Bruce Lee’s Biggest Hater Explains Internal Martial Arts

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Ramsey Dewey

Ramsey Dewey

Күн бұрын

What is up with Ramsey Dewey always making videos debunking crazy myths about Bruce Lee? Why can’t he just let the Church of Jeet Kune Do continue to pass of their fan fiction as fact?
And while we’re at it, what is the difference between and “internal martial art” (内家 nei jia) and an “external martial art” (外家 wai jia)?
Does adding a bunch of Chinese buzz words you barely understand add to your martial arts legitimacy?
Do moving meditative practices like qigong and zhan zhuang grant you supernatural abilities? Or is it just a good idea to do some deep breathing exercises for your health?
Where do we draw the line between fact and mysticism when it comes to esoteric and little understood Chinese martial arts?
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Ramsey Dewey is a retired pro fighter, combat sports coach, referee, and fight commentator… and occasional musician based in Shanghai, China.
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Thanks to my channel sponsor:
Xmartial: catering to all kinds of combat sports athletes from BJJ, MMA, Muay Thai etc. find rash guards, fight shorts, grappling spats, boxing gloves and other training gear. Use my code RAMSEY10 for a 10% discount on everything at
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This video features original music by Ramsey Dewey
Follow me on Instagram at: / ramseydewey
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I fought professionally in Mixed Martial arts, Sanda, Muay Thai, K1 and American kickboxing from 2004-2011 when I was forced to retire due to a broken skull and being blinded in one eye. I hold a brown belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, Black belts in multiple traditional martial arts, including Taekwondo and kyokushin karate. I also train in catch wrestling, sambo, taijiquan, judo, and boxing.
I currently coach at the Animal MMA gym, the Extreme Fight Lab, and the Mordor Fight Club, all in Shanghai, China.

Пікірлер: 644
@sugelanren
@sugelanren Жыл бұрын
Legend has it, Ramsey Dewey once fought a 80 year old Tai Chi master. So strong was his qi, it cut two holes in Ramsey's beard and they have never grown back.
@nickolasdesouza3610
@nickolasdesouza3610 6 ай бұрын
Is this true
@WholeCosmos
@WholeCosmos 2 ай бұрын
very funny
@ironmikehallowween
@ironmikehallowween Жыл бұрын
I actually have a statue of Bruce Lee in my house. Over the decades, I have owned it, the statue has shown that it can defeat almost anyone without even trying. It’s amazing.
@HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
@HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Жыл бұрын
ha ha ha be gone! 🫲🤛🫲🤛
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
The art of fighting without fighting.
@psychedashell
@psychedashell Жыл бұрын
Makes total sense, I've never seen a statue put much effort into anything.
@ehellsword2
@ehellsword2 Жыл бұрын
Almost anyone?
@ericschaab5135
@ericschaab5135 Жыл бұрын
I love Kung Fu Hustle when the protagonist becomes a super human and starts beating the evil guys. Then the landlords start to see him as a son, and the landlady says: "If he studies hard he could become a doctor or a lawyer!" That was a super fun and wholesome line!
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
It’s a great movie!
@katarinatibai8396
@katarinatibai8396 Жыл бұрын
Freaking love that movie.
@someboi4903
@someboi4903 Жыл бұрын
@PaMuShin I feel like there's a similar pattern in Southeast Asia and Central-South America as well.
@pinesandtraplines
@pinesandtraplines Жыл бұрын
​@PaMuShin Fighting and alcohol often go hand in hand due to the painkilling effects alcohol can have when ingested. After years of genuine fighting, injuries are common unless youre extremely good at not getting hit.
@kanucks9
@kanucks9 10 ай бұрын
That's not wholesome! Realistic, yes, haha.
@EliteBlackSash
@EliteBlackSash Жыл бұрын
Having went to medical school for Chinese Medicine, it changed my understanding drastically. “Qi” was NEVER used as a stand-alone term. Qi was always used as the second part of a dual term, and each always referred to a system of the body. “Breath,” for example, was “Da Qi” (Big Qi, because air is everywhere) and the respiratory system. But there is also Qi related to the food you eat, “Gu Qi.” Then there was, “Wei Qi” (the strength of your immune system). Etc etc etc. In other words, every martial art worth it’s weight works with “Qi.” In the sense that they all talk about Breathing, Diet, Health / Resilience / Recovery, etc
@BRAINFxck10
@BRAINFxck10 Жыл бұрын
Yeah but medical terminology is different because it’s specialized, in classical Chinese philosophy the concept of “Qi” IS USED as a stand alone term.
@varanid9
@varanid9 Жыл бұрын
@@BRAINFxck10 Which makes it useless in any practical application.
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
Brian, which Classical Chinese philosophers have you read?
@fireeaglefitnessmartialart935
@fireeaglefitnessmartialart935 Жыл бұрын
Gotta love that gucci. Lol.
@raydrexler5868
@raydrexler5868 Жыл бұрын
@@RamseyDewey I’m not losing sleep waiting for the answer
@gadlicht4627
@gadlicht4627 Жыл бұрын
Meditation can’t make butt fire ball real, but spicy beans can.
@yegenek
@yegenek Жыл бұрын
No one can rival Quentin Tarantino in hating Bruce Lee.😅
@KurtAngle89
@KurtAngle89 Жыл бұрын
No, but it's funny how people really believed that😂
@Biggiiful
@Biggiiful 9 ай бұрын
@KurtAngle89. It was one scene in another characters imagination in that film. Not a historical recreation. There were a few other scenes with Bruce in that film where he's teaching and it comes off as reverent and respectful.
@Superdashie
@Superdashie Жыл бұрын
I heard Bruce lee can fly
@jhonsauceda6024
@jhonsauceda6024 Жыл бұрын
Well you would have never seen him, he's so fast.
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
Can’t he?
@LegacyFable
@LegacyFable Жыл бұрын
Lol this sounds a lot like the chick noris memes and I'm here for it lol
@BRAINFxck10
@BRAINFxck10 Жыл бұрын
Of course he can! Where do you think they got the Liu Kang bicycle kick from 😂
@vincentlee7359
@vincentlee7359 Жыл бұрын
I heard he made your mother pregnant by just entering the same room 😮
@bolieve603
@bolieve603 Жыл бұрын
With the level of physical acting you should have just subtitled it and made it a silent movie. I love it!
@blockmasterscott
@blockmasterscott Жыл бұрын
Hi there Ramsey. I've taken both external kung fu (Choy Li Fut) and internal(Tai Chi) for over ten years now, and I've gotten to know where I know what I'm talking about, so I'll put the differences in layman's terms. First, the two different methods are not different as in black and white. They mix together a lot. The biggest difference is the mentality in the application. External styles like choy Li Fut and American boxing use breathing just like internal styles, but they use the inhaling and exhaling to contract the muscles on contact with the opponent. They do that not only on striking but also joint locks. With joint locks they use the breathing to contract the muscles to snap the opponent's joint into whatever position that they want. Another example of external style is the basic judo hip throw. It's all proper breathing, thrusting the hip out, placing the weight on the balls of your feet and so on. Internal style is a bit harder to explain. When I was first taught Tai Chi, we were taught to "love your enemy to understand how Tai Chi works". What it means is change your mentality to love your opponent so much that it's really easy to read his body language, meaning that your relaxed from not wanting to kill him, so it's a lot easier to read what he is doing. Once you do that, you can sense the shift in body weight, and you can use it against him. A friend of mine that worked with horses told me that she used the same method with horses, and got so in tune with them that she could move them around with a slight touch of her hand, even though she weighed maybe a little over a hundred pounds. Same thing with internal martial arts. That's why you see people that have trained all their lives being able to knock people off balance just by touching them. They can read the body shift in weight. Nothing magical about it. But it takes time though, a LOT of time. After ten years, I'm just starting to get it. Think of instead of being a horse whisperer, you're a bad guy whisperer lol. One thing I have to stress though is that there is absolutely NOTHING mystical about internal martial arts. It's 100% scientific. You just have to get a feel for it.
@marcinm5830
@marcinm5830 Жыл бұрын
Bruce Lee was standing faster than we were running
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
Bruce Lee could stand at 600 miles per hour. Facts.
@bryce4228
@bryce4228 Жыл бұрын
This is the funniest Bruce Lee fact I've heard so far.
@katarinatibai8396
@katarinatibai8396 Жыл бұрын
​@@RamseyDewey😂😂😂👍
@TonyOcasiowingchunpressure
@TonyOcasiowingchunpressure Жыл бұрын
I don't care what people say Bruce Lee is my favorite martial artist and this is a fact he is one of the most influential people of the 20th century...
@thethan302
@thethan302 Жыл бұрын
Clearly Bruce lee was too humble to make any of those _totally factual_ claims himself. But they all came from eye witnesses who clearly saw the -man- demi-god do such incredible feats in person.
@jasonzibart3199
@jasonzibart3199 Жыл бұрын
I loved that you delved a little into the benifical aspects of internal martial arts! Tai Chi seems to do some pretty amazing things for people. People aren't going to be shooting fireballs from thier butts but it can probably improve thier health.
@Biggiiful
@Biggiiful 9 ай бұрын
@PaMuShin. Ya, those studies are not very good. So many factors conveniently being ignored. I am a fan of tai chi and chi gong. Not there is absolutely nothing about them alone that makes people have healthier weight or be more flexible compared to any other exercises. Diet is what matters to weight. Most tao chi practitioners are people who eat lighter meals, rice and steamed veggies. It's not southern bbq lovers practicing tai chi. There is nothing about doing tso chi in groups that makes one lose weight or be more flexible compared to using it yourself. The average person is just more likely to do tai chi on a consistent basis if they have a daily group appointment to keep them accountable.
@williambrookings722
@williambrookings722 Жыл бұрын
For me the "internal" arts emphasise the deep subtleties of the movements, stance and relaxation to allow a very efficient use of power. The focus is on mindfully perfecting these techniques. It works best however when you then go on to pressure test the techniques practically. The thing is that anyone who trains properly will get elements of this in their art. For me BJJ has that aspect to it in that the high level black belts have such a good understanding of their body biomechanics they can tie you up in an effortless, efficient and relaxed way. The effortless relaxation and apparent magic is only there however if they are rolling with someone less skilled. If the skill levels are comparable then you need some real "external" effort to win in a contest.
@brianwatson4119
@brianwatson4119 Жыл бұрын
As a fellow neijia practitioner, I totally agree that pressure testing is an absolute must as is cross training with other systems to learn to adapt what you know to things outside that box.
@KurtAngle89
@KurtAngle89 Жыл бұрын
Funny, I was researching internal arts today. Apparently, they focuses more on internal muscles, near the skeleton, precision of movement and breathing to produce power, alongside elasticity of the body
@brianwatson4119
@brianwatson4119 Жыл бұрын
@KurtAngle89 that's pretty accurate. It's a different way of moving, with that whole Liuhe (six harmonies) thing. The interesting part is that it's also a different way of breathing. And some very odd movement results from it. Or at least it feels that way until you get accustomed to it. Because you're using different connections throughout the body, it feels very strange, like "I breathed and decided my arm should move but I didn't feel any of the major muscles engage even though my arm moved to shoulder height." Almost like you turn your body into a marionette and you're just using your breathing to control it. And, much like using a marionette, the movements are initially a bit clumsy, but grow more refined with continued practice.
@williambrookings722
@williambrookings722 Жыл бұрын
@KurtAngle89 that's true. I've seen some more "internal" style training methods and skills come into the combat arts at times. Conner McGregor used dance like kinetic chain training to be able to punch from unusual and otherwise unfavorable positions. In a similar way some of Lomochenko's unusual striking reminds me of some of the strikes from internal arts. As MMA evolves I'm sure we'll see more. Problem is very few people know it well enough to teach it in an efficient and applicable way
@brianwatson4119
@brianwatson4119 Жыл бұрын
@williambrookings722 that's definitely the case. The Chen family that invented taijiquan is a great example. I've been to seminars with some of the big names. Chen Xiaowang. Chen Bu. Chen Ziqiang. They'll drop nuggets, but never just say, "Hey. Do this." They don't teach the whole thing to outsiders, because Chenjiagou relies on tourism $$$. It's why my studies have moved toward baguazhang and xingyiquan. Far less worried about tourist money or keeping secrets.
@mudkipzuzu
@mudkipzuzu Жыл бұрын
If people want an Asian Kung Fu practitioner to celebrate as an actual fighter so much, then look at Don Wilson. Kung Fu background who went into kickboxing and became world champion many times. Hell even his nickname is “The Dragon”. And while nowhere near the movie star Bruce Lee was, he has an extensive list of martial arts films he’s worked in himself.
@raydrexler5868
@raydrexler5868 Жыл бұрын
Boring choreography and bad acting tho. I can watch his fights all day, but he made garbage movies. Cung Le has at least been in some good movies
@michaelterrell5061
@michaelterrell5061 Жыл бұрын
It’s just that, that happened so long ago, and in kickboxing. What the style needs now is a Machida of sorts, someone to give it legitimacy.
@brianwatson4119
@brianwatson4119 Жыл бұрын
Ooh. I can help a bit with this one, as a practitioner of the neijia arts who doesn't go in for either hocus or pocus. Qi literally means breath, as you point out, but there's a little more to it than that. As you again point out (thank you for that) its about connecting the breath to the movement but also using the breath to drive the movement by (and I'm going to reduce this down a bit to keep from getting too wordy), using the breath to pressurize the abdomen to yank on the body's various connective tissues. Most qigong, things like zhan zhuang or eight pieces of brocade, are used to strengthen those connections. They can get strong enough to be the primary motivator, which feels weird as first. But there's no mysticism, just some body skills that most people don't bother to practice, especially nowadays when most folks don't have the time to make it worthwhile. Imagination does play a part, in the the subconscious mind arranges the body more quickly than the conscious mind can. But even that is just another bodily skill. But it's all just meat and bone and mental skill and relaxed power and strategy. Anyone who tells you they can blast someone with a qi fireball or really anything mystical has no idea what they're talking about. Taiji people (Chen taijiquan is my primary art and I used to use it in security work) often have no idea what they're doing. They get all caught up in the wuxia of it and end up spending years learning garbage. With my students, I start off teaching them the breathing and the movement skills. The ones that pay attention are starting to show some promise. The ones who are into all the mumbo jumbo because a prior teacher taught them poorly are struggling and will continue to do so. Which should be fun when we drop in on the neighboring martial arts schools for open sparring night. Thats the other thing I've noticed. Most neijia folks mistake say really dumb things like tui shou is taiji sparring. It's sparring-adjacent, perhaps, but if bodies aren't hitting the floor, it's not sparring, given that much of taijiquan amounts to standing grappling. Apologies if this rambles a bit, but it's the middle of the night. TL;DR: if they tell you it's magical, they're full of crap. It's often misunderstood, but that's hardly unusual these days. It IS different. Some of the skills are unusual or counterintuitive. It's subtle. It takes a ton of time and practice to get decent. But it's not magic, just a different approach to the age old question of "How do I injure this guy while being injured as little as possible in return?"
@stefanschneider4532
@stefanschneider4532 Жыл бұрын
Hey Ramsey, this is one of the clearest takes on the matter I have heard. It's easy and logical to comprehend "internal" as complimentary to "external", or even better, to emphasize that "going out there and work" is necessary. I am doing Taichi since 15 years, became instructor, doing research on the subject - and still struggle with distinguishing what is fiction and what are the actual working things. E.g. we are practicing very gentle tuishou / push hands. Clearly, they are not for fighting, but cooperative practicing with improvisational, unforseen input, and external pressure. From this practice, convincing pushes happen, but they only happen if we stick to the rules of the Taichi game, including the way to move in a Taichi way. The most interesting learnings are on the subtleties of upright balance. So, this is working as a game, has certain learning effect, but in a very constrained setting. And I like this subtle game, it's fun, explorative, interesting things are happening. But it feels like real testing, a complimentary practice that challenges these constraints, is missing. Best from Vienna!
@emranba-abbad8335
@emranba-abbad8335 Жыл бұрын
They teach it to you stripped off its spirit, find a real teacher. It is worth it.
@mathewgurney2033
@mathewgurney2033 Жыл бұрын
@@emranba-abbad8335 True, in a good school, even your warm-up movements should be conducive to use in combat. Taichi is surely useful for fighting but without a teacher who is actually a warrior, it's hard to understand why until you are ten years into practising it.
@dzen_dzenkazan8050
@dzen_dzenkazan8050 Жыл бұрын
I think tuishou improved my long guard
@pranakhan
@pranakhan Жыл бұрын
If you can, pick up "The Harvard Medical School Guide to Tai Chi Chuan"
@kieran8266
@kieran8266 Жыл бұрын
Honestly, this style in your intro suits you pretty well. When other people in your space (and frankly, just on youtube in general) try to do this kind of thing it usually ends up really cringy. I think you played the balance well and had a good sense of humor without taking yourself too seriously or being too cool. I'm impressed! Mainly, just because the bar on this platform has gotten pretty low, especially when we're talking about skits or gags on channels centered around martial arts, firearms, or self-defense. But that being said I liked it! Your videos keep getting better. Keep doing what you're doing, your channel has always drawn me in because of its empirical approach to unconventional styles of fighting. Your videos about capoeira moves that are actually useful is one of my favorites. The tai chi video as well. People usually dismiss these less pressure tested and effective martial arts styles completely without digging in, asking real questions, and putting individual things to the test. Thanks Ramsey!
@orangeowlgreendragon8953
@orangeowlgreendragon8953 Жыл бұрын
To give you a real life experience, when I had my 2nd day of Covid I had chills, horrible coughs, a super fever, could barely stand move, and the worst headache of my life so far. I’ve studied Taichi and other “internal martial arts,” For years. When I desperately tried to find a way for me to not be bed ridden by using the techniques and experimented theory crafting from over the years, everything boiled down to a lot of gentle breathing that led to slowly loosening the body then moving it. But a key factor to regaining stability with these functions is focus. (Disclaimer Tylenol and Vicks vapor rub were involved in this therapeutic session, it made the process easier to obtain the result that was needed.) I knew to myself I was hot all over because of the fever, I knew to myself pain was going to be everywhere. There’s a catch to that said pain, it’s not equal. With my breathing, focus, gentle movement/muscle loosening, and psychological intent, I calmed myself to really become aware of my body, my intention was to make myself prioritize my attention of pain elsewhere that didn’t hurt as much or dissipate all of the pain. The surge of focus and intent made me feel the pain of my headache even more so at first, then it migrated to shoulder, then my hands, to my stomach, and ultimately it led to my feet and then I made it travel to my head again just so I could rinse and repeat the process until I could be used to the pain and not be bothered by it as much anymore until the Tylenol will really kick in and put an end to all of it. I stopped, applied Vicks and did the process again. My feet felt like they were hot enough to cause a fire(magical exaggeration.) every pain’s priority eventually balanced out to the point where nothing mattered, the Tylenol kicked and I was at peace. Next moment I saw myself well enough to at least be full of vigor and do things like run, jump, skip and so on again instead of being purely bed ridden. I was happy that even though I felt trashy because of Covid crippling me, I managed to out last the problem until all of the medicine kicked and finished the job. To put it simply, the main things that make a magical experience be the way it is is the way how the sensations of focus, awareness, intention, and intuition are being manipulated both within yourself and out. The balance between action and proper stillness blended in a harmonious way leads to it.
@delanchan699
@delanchan699 Жыл бұрын
Id imagine that Bruce Lee inspired Mr Miyagi to try to catch flies with chopticks, after he caught ten of them with a pair of nunchucks, while blindfolded, which came after he had a secret match with Muhammad Ali and won. Even Beerdy doesnt have my sources
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
That sounds… 100% accurate!
@DanFeldmanAgileProjectManager
@DanFeldmanAgileProjectManager Жыл бұрын
As a current practitioner of Chen Style Taijiquan in the US and a former practitioner of Wuji Style Baguazhang and Gu Style Taijiquan both of which I studied for a several years in Qingdao, China, Nei Gong is not just about breathing but primarily about internal micro movements and body alignment, which are critical.
@CodyCannon11
@CodyCannon11 Жыл бұрын
Hey, my friend, I’m an American and I’m currently living in Qingdao and couldn’t find any Bagua guys, do you still know the instructor or someone there who know any Bagua guys here in Qingdao?
@oldtyger
@oldtyger 7 ай бұрын
I think this is a good explanation of internal martial arts. Neijia uses extremely efficient body mechanics to maximize power with minimal effort. However this can be done in very similar ways in so called external arts. Due to the unique methods of developing these skills and body mechanics, internal martial arts tend to take much longer to use practically.
@rbsorg
@rbsorg Жыл бұрын
Well delivered argument. So internal is the theory, application drilling is the 10 page paper, and sparring (external) is the work experience.
@themetal
@themetal Жыл бұрын
Oh yeah, I do stuff like qigong in between more physically intense training all the time. The super power it gives me is a lot less aches and pains than I probably would otherwise. Not much different than any other athlete that actually bothers to stretch.
@obiwanquixote8423
@obiwanquixote8423 Жыл бұрын
The other day as I was doing my PT I got to thinking that in another context, all this single leg balance stuff I'm doing to work stabilizers and my vestibular system would seem a lot like internal arts practice. Someone once said to me "all language is metaphor" and the context of Qi works if you think about it as another language. In fact my old Chinese weightlifting coach used to describe the explosive triple extension as "fa jing." It all starts to click when I start to think about it all as a different language to explain the same concepts
@VictorGalarza-ok5jq
@VictorGalarza-ok5jq Жыл бұрын
Thanks for bringing up topics like these. I'm an average kung fu practitioner and I had the opportunity to watch a match between a shotokan karate instructor and a pa kwa chang or ba gua instructor. The Chinese won by asking the loser what happened, he said, I am surprised that his blows were very similar to our KIME theory. Best regards, Master Ramsey
@milofitness7726
@milofitness7726 Жыл бұрын
I heard also an explaination that says that internal martial arts mean that they are focusing on that is not easly seen or not seen and that is both spirituality, meditation, breathing techniques but also on things you do in fighting like one inch power and proper structure (peng)
@williambrookings722
@williambrookings722 Жыл бұрын
It is like the yoga or pilates training to the grappler or MMA fighter IMO. Or Conner McGregor's training in unusual dance like movement that let him strike from odd positions
@shamounian
@shamounian 10 ай бұрын
Get the book by John Little that just came out, "The Wrath of the Dragon: The Real Fights of Bruce Lee." And please give an honest review of it after reading it.
@JAllen5050
@JAllen5050 Жыл бұрын
The breathing thing can make you INCREDIBLY strong and allow you to absorb WAY more damage.
@natepoodle9132
@natepoodle9132 Жыл бұрын
Much of what there is with Bruce Lee, is modern mythology at work. He was a competent martial artist, had great athletic ability, onscreen presence, and was influential. To be a good competition fighter though, one needs to train for that, and also is expected to lose... or they may win! Some people are more likely to win than others... and thus there is "competition". Many presumed that Mike Tyson would beat Buster Douglas, but he didn't.
@Irrational_Pie
@Irrational_Pie Жыл бұрын
Bruce Lee’s exploits are well-documented in the documentary Enter the Dragon.
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
Hahaha! Yes! It wouldn’t have been set to film if it wasn’t a historical event!
@deltabravo1969
@deltabravo1969 9 ай бұрын
Bruce Lee was like the Fonz because I’ve never seen him in a fight.
@Mr440c
@Mr440c Жыл бұрын
The internal aspect of martial arts is not necessarily a psychological or phylosophical thing. There was a reference made by Takuan Soho I think which is when a duck is smoothly gliding on the surface of water it actually moves its feet a lot. That can be reffered to internal forms. It is something that can not be seen by an untrained eye. People talk a lot about putting your whole body into a punch which externally does not look that different between trained and untrained person for an inexperienced viewer. The nuances in body mechanics that allow for a trained person to deliver a devastating strike is an internal form. The structure. Internal forms and kata appear very simple on the outside while being way more challenging to perform properly than an external form/kata.
@StudioGhostUtah
@StudioGhostUtah Жыл бұрын
One interesting aspect about the whole Internal/External Martial Arts discussion is how the delineation between Internal and External styles was originally political in nature. Meir Shahar, a professor of East Asian Studies at Tel Aviv University, talks about this in his book about the history of the Shaolin Monastery that is definitely worth reading. To explain the "political" delineation in a VERY short summary, styles that were labeled "internal" were often styles that drew upon Taoist practices and philosophies, with Taoism being the "internal" religion of China. External styles, like the ones taught at Shaolin, drew upon Buddhist practices and philosophies, with Buddhism being the "external" religion brought over from India. When you consider the socio-political power struggle between the two religions across Chinese history, the classification starts to make sense. Many people forget, for example, that Baguazhang is closely linked to the Eight Trigrams Uprising of 1813, during the Qing dynasty.
@andrebaxter4023
@andrebaxter4023 10 ай бұрын
Huge Naruto nerd here. No offense taken Ramsey! I love your videos. One of your footwork videos has helped me especially.
@tonbonthemon
@tonbonthemon Жыл бұрын
One thing not mentioned is that the whole distinction between neija and waijia was originally just a way to politicize martial arts and arouse nationalism. The inferior invaders were mere externalists while those at home were the real deal internalists. It caught on but really all martial arts have "internal" and "external" aspects. Sun Lutang was one of many who decided to attempt to give the distinction real meaning but even many "internal artists" still have different opinions on it. HOWEVER those arts like Taiji, Xingyi, and Bagua, and many others go WAY deeper than just breathing. Each art has a very in depth and rich method that connects breathing, the mind, and the rest of the body. While not necessary magical, these can lead to some pretty profound transormation and connection. Much more than you would get from just stretching and focusing on breathing a little more. Again it's not magic but the idea of internal being just the theoretical part or "this is how you punch" is just scratching the surface. It's good to understand that it isn't the fighting skill itself but a bit disrespectful to equate those practices with warm ups and cool downs at the gym. Another reason why these youtubers ought to invite some IMA practitioners to talk more about what they do. Otherwise it's like me taking a few BJJ classes and chalking it all down to trying to wrestle my way into a getting chokehold. Easy peasy right? 🙄
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
BJJ = wrestle your way to a chokehold? Yes, you are 100% correct!
@tonbonthemon
@tonbonthemon Жыл бұрын
@RamseyDewey Guess all those techniques like "holding guard" or "passing guard", "shrimping", "framing", "omoplata" etc is just elitist technical jargon baloney.
@ralfhtg1056
@ralfhtg1056 6 ай бұрын
What I have read is that the differentiation between internal and external styles is obsolete as the differentiation between hard and soft styles. Currently it is differentiated between northern styles and southern styles. Have you heard about that?
@CarlosVerdinOfficial
@CarlosVerdinOfficial 7 ай бұрын
You made me laugh genuinely hard for the entire “how dare you” intro 😂😂😂. Thank you
@pilisjose
@pilisjose Жыл бұрын
As some ignorant once said, "don't confuse me with your facts".
@ericschaab5135
@ericschaab5135 Жыл бұрын
Taichi is awesome for health benefits! After a taichi class, digestion works extremely well, and you sleep like a baby. As long as you have a good instructor, of course!
@Xzontyr
@Xzontyr Жыл бұрын
Great X martial cut at the end. Yup, its good stuff 👍. Iv been an avid martial arts nerd for some time, iv trained for many years, i love researching, and figuring out how to get through the walls of my training partners. However, there is one guy, that we all love but hate sometimes, that brings us endless blight within our training sessions, and it is very difficult to get past his walls/defense. He goes by the name of Mr. Sweet Jams. We call him Jams for short. A very suitable villain name. In all seriousness, he does infact make a great jam, and often will go foraging in the forest for wild berries and edibles to make it. We actually plan on going for another hike soon pretty deep into a region not yet explored. That is where i may challenge him. On a beautiful untouched meadow of berries. This could infact happen. However, as sweet as his jams may be, his soul is not. No, if he reads this, im certain he will grin, in knowing of the struggle we face against him. These are the details. Hes actually very similar to your size. Hes 6 feet, 220, very long arms. Im a tad bit taller than him, but I have a weight of about 20 to 30 lbs on him usually. Size is not everything however. This guys been training alot longer than i have, or any of us have been aswell, so ofcourse that does compinsate. Hel go easy on everyone once in a while, but for the most part he does what he does, and theres nothing wrong with that. Im just seeing if you have any advice to counter something like this. Iv been researching extensively, and have tried different things, which brought me to thinking about the situation, because it actually has a reference to wing chun, which Bruce made me think of. So this is a play out of what usually happens. He uses a double armed long guard, with a squared off stance. Now right now, im sure theres a ton of nerds that already have the answers in their heads, but just hear me out. He was the lucky one at the old gym. Most people were trained to have a close tight guard, but the coach at the time believed that this little jedi should have a green saber instead of a generic blue like the rest of us. So he trained with this long guard. He keeps his back straight while in it, and hel bend his left knee slightly, but keep his back leg mostly straight so that he leans forward slightly, but still has a straight spine. I can get a sub on him the odd time if we go to the ground after a successful take down, but that can be the hardest part since he has incredible take down defense, and counters to go with it. The odd time when i thought iv taken him down and everythings alright, what really happened was he was setting me up for a lock while we were going down. So iv discovered theres a few take downs that obviously prevent this, but getting to them is very difficult. His striking, and defense however is whats the trickiest. Now, i can say i strike very fast for a heavy weight, which came with years and years of shadow boxing primiarly to develope that control and speed. However, my guard is high, and balanced, but also close. Against others with the same iv done great, and against those that seem to think its ok to have a low loose guard, usually dont expect my jab to be as fast as it is until they get tagged with it. Against Mr. Sweet jams however, it is not as simple as it seems. Its like a lumber jack wanting to get at a trees trunk but cant beacause of all of the branches constantly in the way. Iv studied endlessly on how to get past this long guard, and i admire many youtubers attempts on explaining this, but its really not as easy as it seems. This guy usually sees whats coming, and even when you do a feint and try step in low at 45 degrees to get a body hook, he seems to already see it coming once you start moving low, and than when your bent over with your head down, he has a take down or two for that. Anyways. So hes very hard to get a strike on, even with alot of pressure but what usually happens than is he always seems to find that opening once you reach out to tag him, and if he gets you once, he usually has about 2 or 3 follow up shots, knowing how youl react, and than will finish with a take down, or if your backing away, or stepping out off his center line, than its usually a shot in the dark spinning back kick hel try land, and if you try do a generic take down while holding his leg if you catch it, sometimes hel use it as bate and before you react, hel jump in and get a knot inbetween your legs with his, youl both go down, and hes not fun to leg fight with. I love leg locks, but this guy is miles ahead of me with them. So hes just very complicated. By saying he uses a long guard, its so far out that he cant throw a hook unless he brings his arm in a bit. He rarely throws them, he usually just does straight punches at different angles and levels that seem to find their mark, as mentioned, hes very good at knowing a reaction after a strike, or a feint. So, its not the most powerful of shots, but they do still have alot of force since he really pushes his weight into them, when hitting the mits or bag. There just very tedious strikes. So, on the topic of bruce lee, and wing chun that came to mind. The only thing iv found that really works against his long guard, is the wing chun hand trapping, or pummelling, and a quick and short straight punch with a vertical fist once there is a minor opening. Iv never studied wing chun before, so i didnt know much. The odd time, a guy passing through the city for work up north would sometimes stop into our gym, and i always admired the art, especially the foot work. So i just took the basics to try and get some openings or try take his back. As you mentioed before, alot of wrestling and such can be seen in tradional arts like karate, and tai chi as you mentioned. So i guess my question would be, is my logic flawed going against this sort of defense, or can you think of any other options to try? Or am i stuck trying to pumel through the guard to get one small quick shot in. If youd like to respond in any form, itd be appreciated.
@danr5462
@danr5462 9 ай бұрын
Ali was a boyhood hero of mine and growing up I thought he was in fact the greatest boxer to ever lived, and that he could beat every one living and not living. Now that I know more about people like Sugar Ray Robinson, Rocky Marciano etc, and have seen their fights, I don't feel that Ali was anywhere near the "greatest of all time" when he claimed to be that. Also, he was a racist who was a member of a hate group. Yet I still love him for his courage and style and outspokenness. I probably would have cried if I'd ever met him IRL. We believe in the magic of our heroes because we want to believe.
@pranakhan
@pranakhan Жыл бұрын
Thank you for talking about the subject in a reasonable way. As a lifelong practitioner of Baguazhang it is commonly an unpleasant, or at least unenlightening, to talk about these ideas with other practitioners. The "3 families" (as Sun Lu Tang described it) of Tai Chi, Baguazhang, and Xing I, have a lot of unnecessary cultural nonsense attached to them. Try to incorporate modern science into your dialogs, and many of their practitioners (even here in the west) start foaming at the mouth. Or they are on the other side of the non-existent fence, and renounce anything that is outside their understanding of the physical training and sparring. At the end of the day, correlation is just as valuable as causation within the practice. Correlation is an internal-felt-experience, causation is an external-validated-experience.
@ghostdude45
@ghostdude45 Жыл бұрын
When I think about Qi and "neigong", I think about the electrical impulses that facilitate movement and exercises that loosen, strengthen or awaken underused areas for these impulses to flow smoother (I.e, better muscle control, smoother movement, subtle movement, ect). When you are stiff and lost movement in, lets say, the hips, the idea is to breath, do mobility exercises and really focus on moving that area to regain optimal function. Your nervous system turns your hips back on to prime movement instead of stiff, secondary movement because you are using them and it's an adaptation that is needed (apparently lol). These impulses flow more naturally now as a result and you have better control, strength, flexibility, and whatever else your exercises awarded you. Even further, you become more aware of the inner workings of your hips if you'd been oblivious to it before and have a better sense of how it connects to your movement.
@jestfullgremblim8002
@jestfullgremblim8002 Жыл бұрын
Exactly
@CursedCommentaries
@CursedCommentaries Ай бұрын
I study neijiaquan.great explanation fren :D
@ashtraydekay6624
@ashtraydekay6624 Жыл бұрын
The quickness of these flashy edit cuts, and sound effects.......I was knocked out before your sponsor got mentioned........lol
@Lsr000
@Lsr000 Жыл бұрын
To judge Bruce abilities on his movies alone is redicilously ignorant. He was very realistic in his approach towards martial arts, even more than lots of people nowadays. He trained with lots of different martial artists from different styles, what we kinda do nowadays. By listening and read some of his interviews i definitely sure he was legit and know what he was talking about.
@MrCmon113
@MrCmon113 10 ай бұрын
And I thought fighting was about actually defeating competent opponents in tournaments. Apparently it's about talking in a self confident manner.
@rodtack8420
@rodtack8420 9 ай бұрын
I've noticed that everyone who hates Bruce Lee doesn't actually know much about who Bruce lee really was, what he believed, spoke about, stood for and did, and only seems to hate Bruce lee due to his fans. Hating Bruce Lee is trendy I guess. Of course anyone who actually studied bruce lee and what he believed and did understands he was legitimate. The man was genuinely athletic and knew how to fight. He did alot of street fighting as a youth due to being a handsome mixed race which was also precisely how he ended up in wing chun and later moved over seas to America. If I remember correctly Bruce Lees family moved to America precisely to get away from the street fighting and violence he partook in constantly. Even years later when fine tuning his craft he took part in street fights to stress test his theories. Yeah beating a street fighter isn't the same thing as beating a trained pro obviously but it is still better then nothing. Everyone says he was a fake martial artist and a fake fighter because 1. He was a movie star and 2. he is glorified like a mythological fighter that is unbeatable, which causes people to hate him and over react and assume he isn't a real fighter at all and can't beat anyone. Which isn't any more true then stating he beats everyone. To assume he can't fight without evidence is even more ignorant then those that believe he is unbeatable. The truth is bruce lee knew how to fight, he may not have in actuality been a god at fighting like is claimed, but to suggest he can't fight is just as stupid. Realistically, we will never know the true extent of his abilities and how well he would fair in MMA or other competitive fighting, since we dont have video evidence or examples from tournaments, but the man had all of the potential in the world to do well due to how hard he trained and studied. There is no reason to suggest he couldnt do well in the UFC for example. He would, especially with access to modern knowledge and trainers. But that isn't the point. The entire point about bruce lee is he was a popular figure head and philosopher that popularized Martial Arts in the west. Which is why he is so beloved and also hated! The man created the concept of MMA before it was a thing. He is the father of MMA in many ways due to him criticizing traditional martial arts and believing in studying all styles and taking what works from each of them while discarding the rest and tailoring your style based on who you are and what works for you. he was literally one of the first people to criticize martial arts masters of old and the belt system and old masters that didn't train their bodies or stay in shape. He was also the one who said a boxer or wrestler that has a month of training beats a martial artist who has years of experience. Idiots will say, oh this proves he can't fight. Um no this proves he can fight? How do you think he came to this conclusion to make this statement? Oh Idk by studying boxing and realizing it is effective. Which means he studied boxing and applied in real life.
@godwarrior3403
@godwarrior3403 Жыл бұрын
Bruce Li didn't die. He was summoned to fight in Mortal Kombat.
@osamamanan2723
@osamamanan2723 5 ай бұрын
I can't believe I had argument with my dad about Lee's legitimacy. 😂😂
@zekesaadiq108
@zekesaadiq108 Жыл бұрын
As a certified Qi Gong (Chi Kung) instructor I agree with a lot of what you're saying. I've trained Bjj, kickboxing, boxing, yoga and Taiji Chuan as well. I can definitely atest to the athletic benefits of practicing Qi Gong. The primary foundations are visualization, breath and posture. I have a very low heart rate and have had to declare myself an "athlete" in certain situations and I owe this to Qi Gong training. My posture has changed since beginning training, people tell me I look taller. I have seen 65+ people join Qi Gong classes and go from standing with a walker to doing most of the class on their own. These results vary of course! And it's not a magic pill. It's an exercise system... a very thorough one that can benefit any type of individual or athlete. I realized it was the foundation for Shaolin Martial Arts, so I dove deep. Qi Gong does offer some "martial" training as well but it is moreso Hard Style training such as Iron Body. It takes work and commitment! So I agree with his analysis. Qi Gong practices can be a complete exercise program for anyone, elderly people or out of shape people. If they are interested in some other martial art or athletic endeavor, Qi Gong can be a great foundational system to assist their training or maintain their health. As far as mysticism goes, I am Latino and that may be embedded in me to some extent... I definitely connect to the spiritual aspects of Shaolin martial arts, whether they be Taoist or Buddhist they relate to my personal Vedic and shamanic beliefs. I enjoy working with the Tao and nature and the elements. I cannot say anything magical will happen but I can assure you that there ARE energies especially when considering everything is made up of frequencies and your body is an ELECTROMAGNETIC system. 🙏✨
@MNTrader2012
@MNTrader2012 11 ай бұрын
Internal art, nei jia, is body mechanics + dynamic linkage + muscle control. External art, wai jia, is body conditioning + strength training.
@chinesebob7220
@chinesebob7220 Жыл бұрын
I agree that qigong, zhan zhuang, and other internal practices don't replace training like drilling and sparring if fighting skills is the goal. They won't grant superpowers like no-touch push and flying. On the other hand, internal practices can push the mind and body to almost superhuman levels. For example this Wudang master can almost glide like in the wuxia movies kzbin.info/www/bejne/o2e0hoqCgrZrd7s.
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
Those look like pretty normal human martial artist levels to me. He’s wall running, doing hand springs, jumping spinning hook kicks, and bicep curls with what looks to be about 25 lbs. Am I missing something?
@chinesebob7220
@chinesebob7220 Жыл бұрын
Yes that Wudang master did not do anything superhuman, but he is probably closest someone can get to actual flying or walking on walls. Asian legends tend to overexaggerate when they see someone run up walls they will then tell stories about a person flying or walking on walls. Light body is just one feat achievable by internal training. There are others like fa jin, iron palm, iron body, and Wim Hof breathing to withstand ice cold temperatures for more than an hour. These feats seem like magic but is achievable by anyone with dedication and training.
@dreadrath
@dreadrath 9 ай бұрын
Whenever Bruce Lee threw a punch he split the entire universe down the middle, but he did it so cleanly that the universe doesn't know its been cut; let us hope it never does discover that fact, cause if it does, we can kiss all existence goodbye.
@SeanLives
@SeanLives 2 ай бұрын
'A person who trains boxing and wrestling for a year will beat any Kung Fu fighter' - Bruce Lee
@ezsmith3765
@ezsmith3765 2 ай бұрын
Thought it was Tyson Fury without my glasses on 🤣😂
@KeyserSoze23
@KeyserSoze23 Жыл бұрын
In the world of martial arts, a legend did arise, Bruce Lee's prowess, a spectacle for all eyes. With lightning-fast strikes and wisdom profound, He's the greatest of all, his legacy unbound. In every kick and punch, his spirit does gleam, Bruce Lee, forever, in our hearts, supreme.
@HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed
@HarryTzianakisTheGodOfSpeed Жыл бұрын
Ha ha ha Be gone!! 👋🤛👋🤛
@wolf89535
@wolf89535 5 ай бұрын
I love this!
@erykkai
@erykkai Жыл бұрын
Great translation of Classical Chinese jargon to Contemporary Martial Arts Exercise and Practices. Combative Exercise to Non-Combative Physical Therapy
@tripleg1686
@tripleg1686 Жыл бұрын
Hey dude with your voice u could do voice over’s or be a professer in a university. Good video with good insight.
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
I did teach at a university. I have done voiceovers. Welcome to the channel.
@8523wsxc
@8523wsxc Жыл бұрын
I've got no time to look it up so I'm just gonna assume that internal martial arts is when your stomach punches your liver.
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
No, it’s when your páncreases puts a rear naked choke on your kidneys.
@mattlawyer3245
@mattlawyer3245 Жыл бұрын
When I was younger it was the myth surrounding internal practices that got me into martial arts. In my mind it was all connected to the phrase "knowledge is power." Later I learned that knowledge is not power. Action is power. Knowledge only amplifies existing potential by enabling effective action. But I am grateful that I passed through that romantic phase, since it is only thanks to that phase that I eventually learned and progressed to where I am now. Love you, Ramsey. Keep it up.
@JOHN18042
@JOHN18042 11 ай бұрын
But knowledge is power depending on the circumstances, just like taking action can become a detriment in other circumstances
@mattlawyer3245
@mattlawyer3245 11 ай бұрын
@@JOHN18042 I mean, whenever a particular action would be detrimental, to not take that particular action is still an action. That doesn't undermine the fact that it all ultimately comes down to action. What do you mean by "depending on the circumstances"?
@XwildXdogX
@XwildXdogX Жыл бұрын
Hey coach. I know you've been in china for a while and had encounters with various kung fu styles. What styles of kung fu have you enjoyed and what have you learned from them?
@BeamMonsterZeus
@BeamMonsterZeus Жыл бұрын
Here's my attempt at debunking: How many photos aka "money shots" of a boxer or MMA fighter of note feature them knocking the slobber out of someone else in some powerful, well-trained strike? Many, and they're real strikes. How many movies feature the action star Bruce Lee performing high-level choreography and interpretive dance-fu, sending paperweight men flying or flipping about? Many, and they're fun/great movies. Conflating fiction and reality is dangerous.
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
Bruce Lee made four and half martial arts movies: The Chinese Connection, Fist of Fury, Way/Return of the Dragon, Enter the Dragon… and the incompleted Game of Death.
@YouCallThataKnife253
@YouCallThataKnife253 Жыл бұрын
Bruce Lee was called the little dragon because he was a literal dragon Well, half... His father was a Cantonese opera singer, and his mom was a literal dragon
@ArdentLion
@ArdentLion Жыл бұрын
So his father Entered the Dragon?
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
I heard that Bruce Lee mastered all the Dragon Shouts of Skyrim. His Fus Ro Da could launch a 300 lb man almost as high into the atmosphere as his side kick!
@klanders988
@klanders988 Жыл бұрын
good video as usual. but i didn't expect the spanish inquisition.
@alexanderren1097
@alexanderren1097 Жыл бұрын
Bruce Lee: the only man ever known to have killed Chuck Norris 3 days later, Chuck Norris rose from the dead and Bruce Lee died under mysterious circumstances.
@BWater-yq3jx
@BWater-yq3jx 11 ай бұрын
Chi-gung, Chi Kung, or qigong is best translated as 'energy work', gong being the same word as in gong fu (Kung Fu). The breathing is important, but the visualization of chi flows is absolutely integral to the practice.
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey 11 ай бұрын
你会说中文吗?
@PhilipZeplinDK
@PhilipZeplinDK 11 ай бұрын
Reminds me of the (now infamous) poll on the Aikiweb forums, asking if Morihei Ueshiba could really dodge bullets: 80% said yes.
@chrisboyer7178
@chrisboyer7178 Жыл бұрын
What about Yoga chakras and the endocrine system?
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
What about them? What do you know about chakras?
@chrisboyer7178
@chrisboyer7178 Жыл бұрын
​@@RamseyDewey The way I understand them is that scientists can study monks that emit higher and more consistent levels of Gamma waves and the structure of the brain required for these altered states. But only the monk can experience them. Much like we know how the endocrine system secretes adrenaline from a region described by monks as the solar plexus chakra, but only the monk can experience and organize the experience in their minds eye. I like chakras because they help me understand and engage with different parts of my body and other peoples bodies. The most common are the minds eye and the gonads, or ovaries :)
@_Alfa_Channel
@_Alfa_Channel Жыл бұрын
no one ever talks about "rooting" - about how to Stand - most powerful secret of Eastern Martial Arts - Basic in Kung Fu - never taught anywhere else
@GrahamMilkdrop
@GrahamMilkdrop Жыл бұрын
I love the attention to detail with the body language in the opening rant! My 2 cents on 'internal arts'... it is self awareness and 'grounding' through meditation and (if combat focussed) sparring. Self awareness as in awareness of one's own physical abilities and limits as well as mental state and exploring how the two meet. As for 'chi', for me it means energy as understood in physics... levers and fulcrums etc... It's not magic but it really can be a force multiplier!
@christiegamhewage5520
@christiegamhewage5520 Жыл бұрын
If Bruce Lee is alive you never dare tell this
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
Bruce is alive. The human soul is immortal.
@mrpalindrome3067
@mrpalindrome3067 11 ай бұрын
In the whole taijiquan side, it took me a long time to understand Wu style's differences (I practiced a Yang style, and Chen style made sense immediately in transfer). I found that they really emphasize the lean and it took watching some catch as catch can wrestling videos (especially older ones) to understand it. Considering the folk wrestling background it makes sense to see the relationship. Internal arts means so many different things, but what I think people forget is that almost every martial art falls in one of two categories: A soldier's toolkit to inflict your will on your opponent, or something refined taught to the rich and the nobility. The first is only effective because what doesn't work from it is paid for in blood, but is subject to stagnation and loss of efficacy as times change. The second only becomes effective when you put it behind a soldier who's paid a little of that blood toll. Taijiquan has this same problem. It's the result of a grizzled veteran taking his changquan (long fist for the rest of y'all) and repurposing it for the nobility he's teaching.
@notusingmyname4791
@notusingmyname4791 Жыл бұрын
external strength lies in muscles like pectoral major, trapezius, and deltoid posterior (raises your upper arm to the side). the stuff that makes you look super strong and really helps with boxing. internal strength lies in muscles like deltoid anterior (raises your upper arm in front of you), lats, and Rhomboid, and your rotator cuff muscles.. these won't make you look imposing but can still generate plenty of power in certain strikes. I've felt the difference and it's all akin to the pose and angle of your body where you use certain muscle groups vs another. a good way to look at it is pushing your bike up a hill that's too steep to pedal up... if you push your bike from the handle bars it's frickin' hard as hell (can't do it from your seat cuz your handle bars will turn)... but if you get in front and pull your bike (or hell just pick up your bike and carry it), it's super easy. This is because we humans stand up-right, and not perpendicular to a steep hill, pushing direction is actually forward, not necessarily up, so you're kinda pushing into the hill, not up it... where as if you're pulling your bike, you're pulling it up (and of course lifting is lifting it up), so you're not pushing the bike against the angle of the ground now.
@EliteBlackSash
@EliteBlackSash Жыл бұрын
Personally, I think the idea of “internal” martial arts is one that scholarly teachers used as a marketing term (as opposed to the Fighters, like Chang Dung Sheng of Wang Zi-Peng). You don’t find a lot of that stuff in, “Southern styles” like you do in Tai Chi, Ba Gua, Xing Yi, LHBF, etc Just because you move slower doesn’t make it, “more internal.” White Crane is just as “internal” as Tai Chi, in the sense that the way it develops deep relaxation, fine motor skill, breathing, understanding of leverage, and utilizes relatively static and focused, meditative practices to develop it. They make up legends like Ba Gua circle walking came from some Taoist monks. More likely is the account that the student Cheng Tinghua, who was a Shuaijiao practitioner, came up with the circle walking so his students could walk the palm changes around the outside edge of their Wrestling pit. More striking, he found no contradiction between his Wrestling and his Ba Gua. The same for Yang Lu Chan with the Manchurian’s Wrestling. EVERY martial art uses a mixture of “qi gong” / nei gong internal practices and lin gong (stone locks, sand bags, heavy staff whipping, weaponry, stance holding, body hitting, etc). Its the same as boxing do cardio, then shadowboxing and then the medicine ball. The only thing that separates Kungfu is the pursuit of not relying on pure athleticism. In that regard, it is closer in philosophy to Jujutsu / Jiujitsu or Judo than for example the Wrestling we had to learn in high school.
@whyguy2324
@whyguy2324 11 ай бұрын
My understanding is that the distinction between internal and external styles was very uncommon and was originally a political/religious classification with internal being Daoist derived martial arts styles (with supporters of the Ming dynasty using them) and external being non-Daoist (mainly Buddhist) martial arts styles that may or may not have supported the Qing. It is only later (in the early 20th century) that the idea of internal styles had a bunch of mumbo jumbo tossed into it.
@DrJ3RK8
@DrJ3RK8 11 ай бұрын
These aspects aren't just for Chinese traditional arts. Look at how boxers hit the heavy bag. Internal (breathing) should be a part of good movement, calming the mind, etc. It's not magic. However, if you compare someone that can breathe their way through something stressful, and someone that can't or panics, then it may as well be magic. ; )
@Fanaro
@Fanaro Жыл бұрын
2:32 Look for the "No Zero Days" concept as well, it goes in the same direction.
@wacky_paintings
@wacky_paintings Жыл бұрын
Chi gong stances are used to increase the electrical energy in the body (internal). You can feel it moving around as you breath in and out. The trick is to relax and let it flow. This energy can then be used to make the muscles contract better, for punching and kicking (external)
@saiyanninjawarriorz
@saiyanninjawarriorz Жыл бұрын
What a refreshing take, most combat sports guys will completely dismiss the traditional stuff, while completely ignoring the context. While also calling out the role players 😂
@TaijiquanGaoshou
@TaijiquanGaoshou 10 ай бұрын
Even before watching the video, just seeing the face on the thumbnail, the first thought was "Brazilian Jiujitsu". I wasn't wrong. I'm also visualising in 5-7 years from now, when trauma accumulates, and sh..t stops being as tough as an iron rod, the author secretly enrolling into a Taijiquan class. And you know what, I'm sure he'll be good at it !
@mattdowds8505
@mattdowds8505 Жыл бұрын
Seeing how you brought up the Bible, what is your opinion on what it says about meditation? Joshua was commanded to meditate on God’s law day and night in order to have godly success in his endeavors (Joshua 1:8). David speaks of his love for and subsequent meditation on the law (Psalm 119:97). The Bible also mentions people meditating on what God’s Word reveals about God: His works (Psalm 143:5), deeds (Psalm 119:27), promises (Psalm 119:148), and unfailing love (Psalm 48:9). Meditation in the Bible involves a pondering of God’s Word and a deep reflection upon its truths. When Joshua was told to meditate constantly on God’s law, his meditation was to make him “careful to do everything written in it” (Joshua 1:8). Thinking on God’s Word and His character is the focus of meditation, and its goal is obedience. Focusing on the Bible and God’s ways will help us in our walk with God: “I have hidden your word in my heart that I might not sin against you” (Psalm 119:11). In the New Testament, Timothy is told to “meditate on” what Paul has written (1 Timothy 4:15, KJV) All believers are admonished in Philippians 4:8 to control their thoughts: “Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable-if anything is excellent or praiseworthy-think about such things.” Meditating on what is good and right has the end goal of turning thoughts into action and putting them into practice (Philippians 4:9). Coming into contact with the Bible should promote change in a person’s life (James 1:22-25), and biblical meditation will help ensure proper change. The Bible’s view of meditation is different from what the world tells us it is. Modern teachings on meditation stem from what are called false religions: transcendental meditation, for example, finds its roots in Hinduism. Secular views on meditation may see it as a healthy way to relax and remove stress from one’s life. Ultimately, non-biblical forms of meditation, whether from Hinduism or from secularism, cannot provide lasting peace, as only Christ can give true and enduring peace (John 14:27). Christians should follow the Bible’s teaching on meditation and meditate on God and His Word, not on ourselves or the things of this world. We should not participate in the world’s version of meditation, but instead meditate on God’s Word and allow it to transform us (Romans 12:2). Then there's Matthew 12:43-45 “When the unclean spirit has gone out of a person, it passes through waterless places seeking rest, but finds none. Then it says, ‘I will return to my house from which I came.’ And when it comes, it finds the house empty, swept, and put in order. Then it goes and brings with it seven other spirits more evil than itself, and they enter and dwell there, and the last state of that person is worse than the first. So also will it be with this evil generation.”
@Wiseblood2012
@Wiseblood2012 Жыл бұрын
Buzz Aldrin missed the Apollo 11 Saturn Rocket. Fortunately, Bruce Lee was in Florida and kicked Buzz to the moon. That is why Buzz didn't "exit" the lunar module until 19 minutes after everyone else. Because his post-kick flight was 19 minutes.
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
Facts!
@jonatho85
@jonatho85 Жыл бұрын
It’s kind of crazy. Like, studying Tai Chi, Xyingi, and Pakua together helps channel chi. But let’s talk martial aspects. All 3 together work towards a lot of the philosophy Bruce had. You need Tai chi for the movement, sensitivity, that feel. Pakua gives you the dynamic footwork and has you work on angles and grappling. The Tai chi learned in push hands help you get ready to move into that grappling you do in Pakua. Then Xingyi has the lighting fest striking. Bruce says stay relaxed, don’t tense until impact. Breath control, controlling yourself. Being formless. Ready wherever the attack comes from (tai chi and Pakua). Striking fast (Xingyi) which comes from that relaxed but readiness you get from tai chi. Now shooting chi out of my hands. Those are stories that aren’t needed. The physical effects that people are seeking come from the body mechanics developed. In the end you have to do free sparring like he championed. So they get to the same destination taking different routes.
@georgecostanza2695
@georgecostanza2695 11 ай бұрын
Got an idea for you Ramsey; start a side channel teaching Chinese. I just find it particularly intriguing when westerners are proficient at Asian languages, and you're a good teacher! It would also be awesome if you showed us around Shanghai one of these days!
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey 11 ай бұрын
Hahaha! My Chinese is terrible!
@georgecostanza2695
@georgecostanza2695 11 ай бұрын
@jpssteveshanahan9572 Anyone learning Chinese these days, it should certainly be mandarin. You’ll be able to speak not only with the 1.5 billion people in China, but tens of millions more in Taiwan, several tens of millions more in Malaysia, plus the millions of Chinese diaspora and bilingual speakers all around the the world. The number of people who speak Cantonese are a tiny fraction of that.
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey 11 ай бұрын
Mandarin. Cantonese is only spoken in Hong Kong and Guandong. Did you know there are over 400 different languages in China? Mandarin is the lingua franca.
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey 11 ай бұрын
Here in Shanghai, for example, the native language is Shanghainese. But most people here speak Mandarin.
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey 11 ай бұрын
@jpssteveshanahan9572 A huge percentage of Chinese people learn Mandarin as a second language. (their native tongue being their hometown language, of which there are many) In fact, there are still a lot of Chinese people who don't speak Mandarin at all. Mandarin (puntonghua, the common tongue) is a language from Beijing that the Ming Dynasty started spreading across the country about 400 years ago to try to unify a linguistically diverse population. My friend Hairat (you can see him in some of my videos) is from Xinjiang, China. He learned Mandarin as his 7th language after Uyghur, Turkish, Kazakh, Arabic, Russian, and English. And he always tells me that my Mandarin is better than his (and my Chinese sucks)
@BelgianDan
@BelgianDan Жыл бұрын
i NEED TO TALK TO YOUR SUPERVISOR 🤣 I love the beginning of the video.😃 Bruce Lee is an great source of inspiration but some deify him regretfully. I like to combine internal and external side of my training. Another great video man, I loved listening to this.
@matthewmele764
@matthewmele764 Жыл бұрын
My teacher has always said that in the old days, qigong, neigong and waigong were all done together.
@orlandoboom9018
@orlandoboom9018 Жыл бұрын
I've been saying this for decades, 'soft/internal style' is just stretching, eating well, resting, focus etc - not magic. I heard of an instructor who believed in 'photonic energy' transfer. lol avoiding LARPers.
@BWater-yq3jx
@BWater-yq3jx Жыл бұрын
The 1" punch spasms was the first time I lol'd today. 😄
@ChocolateMilkCultLeader
@ChocolateMilkCultLeader Жыл бұрын
Your skits are top tier
@RamseyDewey
@RamseyDewey Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@handsofstone1887
@handsofstone1887 Ай бұрын
You're awesome dude! Keep it up.
@tonygallagher6989
@tonygallagher6989 11 ай бұрын
According to a kung-fu teacher I met... Internal = related to Taoism, which came from China, therefore within the country. External = related to Buddhism, which came from India, therefore outside the country. His theory falls apart a little when you consider the Muslim influence on martial arts in China.
@macmiles278
@macmiles278 8 ай бұрын
Bruce Lee actually beat Godzilla & King Kong at the same time. 🤔
@justinlast2lastharder749
@justinlast2lastharder749 Жыл бұрын
As much as I love Bruce Lee and consider him waaaaaay ahead of his time...he wasnt a Competition Fighter. The Only competition he ever entered was a High School Boxing Match.
@kevinmurphy5878
@kevinmurphy5878 11 ай бұрын
"Fear not the man who has practiced 1 kick 10,000 times, fear Quentin Tarentino." - Bruce Lee KZbinrs
@simpletongeek
@simpletongeek Жыл бұрын
Do you know any resources available regarding Taiji Zen? It's the version by Jack Ma and Jet Li. I keep looking and all I see is a few videos on KZbin. Isn't there anything more?
@sebastianrodriguez9909
@sebastianrodriguez9909 Жыл бұрын
Lowkey, that yellow gi is sick af.
@anantasheshanaga3666
@anantasheshanaga3666 Жыл бұрын
Internal energy is the result of a combination of factors and actions like deep relaxation and releasing muscle tension, efficient transfer of body mass and shift in weight, overcoming the body's natural restrictions on loading force(autogenic inhibition), proper posture, properly utilising the connective tissue, including fascia, etc. It's not magic. But to learn all this, you need a qualified teacher who can do all this and explain it to you properly. So having a good teacher is very important. Too many people out there who claim they have the goods, but can't do any of it.
@Fanaro
@Fanaro Жыл бұрын
15:18 I think one of the things that got me out of Catholicism when I was younger was that told us to think but they never taught us how or what to think about specifically. Nowadays, I see so many more interesting and useful things I would think about.
@theoneandonlykyle9800
@theoneandonlykyle9800 11 ай бұрын
I met Bruce lee back in 69 he could do telekinesis and he could shoot lasers out his eyes. I seen him take down chuck Norris joe Fraser with one finger.
@jestfullgremblim8002
@jestfullgremblim8002 Жыл бұрын
You are not wrong, but an easier explanation to Internal Martial arts that i give my students is "Internal Martial arts are no more than martial arts that follow as many Taoist principles and practices as they can" The whole Qigong and Neigong are Taoist practices, the Baguazhang circle stepping is a Taoist practice, the whole thing about not trying tl meet force woth force and instead of that yield and bend, is also a Taoist principle. Everything those martial arts do is apply what Taoism teaches but for combat. The first thing the Tao Te Ching (basically the Taoisr Bible. It is the most important Taoist book) says is "The Way that can be taught and, said or shown, can never be the eternal way" That's why these "Internal" martial arts try to teach as little attacks as possible and instead teach you concepts that can be used for many things or teach you practices that will improve your body a lot, which again, helps you with any technique. I can elaborate further but this is just a KZbin comment, maybe King of Fist will someday reach further and teach these things to everyone. I hope both him and Ramsey read this
@nicktodd5294
@nicktodd5294 Жыл бұрын
Would be interesting to see where the common ground begins and ends between Ramsey and @THEMARTIALMAN on this topic.
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