I was wondering what style people would reconmend for someone with not a lot of room to practice. I live in a small appartment, and it will be hard to practice a form that moves around a lot. Plus, I think I would like something nice and compact. I was thinking wing chung, but then again, I like styles with some joint locking in them. Well any thoughs would be great. Thanks.
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Style that does not need a lot of room?
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hmmm
Originally posted by Darthmaul View PostI was wondering what style people would reconmend for someone with not a lot of room to practice. I live in a small appartment, and it will be hard to practice a form that moves around a lot. Plus, I think I would like something nice and compact. I was thinking wing chung, but then again, I like styles with some joint locking in them. Well any thoughs would be great. Thanks.
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well if u only have a small space, u could always just practice like technique and stuff. like hold positions. a form is just a series of techniques. but knowing the form doesnt help u if u dun have good technique. so u could just choose any style if u train like that.
u could also find schools that do multiple styles. that way there will probably be some forms that dun take up much space. and u can practice your other forms during ur classes.
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Originally posted by PlasmaShockare you looking for full contact, no contact, light contact, traditional, flashy, or modern arts?
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Originally posted by millie View Poststand in horse stance for a year {every day up to 108 minutes)
stand in a horse stance for a year punching
stand in a hourse stance for a year kicking
then the room should be bigger
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I would do wing chun and then branch out into a joint locking system (BJJ, some styles of Muay Thai, etc)
Some schools of wing chun explore joint locking and grappling.
Are you a bouncer by chance? I'm interested in the specificness of your request.
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You don't need to much room for Kyokushin. I've got a rather small area to practice in, and I don't find it that hard. The katas in the lower gradings aren't complex what-so-ever, as long as you know the techniques within the Kata, you should be fine just practicing it in the dojo, you can spend all your home time practicing techniques. As long as you have enough room to get yoru leg in the air, you should be fine. As soon as you start going up grades, you'll start needing some room to practice your katas, but I'm talking a year or more down the track, but even then, it's not by any means a excessive amount of space.
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Originally posted by Red Rum View PostI would do wing chun and then branch out into a joint locking system (BJJ, some styles of Muay Thai, etc)
Some schools of wing chun explore joint locking and grappling.
Are you a bouncer by chance? I'm interested in the specificness of your request.
Oh the joint locks, just something I like to do.
Oh thanks for the Kyokushin idear, I will check it out. I was also thinking of Karate, like you were saying about Kyokushin, some styles have katas that dont really move much in the beginning.
Same for wing chung. I am just going to start looking at school and see what is out there that I like. I did take a few wing chung classes a while back, and I do remember doing some locking (like was mentioned some schools do), but that guy does not teach anymore, so I have to look elsewhere.
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