Thanks for the video man. I originally found you through the video you did with Seth. I appreciate that you present the material with the mindset of being applicable if there is actual resistance. The pressure testing mindset needed to be brought to the source material to actually test if you can do what is being taught. I see way to much of it being taught in ways that are going to fall apart as soon as someone doesn't respond with the compliant choreography they are used to.
Давно уже в нормальном движении подразумевается при ударе первой рукой удар ноги взаимосвязь видимая или не заметная что в свою очередь отмечает необходимость комбинационных множество действий на разных способах❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😂❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I cant lie, ive studied martial arts for a long time, and this application of sonething as obscure as ninjutsu is exactly the kind of thing i found from the best teachers ive ever had. Oss
It's crazy how some of the applications intertwined with grappling of BJJ and self defense this is golden I think I will try this style of martial arts
Part of what I apprciate here, they are making contact. This is subtantial, physical contact, you can see the practiced motins. You can see he's using, "Slow in smooth, smooth is fast."
As a BJJ student who also studies Bujinkan Budo Taijutsu, I love your stuff. I've never had the opportunity to train To- Shin Do, but have always been a huge fan of Anshu Hayes. I absolutely love how you break down techniques. Great videos!
I've trained in Shotokan for 45 years & Shinobi for 38 years now & must say that I love his style of training! You are never too old to learn & things have really changed since I first started! I must say that, he's really good and he understands the art but he's an excellent teacher & that's not easy!!! Total respect on that!!! 🙏 I would be honoured to have trained under this Sensei! God bless you, Sir! Keep up the great work!!
I have been a harsh critic of much of the Takamatsu-den schools as currently taught. However, there is nothing in this video that I observed as lacking. All of the principles seem solid. Pressure testing is very important, and I do not know if they do that in this specific school. But as far as techniques go, most of this could work given the proper timing.
Yes Sir, that slanted angle defence Does make sense! Just, Why don´t you shpw the opposite X- to give more to the legs? Best regards. Paul. 68, retired instructor of Karate.
I like the way you teach. Many times the problem is, waza type practice alone, doesn't get you ready for high intensity attacks that off balance you, and possibly break thru your defense. Having done kick boxing and free style grappling you understand the reality of fighting. I've worked security most of my adult life, and trained in a few different countries and martial disciples. Watching you teach is refreshing.
This was awesome. I really enjoyed seeing the more modern application. I do Bujinkan, but have an open minded instructor who has multiple martial arts background like yourself. So we do a lot of henka and modern type fighting applications. I live in Alabama, North West Corner. Is there any Time Shin Do practitioners near me?
Thank you for watching! I don’t know if any TSD practitioners in your area but there are some great digital training options if you want to learn more, check out NinjaSelfDefense.com!
@@TheNinjaEveryDay Thanks. The closest school I have found was Tampa Quest. Which is awesome by the way. I think the way things are going, you guys teach the best methods for defense. Bodily, morally, and legally.
where in uk dp this style be taught any students in uk which part of england are they what sthe school called clases days thank you if you do have a place
Good solution, friendly atmosphere, but 13 minutes could be used to show an active approach as well to help beginners when to take the initiative. Paul,67, retired instructor of Karate.
i studied this for a few years. unader hatsumi . I am older now. early 60s. I missed the bottom step of some concrete steps.. havent practiced in a long time but right before I did a face plant on the sidewalk I did a perfect forward roll. My friend was like what the hell was that. Learning to be present in your body. The best. I learned lots of great stuff. However, I will use say this after bouncing and skip tracing I got beat up a bunch and quickly learned how to keep from getting beat down. All I can say about this lesson is punches come fast man. If they have any skill at all , well it just won’t happen like you think. And people’s heads are damn hard, and it is not so easy to just knock somebody out. Sometimes you give em hard overhand right to the cheek. SOme dude just shake it off.
Just a question, why do you have to adapt techniques to modern day violence? Shouldn’t the art prepare its students already, after all this art is supposed to be an art of war.
Great question and I agree that we should be training for current conditions. This is part of my effort to keep my taijutsu as current and effective as possible.
Because some techniques are developed for a specific context, a context that often do not really exist any longer in most places (swords and spears to the death etc). Many of the _priciples_ however that is the fundation of thoose techniques are on the other hand timeless and can easily be applied to new contexts. This is nothing weird within for example Bujinkan where creativity and adaptation is seen as the very cornerstones. But what most people often only sees is just the traditional, basic, techniques done to learn these principles, and not the applications of said principles.
This is good for learning movement, but I would toss out the halloween costume. At 11:07 you had the opportunity for a finisher, but chose the reach over and all the other movement.
@@TheNinjaEveryDay I have no problem with the gi. the the Ninja costume is really off putting. So 80's. But, I do like your movement and use of elbows to block. Hopefully I can meet you and show you the move I was hoping you would go for at 11:07.
Chief this is a demonstration. Did you ever stop and think that if this person's partner did show the any resistance that they could end up getting hurt when this is only supposed to be a demonstration
The guard pass looks too easy if the opponent doesn't try to resist. What's why BJJ boxing Kiokushin wrestling is the way to build realistic self defence skills. Good techniques - would work on a BJJ white belt.
I guess they mythology is that it strictly offensive in nature striking before the attacker does or jamming him up. Last cup of water on earth the cup of water is in the middle of the x.
Nah any 6 month white belt can defend a simple knee slice, you arent getting close to a clean knee slice like that with 3-4 stripe white belt and above it has to be used with other passing techniques
Seeing some o' dis, if I were a ninjutsu guy wit a high rank, I'd try 2 train these techniques wit ppl in as much of a "krav maga" way as possible! If one can get any tech off against a resisting opponent, and I do mean repeatedly, then best believe said tech is gonna b with u when u actually need it! Yeah tho! Those defensive arm blocks an' evasions... I should wonder if I've seen them elsewhere b4, cuz they may not b exclusive 2 just ninjutsu! But dis is just me typing on my keyboard!
I'm going to be the first person since the ancient times to Practice martial arts and truly Awaken it no fake tv bullshit I'm talking the Real original Deal
nice vid m8! but at min 4, sec 5.. my eyes are litt crying for a missing TanDa.. cantonese sry.. ^^ that could end the vid 9 min earlier.. why parry when u can parry and strike? wu mei is lurking..
Please show me just one video where these techniques actually work, of all the thousands upon thousands of videos of real fights/street encounters on social media, there has got to be at least one. correct??? Please spare me all the battlefield BS because I've read it all. I trained Bujinkan in the 2000s
Hi, I'm unsure what you are asking for. I shared a few techniques and entries to techniques for folks to try in a self-defense situation. The elbow roll I shared is a widely accepted way to get outside a punch. An uchi mata (a technique I showed) is regularly used in judo competitions. An ankle pick (something else that I showed) is a prevalent wrestling technique. No battlefield BS from me. I want what I'm showing to work for people.
@@TheNinjaEveryDay You are clearly talented; however I think yo do people a disservice when you try and frame a wrestling technigue as self defense, because there is no such thing as self defense there is only fighting.
the amount of content creators on their TH-cam channels mock Ninjutsu as bullshido and add examples like ashida kim to try and prove Ninjutsu is not a real martial art ... Mocking and poking fun at it to get likes and subscribers thinking it's hilarious 🤬 My sensei when I trained was a bouncer and a security guard .. he was deadly and taught us to apply it against street fight moves ... Classes were tough and he pushed us... It's still with me to this day ...
NINJAS ? Time to grow up in this day and age. Men acting like Ninjas lol...so unrealistic.They practice this choreographed stuff that wont work in reality because they cant do realistic martial arts...too much work and they might get hurt.Dancing and acting is more safe than real martial training.
Thanks for the video man. I originally found you through the video you did with Seth. I appreciate that you present the material with the mindset of being applicable if there is actual resistance. The pressure testing mindset needed to be brought to the source material to actually test if you can do what is being taught. I see way to much of it being taught in ways that are going to fall apart as soon as someone doesn't respond with the compliant choreography they are used to.
Thank you for watching! You are correct in that you have to scrap a little to see 1. if the material works and 2. if you can actually pull it off.
Давно уже в нормальном движении подразумевается при ударе первой рукой удар ноги взаимосвязь видимая или не заметная что в свою очередь отмечает необходимость комбинационных множество действий на разных способах❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😂❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I cant lie, ive studied martial arts for a long time, and this application of sonething as obscure as ninjutsu is exactly the kind of thing i found from the best teachers ive ever had.
Oss
Thank you for watching!!
It's crazy how some of the applications intertwined with grappling of BJJ and self defense this is golden I think I will try this style of martial arts
Thank you for watching! I believe that if most folks gave taijutsu/ninjutsu a try that they could find lots of value in it.
Part of what I apprciate here, they are making contact. This is subtantial, physical contact, you can see the practiced motins. You can see he's using, "Slow in smooth, smooth is fast."
You don't see a lot of taijutsu adapted for modern times. This is refreshing
Thank you for watching!
Impressive flow of applications, Thank you
Thank you for watching!!!
As a BJJ student who also studies Bujinkan Budo Taijutsu, I love your stuff. I've never had the opportunity to train To- Shin Do, but have always been a huge fan of Anshu Hayes. I absolutely love how you break down techniques. Great videos!
Thank you so much!!!
Love seeing this! I had the honor of having Anshu present when Master Sauer awarded me my 4th degree. Two amazing masters!
Snoop menuce has done close to 10 BJJ Brazilian jujitsu classes! Almost 1 month into jiujitsu trainning
Thank you, love the real life twist of the self defense, similar to my own Dojo! best!
very good
let me know when you will have a seminar...
If you follow us on Instagram or Facebook, you can see when we have seminars, which is relatively often. Cheers!
This is an art form. Cool instructor!
Thank you!
Very good! Thanks for putting it out there! There are definitely some details I missed when we worked on this live! 🐊🦈
Yessir! Thanks for watching!
Like those Henkas with ganseki name great flow
Thank you for watching!
I like your teaching I like ninjutsu
I've trained in Shotokan for 45 years & Shinobi for 38 years now & must say that I love his style of training! You are never too old to learn & things have really changed since I first started! I must say that, he's really good and he understands the art but he's an excellent teacher & that's not easy!!! Total respect on that!!! 🙏 I would be honoured to have trained under this Sensei! God bless you, Sir! Keep up the great work!!
Fire! been waiting for content like this.
Very Cool
Thank you!
Great work, Hardee
Thank you for watching!!
Funny thing is the elbow roll or parry is called Boang sau in Wing chun/ JKD
I have been a harsh critic of much of the Takamatsu-den schools as currently taught. However, there is nothing in this video that I observed as lacking. All of the principles seem solid. Pressure testing is very important, and I do not know if they do that in this specific school. But as far as techniques go, most of this could work given the proper timing.
Thank you for watching! I appreciate your perspective!
That’s because this is To-Shin Do, developed by Master Hayes, with a strong root of Authentic Ninujutsu taught by Hatsumi himself. This style is legit
So...Wing Chun entries, Wrestling takedowns, and finish with BJJ? 😉
Taijutsu was an early MMA. Kung Fu and Jujutsu certainly contributed.
Yes Sir,
that slanted angle defence Does make sense!
Just, Why don´t you shpw the opposite X- to give more to the legs?
Best regards. Paul. 68, retired instructor of Karate.
Tanks you very much for the video master
Great video!
Thank you for watching!
I like the way you teach. Many times the problem is, waza type practice alone, doesn't get you ready for high intensity attacks that off balance you, and possibly break thru your defense. Having done kick boxing and free style grappling you understand the reality of fighting. I've worked security most of my adult life, and trained in a few different countries and martial disciples. Watching you teach is refreshing.
Thank you very much! Your point about the limitations of "waza-type" training is spot-on.
His teaching style really was superb!!
This was awesome. I really enjoyed seeing the more modern application. I do Bujinkan, but have an open minded instructor who has multiple martial arts background like yourself. So we do a lot of henka and modern type fighting applications. I live in Alabama, North West Corner. Is there any Time Shin Do practitioners near me?
Thank you for watching! I don’t know if any TSD practitioners in your area but there are some great digital training options if you want to learn more, check out NinjaSelfDefense.com!
@@TheNinjaEveryDay Thanks. The closest school I have found was Tampa Quest. Which is awesome by the way. I think the way things are going, you guys teach the best methods for defense. Bodily, morally, and legally.
@@rickiecowens2410 the Tampa Dojo is great!
Wish you where in NYC. 😢😢
I've never taught in NYC
where in uk dp this style be taught any students in uk which part of england are they what sthe school called clases days thank you if you do have a place
Great Job..👍
Good solution, friendly atmosphere, but 13 minutes could be used to show an active approach as well to help beginners when to take the initiative. Paul,67, retired instructor of Karate.
Thank you for watching!
i studied this for a few years. unader hatsumi . I am older now. early 60s. I missed the bottom step of some concrete steps.. havent practiced in a long time but right before I did a face plant on the sidewalk I did a perfect forward roll. My friend was like what the hell was that. Learning to be present in your body. The best. I learned lots of great stuff. However, I will use say this after bouncing and skip tracing I got beat up a bunch and quickly learned how to keep from getting beat down. All I can say about this lesson is punches come fast man. If they have any skill at all , well it just won’t happen like you think. And people’s heads are damn hard, and it is not so easy to just knock somebody out. Sometimes you give em hard overhand right to the cheek. SOme dude just shake it off.
Excellent! 👊🏻🤙🏻
🤙
sooo interesting
Great job!
Just a question, why do you have to adapt techniques to modern day violence? Shouldn’t the art prepare its students already, after all this art is supposed to be an art of war.
Great question and I agree that we should be training for current conditions. This is part of my effort to keep my taijutsu as current and effective as possible.
@@TheNinjaEveryDay thanks for the quick answer, nice to have talked to you
Because some techniques are developed for a specific context, a context that often do not really exist any longer in most places (swords and spears to the death etc). Many of the _priciples_ however that is the fundation of thoose techniques are on the other hand timeless and can easily be applied to new contexts.
This is nothing weird within for example Bujinkan where creativity and adaptation is seen as the very cornerstones. But what most people often only sees is just the traditional, basic, techniques done to learn these principles, and not the applications of said principles.
Absence of distraction. Great words Mr Merritt. Cheers from Ottawa.
Thank you sir! Cheers to you!
This is good for learning movement, but I would toss out the halloween costume. At 11:07 you had the opportunity for a finisher, but chose the reach over and all the other movement.
You don't like my gi?
@@TheNinjaEveryDay I have no problem with the gi. the the Ninja costume is really off putting. So 80's.
But, I do like your movement and use of elbows to block.
Hopefully I can meet you and show you the move I was hoping you would go for at 11:07.
So you want him to forget where art comes from for your paradigms
Why does every guy over 40 look like a relative of Stephen Hayes in this video?
😂😅
so master ken got his inspiration from this dude
Nice
Thanks
Hi my name is ryan i am interested in ninjutsu where are you located?
We are in NC
7:09 your "opponent" is showing no resistance that's the only reason why his leg was so weak .any other human being legs would be firm automatically
He is showing resistance. He only trains people with resistance.
Chief this is a demonstration. Did you ever stop and think that if this person's partner did show the any resistance that they could end up getting hurt when this is only supposed to be a demonstration
Bjj rolls all the time with full resistance and people walk away and go to work after. That excuse doesn't fly anymore
The guard pass looks too easy if the opponent doesn't try to resist. What's why BJJ boxing Kiokushin wrestling is the way to build realistic self defence skills. Good techniques - would work on a BJJ white belt.
I guess they mythology is that it strictly offensive in nature striking before the attacker does or jamming him up. Last cup of water on earth the cup of water is in the middle of the x.
Nah any 6 month white belt can defend a simple knee slice, you arent getting close to a clean knee slice like that with 3-4 stripe white belt and above it has to be used with other passing techniques
Seeing some o' dis, if I were a ninjutsu guy wit a high rank, I'd try 2 train these techniques wit ppl in as much of a "krav maga" way as possible! If one can get any tech off against a resisting opponent, and I do mean repeatedly, then best believe said tech is gonna b with u when u actually need it! Yeah tho! Those defensive arm blocks an' evasions... I should wonder if I've seen them elsewhere b4, cuz they may not b exclusive 2 just ninjutsu!
But dis is just me typing on my keyboard!
is that walter white?
I'm going to be the first person since the ancient times to Practice martial arts and truly Awaken it no fake tv bullshit I'm talking the Real original Deal
Ninjitsu flims Hollywood la beverly hills ninja
that's good bjj
teach us how to kill with your bare hands
nice vid m8! but at min 4, sec 5.. my eyes are litt crying for a missing TanDa.. cantonese sry.. ^^ that could end the vid 9 min earlier.. why parry when u can parry and strike? wu mei is lurking..
Please show me just one video where these techniques actually work, of all the thousands upon thousands of videos of real fights/street encounters on social media, there has got to be at least one. correct??? Please spare me all the battlefield BS because I've read it all. I trained Bujinkan in the 2000s
Hi, I'm unsure what you are asking for. I shared a few techniques and entries to techniques for folks to try in a self-defense situation. The elbow roll I shared is a widely accepted way to get outside a punch. An uchi mata (a technique I showed) is regularly used in judo competitions. An ankle pick (something else that I showed) is a prevalent wrestling technique. No battlefield BS from me. I want what I'm showing to work for people.
Pretty sure he’s a BJJ black belt under Roy Dean.
@@cjdubs8740 And
@@TheNinjaEveryDay You are clearly talented; however I think yo do people a disservice when you try and frame a wrestling technigue as self defense, because there is no such thing as self defense there is only fighting.
@@nicknick7776I don’t necessarily disagree with you on that point….
4:28 you could never ever in a real life situation do that to a speedy firm punch you would bruse your elbow really bad
hi.
i don't agree with "woah"
ninjas are silent
Nice feeling and personality, but this will never work, I hope the students understand that.
6:38 His other hand is exposed just like yours 💡
the amount of content creators on their TH-cam channels mock Ninjutsu as bullshido and add examples like ashida kim to try and prove Ninjutsu is not a real martial art ... Mocking and poking fun at it to get likes and subscribers thinking it's hilarious 🤬
My sensei when I trained was a bouncer and a security guard .. he was deadly and taught us to apply it against street fight moves ... Classes were tough and he pushed us... It's still with me to this day ...
Classic bullshido " i can do 3 actions for every 1 action my opponent does "
Example " if he do this i just do this, this, this, and this then gg "
just for laughs
ahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahh
NINJAS ? Time to grow up in this day and age. Men acting like Ninjas lol...so unrealistic.They practice this choreographed stuff that wont work in reality because they cant do realistic martial arts...too much work and they might get hurt.Dancing and acting is more safe than real martial training.
🤦
troll harder
@@adandyguyinspace5783 🤦
Ugh🤦🏾♂️
100% mac dojo...dangerous " master"'
Copying sounding like k hayes lol