It's an effective way not to get lasting head trauma however.
Btw there are plenty of styles and specific classes that keep brain bashing at a minimum. For example brazilian jiu jitsu. A little bit of bashing is ok if you wear protective gear.
brazilian jiu jitsu is great. i train in a direct lineage from DLR.
Muay Thai is also great. there are things that can be done to train responsibly and minimize the chances of CTE. tell your doctor you train and what it consists of. get your scans and bloodwork as regularly as you can afford to. headgear doesn't do much, but it does help.
there are ways to do this responsibly. becoming able to effectively defend yourself becomes more important every day.
Well, even for martial arts that do involve a fair bit of getting punched in the head, usually more easy going classes will at most include light sparring which won't be very dangerous for your head.
small impacts over time make a bigger difference than the occasional hard impact when it comes to CTE. by all means, train what is effective, but get your scans and get your bloodwork. regiment your training accordingly.
Yeah I love doing martial arts and combat sports but I don't watch mma. I have to watch each specialized discipline seperately because they don't have chud culture surrounding it (with the exception of boxing).
I learn combat sports to defend myself and my queer comrades. I watch ONE FC as fight study, and have learned to enjoy MMA.
That said, if every UFC fan vanished from the earth it would be a net win. It's not as toxic as boxing, but it comes damn close.
word, I have 0 issues for people learning MMA and the likes for useful purposes.
Right but also no head stuff or at least keep the head stuff at a bair minimum. Don't bash your brains people.
this is not an effective way to learn how to fight
It's an effective way not to get lasting head trauma however. Btw there are plenty of styles and specific classes that keep brain bashing at a minimum. For example brazilian jiu jitsu. A little bit of bashing is ok if you wear protective gear.
brazilian jiu jitsu is great. i train in a direct lineage from DLR.
Muay Thai is also great. there are things that can be done to train responsibly and minimize the chances of CTE. tell your doctor you train and what it consists of. get your scans and bloodwork as regularly as you can afford to. headgear doesn't do much, but it does help.
there are ways to do this responsibly. becoming able to effectively defend yourself becomes more important every day.
Judo is very similar and much, much cheaper than BJJ.
Well, even for martial arts that do involve a fair bit of getting punched in the head, usually more easy going classes will at most include light sparring which won't be very dangerous for your head.
small impacts over time make a bigger difference than the occasional hard impact when it comes to CTE. by all means, train what is effective, but get your scans and get your bloodwork. regiment your training accordingly.
What most good gyms do is light contact "technical" sparring 95% of the time with "hard" (near full power) sparring in preperation for a fight.
Yes, and if you just want to learn some self defense, you don't even really have to do the hard sparring thing, or fight competitively.
I'd say you do. Getting punched full force is something you've got to practice being okay with.
Well I guess you could also practice being okay with getting stabbed but it's not a great idea.
Correct, getting stabbed is much more likely to kill you.
Even better reason to practice being stabbed.
Yeah I love doing martial arts and combat sports but I don't watch mma. I have to watch each specialized discipline seperately because they don't have chud culture surrounding it (with the exception of boxing).