Best Martial Arts Style - Think Tactic Instead of Style

Are you interested in knowing what is the best style of martial arts?

As an author and martial arts teacher, I am asked my opinion in the best style of martial arts. In fact, it's a trick question ....

I tend to be wary of any style whose practitioners say it is the best. Unless, of course, the very nature of the style is for you to get out and explore other systems and styles.

You should be familiar with the different fighting styles, and be able to change gears in an instant. You must study the tactics, techniques, tactics and strategies of what others are doing.

For example, once you know how other attacks stylish vertical straight punches, then you can develop a specific tactic to your style punches. And once you have a tactic, you can practice making a response.

Or reaction-response tactics in a fight?

Ultimately, you do not want to make too tactical planning in the middle of a fight. Generalizing the necessary technical practice, therefore suit a variety of situations. This way, you start having reactive responses against several isolated working techniques.

Look widespread than answers:

* Can be run quickly

* The work of a variety of positions

* Do not leave your arms or legs crossed or other bad positions

* They are short sequences - long, the stored number of techniques are "waves"

When should you learn new moves?

Make sure not to add too fast tactical repertoire of moves and fighting strategies. It is much better to understand one or two at the beginning of the struggle, to become familiar with the technical 100 could never do the work in a real situation.

How long you need to add to their technical martial, movements, strategies and tactics?

You integrate the new, the old becomes practice. In other words, once you can actually use what you have, then you can add more to the mix.

And not always think that adding instead ... better.

Would you like to learn a new skill? (The one that works.)

Download my free ebook on how to deal with anyone who tries to hit you elbow. That's the kind of progression of a widespread movement of martial arts to the reaction response (tactical practice), I mean.

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Keith Pascal was a writer full time martial arts for eight years and a master of martial arts for 25 years.

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