mysurvive
Yellow Belt
Hey everyone,
My name is Ricky and I'm relatively new to martial arts. Today I will be sitting in on my first Wing Chun class (that I think I will take as my art). I know a lot of people may tell me to look around and dabble in other arts, so let me give you some reasoning in why I think this will end up being my art.
I have dabbled in various arts such as Judo, Karate, and Muay Thai (the others I have so little experience in that it isn't worth listing). I never committed to any of these, but I have experienced them. Been beat up using all of them also, so I know they're all viable arts. My family does Judo, Ju Jitsu, Karate, and Tai Chi. I didn't want to do any of these, because I want an art that I can call my own and possibly even introduce my family to a new art. I also didn't want to get caught up in the MMA/Muay Thai/BJJ craze (no offense to anyone that takes MMA classes, it just isn't for me). I wanted a striking art that didn't rely too heavily on grappling and had a technical side. I posted in the 'beginner section' and one of the members suggested that I speak to a certain Sifu about Win Chun and Kenpo. The Sifu then referred me to the school that he is actually learning Wing Chun at, since he is not actually a teacher of Wing Chun.
I can get obsessive about things sometimes, so I have been constantly researching Wing Chun, and I feel like this is exactly what I have been looking for.
So now that you have my small background, my questions.
Why did you choose Wing Chun?
What kept you coming back?
What do you enjoy most about Wing Chun?
What has been the most valuable lesson you have learned from Wing Chun?
Have you even had to use the techniques in real world application?
-If so, what was the result?
What do you plan to do 10,20,50 years down the line (with regards to WC)?
What advice would you give to a newbie?
My name is Ricky and I'm relatively new to martial arts. Today I will be sitting in on my first Wing Chun class (that I think I will take as my art). I know a lot of people may tell me to look around and dabble in other arts, so let me give you some reasoning in why I think this will end up being my art.
I have dabbled in various arts such as Judo, Karate, and Muay Thai (the others I have so little experience in that it isn't worth listing). I never committed to any of these, but I have experienced them. Been beat up using all of them also, so I know they're all viable arts. My family does Judo, Ju Jitsu, Karate, and Tai Chi. I didn't want to do any of these, because I want an art that I can call my own and possibly even introduce my family to a new art. I also didn't want to get caught up in the MMA/Muay Thai/BJJ craze (no offense to anyone that takes MMA classes, it just isn't for me). I wanted a striking art that didn't rely too heavily on grappling and had a technical side. I posted in the 'beginner section' and one of the members suggested that I speak to a certain Sifu about Win Chun and Kenpo. The Sifu then referred me to the school that he is actually learning Wing Chun at, since he is not actually a teacher of Wing Chun.
I can get obsessive about things sometimes, so I have been constantly researching Wing Chun, and I feel like this is exactly what I have been looking for.
So now that you have my small background, my questions.
Why did you choose Wing Chun?
What kept you coming back?
What do you enjoy most about Wing Chun?
What has been the most valuable lesson you have learned from Wing Chun?
Have you even had to use the techniques in real world application?
-If so, what was the result?
What do you plan to do 10,20,50 years down the line (with regards to WC)?
What advice would you give to a newbie?