Ive been to busy to do this until now. And i wanted to see how it panned out.
I really wonder if you guys have read my original post at all. This is the only damn case where this shows up. I didn't waltz into the ****ing Aikido school saying I am tough and have seen this before, the case IS LIMITED TO KRAV ALONE. So everyone, please for the love of God, stop making generalizations about me because of my experience with ONE ART, despite the fact that I presented FOUR. Holy **** people, lay off of the Krav for a bit.
*your experience with one outlet.
Also, were discussing. If you dont want to discuss the Krav thing you dont have to. Its like if someone asks you a question face to face - Youre not obliged to answer and youre not obliged to be 'right'.
It really begs the question, have you even read my original post? Why don't you do me a favor and go read that, then amend your post sir.
Everyone read your original post - Its your replies thatre being addressed.
Now for the fun part.
You don't understand, it is the exact same way we do it in San Soo. Person gets you in a headlock. Tuck your chin to the inside shoulder, and step out immediately. Slap the groin. Find their face, grab the hair or put your fingers under their nose. Force down as you stand up, hammerfist to the face or chest. EXACT same way we do it in San Soo. I have seen and actively participated in their technique, so you are already wrong. Have you done both arts? If you haven't you have no place telling me how similar they are or aren't, that goes with everyone else here too. Until you have actually experienced both arts, kindly keep quiet, as you are judging from a position that has no right to judge.
Its also how just about every par for the course self defense school does defense against headlocks. Its either a groin slap + eye gouge thing followed by hammerfists, or its a bearhug around the hips/legs followed by a throw.
Lemme present you with an optional scenario: You want to learn *new* solutions. If the solutions you already have are good, why on earth do you want to have more to choose from? Better solutions i could understand, but better solutions would be even more mundane. And you soon after say this:
I am done looking for something to continue my training in the "street fighting" self defense arts. My hopes died with Krav. Now I am looking for something to complement what I already know, Jiu-Jitsu to develop ground game perhaps. Or even TKD to help my kicks and experience a tournament setting.
So dont try and put it down to wanting to learn different arts. Youre clearly filtering it through 'street fighting'. Self defense, 'street fighting', and so forth are all simple creatures because the 'solutions' to the 'problems' really are simple. When stuff gets complicated, you should smell a rat.
Also, we have every place to talk about things we havent experienced when its on a technical level.
One thing though: Tucking your chin to the inside of their shoulder gives them your carotid artery. Thats not good if their headlock is meant to choke you. Youve given them more neck to squeeze. Having your throat compressed is painful but it wont put you down as fast. Just move your whole head if possible. If theyre squeezing so tight you cant do that, you probably cant turn it either.
From my experience with the class, and thorough questioning of the owner, the level 1 class ultimately is what I experienced in that class. You have to look at it from my perspective, you are trying new martial arts, in the previous three, you have learned or experienced something new. Then you go to another art, and experience something identical to what you just trained a third of your life in and told that you have to start anew. It is not a matter of pride, it is a matter of actually GETTING SOMETHING out of what I am paying for.
Again: Working solutions work, and other obvious truths. That being said...
I would be perfectly fine with being level 1 if I were able to work with higher levels and be allowed to spar. Upon questioning why level 1 doesn't spar, I received this answer, "People in level 1 need to develop control before being allowed to spar." I didn't comment, but this was going through my mind, "What the hell do you think that I have been doing? In a martial art almost identical to yours, I would have quite developed control."
Well, you did spend three years doing what they do just for level 1 by the sounds of it. You cant expect to be jumped ahead due to your experience in a different system. Humans have this way of wanting to complicate simple things. Krav is about simple, recyclable solutions to different problems. Theres very little build up to any 'advanced' stuff, so much as applying the same stuff to different things. Thats Krav for you, at least most of the time.
Youre literally asking to be skipped ahead because you consider yourself to be more advanced than their beginners are, even though youve *never done their system before*. I guess ive got a green belt in TKD, i should be able to go get the equivelant in Shotokan, right? ...right?
I would also like to point out this from our email chain before I actually moved. Upon asking how similar it is to San Soo, "Krav is unlike anything else out there."
No. You, sir, are wrong. It is quite similar to at least two martial arts I can name off of the top of my head, San Soo and Kenpo. There are others as well.
Krav is pretty unique, mostly in its training methods. Technique isnt on the forefront. I cant speak for the outlet you went to, though. Because it should barely resemble San Soo OR Kenpo.
https://www.youtube.com/results?q=s...ent=firefox-a&um=1&ie=UTF-8&gl=AU&sa=N&tab=w1
https://www.youtube.com/results?sea...j3j1.4.0...0.0...1ac.1.11.youtube.pMuurImig0E
https://www.youtube.com/results?sea....5j3.8.0...0.0...1ac.1.11.youtube.6rtMiRG67ag
60 seconds of research. 20 seconds for each one. Its blatantly obvious.
Now on a less debate themed note, calm yourself mate. You did state an unrealistic expectation or two, and you were called out on it. Take it on the chin, you dont need to 'defend yourself'. You will be better preserved by talking about it rather than jumping on people for calling you on it.