Question:

How many of you had learned any Martial art from countries like <span title="JAPAN,THAILAND,CHINA,KOREA">JAPAN,THAILAND,CHINA,KORE...</span> ? i want to learn?

by Guest21496  |  earlier

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did any one of you had learn any martial ar from china,korea,thailand or japan

q1 which country is least expenisve and best to learn ?

q2 did you had an information about hostel fees or total fees of any club for long term learning?

please give me all type of information that you can give to me

give your answer in points like

1

2

3

4

5 so i can choose your answer as best answer

god bless you all great fighters.give a serious advice please

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2 ANSWERS


  1. I lived in Japan and learned Bujinkan Ninjutsu there.  I am very grateful to Master Hatsumi for being so open to foreigners and teaching his art.  I would say that you should take up an occupation such as teaching English while you study what ever art you want to study.  This usually requires you to have a degree in any subject but doesn&#039;t require you to speak the language.  Learning a martial art as well as living in another country requires discipline and maturity which pays off in the long run.  What I would want to stress is the importance of adapting to the local culture while you live there.  Going somewhere like a tourist and actually living there are two different things.  Once you live there, you have many unique frustrations however with the right attitude they are adventures of their own.  From my experience in Japan, one frustration is finding an apartment to rent.  There is a bit of prejudice against renting to foreigners but it is not at all impossible.  Probably the easiest route is to find a &quot;gaijin house&quot; to live out of.  From there, if you live in the Tokyo area, you could find many resources from a free English magazine called &quot;Metropolis.&quot;  As far as an affordable place, perhaps Thailand would be a wonderful place.  I have been wanting to go there and learn Muay Tai.  I however again would be cautious about the traps that ex-pats fall into when living in foreign countries.


  2. Krav Maga is more less street fighting based on defense I&#039;m not sure on the price and brazilian jiu-jitsu which uses balance and defense to submit opponents  also Krav Maga is from Israel i would recommend Krav Maga if you want a martial that hasn&#039;t been watered down and to be able to protect yourself

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