Hi guys,
I am new here and would really appreciate an advice. I've decided that I would like to start to train in a martial art. However, I know very little on the subject, so I am looking for an advice on which art would be better suited for me. Here's what I'm generally looking for:
- I would really like an art that develops what one's body can do, the spatial awareness, ability to react in different ways, thinking speed etc. Much more interested in self-defense than learning how to attack.
- It would be really great if the art had a more-or-less well defined rules and a good, explainable reasoning for why this particular move or this skill is important. I know that every teacher will be different, but it would be important for me that there were some well-tested and general internal standards that work for the whole art.
- It would also be really cool if the art had some form of sparring (I did a bit of kick-boxing as a kid and loved the intensity of the sparring).
Tl;dr: I am not looking for the best fighting style or a particular philosophy, but rather a way to learn an art through which one can truly develop his body and that requires a lot of patience and discipline.
I know this all might be a bit vague, but any advice will be truly welcome and appreciated. I am male, 29 years old. Many thanks for reading
P.S. There are possibilities to do Bujinkan, Karate, Aikido, Judo, Taekwon-do, Jujutsu close to where I live.
I am new here and would really appreciate an advice. I've decided that I would like to start to train in a martial art. However, I know very little on the subject, so I am looking for an advice on which art would be better suited for me. Here's what I'm generally looking for:
- I would really like an art that develops what one's body can do, the spatial awareness, ability to react in different ways, thinking speed etc. Much more interested in self-defense than learning how to attack.
- It would be really great if the art had a more-or-less well defined rules and a good, explainable reasoning for why this particular move or this skill is important. I know that every teacher will be different, but it would be important for me that there were some well-tested and general internal standards that work for the whole art.
- It would also be really cool if the art had some form of sparring (I did a bit of kick-boxing as a kid and loved the intensity of the sparring).
Tl;dr: I am not looking for the best fighting style or a particular philosophy, but rather a way to learn an art through which one can truly develop his body and that requires a lot of patience and discipline.
I know this all might be a bit vague, but any advice will be truly welcome and appreciated. I am male, 29 years old. Many thanks for reading

P.S. There are possibilities to do Bujinkan, Karate, Aikido, Judo, Taekwon-do, Jujutsu close to where I live.