankyo) are not joint techniques, they are stretches. You're attacking the soft connective tissue, not the joints. This is why most of the pain in sankyo is not felt in the wrist, but in the forearm. This is also why when you retreat to the pinky in that technique, the pain gets worse, because you're placing another nerve stretch on top of the hand rotation stretch. If that was simply a joint attack, the pinky articulation wouldn't affect it. Kote kage on the other hand, you feel the pain at the wrist, but then you're also working directly on separating the joint. Also, most actual joint attacks don't hurt until something is broken. Like rokkyo, there's not a lot of warning before the elbow is gone.
🙄 Dude, I've done a hell of a lot of Aikido to people in the real world, and I'm still here to talk about it. I think you're mistaken in your theory of how this stuff works.
@@darkelf1000 doesn't matter. I'm still here man. I've been mugged many times, and I'm still here. What you don't understand about this subject could fill a library. If it was just about being faster than bullets, then I wouldn't be here to tell you that you don't know what you're talking about.
Wow, finally someone showing the actual angles these techniques are performed at. Very impressive.
I never learned aikido, but truthfully i have always been interested because i did a bit of japanese jiu jitsu for a few years. It was good to see these techniques be broken down the way they were presented here.
Thank You Sensei
Bravo again
Good Aikido Osu
6:33. Yes, there is always someone else waiting. But it's actually better to go slower. You ever play tag, when you have a tree or a table? It's not possible to ever catch someone when they have an obstacle to hide behind, and that's just with a static obstical. Aikido, you have the ability to make the tree (uke) move where you want the tree to be (or you can move yourself relative to the tree like before, or a combination there of). But if you just drop uke, you clear the path for the next attack, you give up your obstruction. It's best to keep the path convoluted. That's the real power behind these standing manipulations that you're performing so well. If you can keep uke standing, you can keep him in the way, and you can deal with next attack with more optionality. In fact, this is how you scale to taking on an entire mob if you have to.
13:15. Most of the techniques you've demonstrated so far (such as sankyo) are not joint techniques, they are stretches. You're attacking the soft connective tissue, not the joints. This is why most of the pain in sankyo is not felt in the wrist, but in the forearm. This is also why when you retreat to the pinky in that technique, the pain gets worse, because you're placing another nerve stretch on top of the hand rotation stretch. If that was simply a joint attack, the pinky articulation wouldn't affect it. Kote kage on the other hand, you feel the pain at the wrist, but then you're also working directly on separating the joint. Also, most actual joint attacks don't hurt until something is broken. Like rokkyo, there's not a lot of warning before the elbow is gone.
Danny Bonaduce teaches Aikido? Who knew?!
😂 i feel bad for Uke
Always 😮
Hell yeah..but he learns the most as well..been in his shoes..bravo to him and teacher 👏🏾👏🏾
Jesus Christ, that poor dummy is sending pain signals left and right and John just casually keeps torturing him. Painful to watch.
"why on earth did i volunteer in this"
That poor guy lol
Bang....you dead.
🙄 Dude, I've done a hell of a lot of Aikido to people in the real world, and I'm still here to talk about it. I think you're mistaken in your theory of how this stuff works.
@bujin5455 won't be faster than a bullet.
@@darkelf1000 doesn't matter. I'm still here man. I've been mugged many times, and I'm still here. What you don't understand about this subject could fill a library. If it was just about being faster than bullets, then I wouldn't be here to tell you that you don't know what you're talking about.
@bujin5455 yeah I do. Thanks. You lose.
@@darkelf1000 school yard gainsaying huh? I stand by my prior.