Self-Protection

Revisiting Step-Kumite: Because “Beginners Have to Start Somewhere” Isn’t Good Enough.

(Approx 2 minute 40 second read) With regard to my recent article on step-kumite, someone argued that beginners need a starting point, and that step-kumite is often seen as an entry-level method. . He made the comparison to teaching a child how to catch a baseball – starting with a tennis ball at a short […]

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The Past Informs Us, But It Doesn’t Define Us – What Matters Is What You Can Do with It.

(Approx 1 minute 55 second read) I’ve always been fascinated by history. When I lived in a rural area of the UK, reminders of the past were everywhere – Bronze Age burial sites, a Roman town and amphitheater, a 10th-century church. You could almost feel the weight of time beneath your feet. That sense of

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Before the Rebrand: Modern Isn’t Always Better – and Why That Still Matters.

(Approx 2 minute 30 second read) What many people call traditional karate had its inception at the beginning of the 20th century. The method of practice changed almost completely with its introduction to mainland Japan in the 1930s. . Today, that is what most people think about when having conversations about traditional karate. . Using

Before the Rebrand: Modern Isn’t Always Better – and Why That Still Matters. Read More »

The Surface and the Core: What Karate Has Become – and What It Was Meant to Be.

(Approx 2 minute 40 second read) A question for the instructors out there: what do most of the students who come into your dojo want? . I stopped and asked all my young and beginner students this question a while back. Without exception, they answered that they wanted some form of self-defense – something to

The Surface and the Core: What Karate Has Become – and What It Was Meant to Be. Read More »