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Children do not belong in MMA imo. It's more of an ego trip for the adults anyway. Irresponsible troglodytes......
check these outI'd be very wary of taking my children to a MMA gym to train. I don't know if they have the structure or the curriculum to deal with the various developmental stages that children go through.
Luis of One Dragon has a fine and well structured program called Play as the Way. Which I have. It is a different paradigm to teaching and disipline than they typical hut-hut karate discipline. His kids also do very well in BJJ and Judo comps. Luisis a blackbelt in BJJ as well as judo, and part of the Straight blast gym. Mod Com is as well. Definitely NOT mcdojo.The last video was a bit iffy to me. To see young kids like that doing sweeps and slamming opponents into mats seems way to aggressive for that age group. Not to mention that there does not look to be any structure whatsoever. Sorry to say but MMA is the new McDojo !!!! You are going to see more and more of this as it is now aired on primetime TV.
Much can be learned, relearned, or remembered from teaching children. They are as much our teachers as we are theirs. If you free yourself of your own indoctrination, you will quickly realize that their state of being is one of fluid, natural, and receptive acceptance of the universe. The common martial art's philosophy of fluid yielding and movement is living and well represented in children already. As guides we need only to protect and preserve this wellspring and assist them in transferring it smoothly into adulthood. If done correctly, they will mature with the courage and responsibility to successfully pass along what they themselves never lost; their sense of adventure, wonder, and the joy to explore beyond the limits of current modalities of thought.At ODMA…1. We do not train children, we assist them to develop to their full potential.
2. We do not condition them to respond predictably through rote technique, we provide the conditions for them to evolve and create dynamic means by which to achieve success.
3. We do not use a win or lose paradigm. We use incremental and progressively increasing challenges in complexity, intensity, and unpredictability to provide the child with positive feedback and "errorless learning."
4. We are not there to think for them. We are there to reinforce an environment conducive to the stability and maintenance of independence, freedom, and creativity.
All good. My only response is that I don't think much about competing in a tournament, and if you think about winning or "beating someone" when sparring, you don't understand the nature of sparring. Sparring, as it's done at my school, is so that you help your sparring partner (notice, they're called "partners" and not "opponents") improve. Sometimes that means pushing your partner and challenging them and sometimes it means slowing down and working nuance with them. And they should be doing the same for you. I would suggest that if your primary focus in sparring is yourself, ego might be involved... at least a little.Steve, I see what you are saying. My whole point is that I have satisfaction enough to see a change within myself ( spirit, will, health, etc....) from MA training, and that is all I require. I do not feel a need to compete against the next guy. My goals are my goals are those. I enjoy seeing a change within myself and going from a pack a day smoking, sitting on my fat *** on couch all the time doing nothing person to being as active as I am now. That is enough reward for me. It is why I went on this journey. To see if I have the Qi to do it
I am honestly not even thinking about "competing in a tournament" or beating someone in sparring class. When I spar in class I look at it as improving my attack/defense and improving my cardio , most importantly. Does that make sense ? I don't think that is necessarily ego related right ? Unless it is for me to feel better about myself. Which is what is happening
The first 2 videos were very interesting. Even though it is just day care with a Spin. It doesn't look like they are really teaching a whole lot. It does look like a positive environment though and it always makes me smile to see kids smiling. The last video was a bit iffy to me. To see young kids like that doing sweeps and slamming opponents into mats seems way to aggressive for that age group. Not to mention that there does not look to be any structure whatsoever. Sorry to say but MMA is the new McDojo !!!! You are going to see more and more of this as it is now aired on primetime TV.
Children do not belong in MMA imo. It's more of an ego trip for the adults anyway. Irresponsible troglodytes......