I have a query more than a question. I am currently suffering with a crippling anxiety from realising the reality of 2 years out of training due to a few broken bones in my hand. How can I recover what I had two years ago at 37 years of age. I genuinely couldn’t get my head around my trainer calling out shots and combos for the focus mits every one I messed up from a simple jab to more advanced combos. I don’t want to give up but the way it made me feel I mean I’m already autistic so I struggle with emotions at the best of times this is a whole new realm for me could you help me get my head around it please
@LukeKido7 күн бұрын
Oh my, you really knew where you were stepping into! That was kinda anticlimatic because he had many beautiful qin na (joint locks) to apply on you, but you had to be more aggressive 😆. Awesome content as always Jesse! Congratulations.
@joeo40087 күн бұрын
@@alexholmes7275You have to patiently give Your self the right to choose your own path In martial arts and not fall into it's mental/ emotional trapings. If anything in life stops feeling right! Just change your were your feet are pointed and walk..it will always be your right path. You can't get this life wrong, choose a different art, all have merit and something to add to your life.
@joeo40087 күн бұрын
Love the respect Jesse gives to others arts and how it reflects off his own. Always enjoyable! thanks Jesse!
@ragemydream7 күн бұрын
the fact he has his own sound effects when striking is impressive
@friedrichmyers7 күн бұрын
That too in a Hoodie. I can make sounds on a Gi but doing it in a hoodie is some real gangster shit.
@angelloakira7 күн бұрын
I was thinking the same thing @@friedrichmyers
@TheSin33317 күн бұрын
As a fact, it is pretty easy to do that with any kind of clothes once you have practiced enough. You don´t even need to think about it. ;-)
@klikny7 күн бұрын
that sound can only be created with power and speed.
@Flokoli16 күн бұрын
5:10 I'm fucking dying 😂😂😂
@GLASSGHOSTHUNTERS7 күн бұрын
What a cool guy. So well spoken and humble. And very respectful when sparring. Wasn't about showing off or anything like that. Cool guy.
@Deletirium7 күн бұрын
Absolutely- I don't do martial arts, but if I did, I would vastly rather from somebody like this. Someone who struts around bragging how dangerous and skilled they are is less than confidence inspiring.
@heinrizliyaputra78116 күн бұрын
He has Wude
@lazarussevy27776 күн бұрын
@@heinrizliyaputra7811 What is wude?
@heinrizliyaputra78116 күн бұрын
@@lazarussevy2777 Wude is a Chinese term that translates to "martial morality" and is a core part of traditional Chinese martial arts training. It's made up of the words wu (武), which means martial, and de (德), which means morality. Wude has two aspects: the morality of deed and the morality of mind. Its central themee of Sifu Game, a game inspired by Him
@soldier1stclass9876 күн бұрын
martial morality @@lazarussevy2777
@vaderdust7 күн бұрын
I’ve noticed recently that a lot more traditional martial artists are pressure testing their art. This is a great thing for the martial arts in general. As a Wing Chun and Jiu Jitsu practitioner, I have found that nothing improves your art like an actual pressure testing.
@shawnmiller81697 күн бұрын
Practitioners of Chinese Martial have always done this... I think it's just becoming visible to the social media generation. When I was coming up in the 80's everyone sparred with everyone regardless of style... usually with little or no safety equipment (much like the generations before us). The difference is, it's on KZbin now... that, and people care more about safety. 🙂
@MrRourk7 күн бұрын
Desperation to find followers. So many arts are going to disappear in the next 10 to 15 years. No one to carry on.
@ranfan18206 күн бұрын
@@shawnmiller8169Very insightful! I always thought modern (within the last half century or so) practitioners never did hard sparring. What exactly did you practice back then?
@SocratesWasRight6 күн бұрын
@@shawnmiller8169plenty of BS practioners among Chinese martial arts. Just watch the saga of Xu Xiaodong exposing them.
@Xannyphantom9056 күн бұрын
@@shawnmiller8169 Yup. Nothing else to say.
@EliteBlackSash7 күн бұрын
“You want us to do light sparring, or you want us to killourselves?” 😂 I know its a language barrier thing, but, he asked it so matter of factly, it was unintentionally funny 😂🤣
@mscir6 күн бұрын
Yeah, Jesse's "Huh?" was so funny.
@oneoranota6 күн бұрын
From that sentence alone I got that he was from Paris ! We do speak like that around here.
@Venik756 күн бұрын
@@oneoranotaTu veux qu’on se la tue ? 😂
@Vincent_Beers6 күн бұрын
Sometimes, they die.
@LemmyCetay5 күн бұрын
Theres the word "s'entretuer" in french which means to kill each other, i assume he meant that but translated it to "kill ourselves" lol
@Sbv-257 күн бұрын
If they make another Sifu game that has karate style, you should be the mocap actor
@AngriestPeanut7 күн бұрын
On God, they should make each game about a different style
@KARATEbyJesse7 күн бұрын
That would be fun! 🔥
@Ghost-ql3hl7 күн бұрын
I’ve literally been saying this since the game came out They can literally make a game for each martial art if they wanted Muay Thai Karate All the other forms of Kung fu Boxing
@dogfishbanana7 күн бұрын
can we make a game where every yt martial artist exists with their own perks , like the back kicker nat , the band guy joshua , the typhoon (that tkd guy with josua ), the chubby surprise - sensei seth , the soviet guy - andrii khotin ,etc etc
@peybak7 күн бұрын
They'd have to call it "Sensei" then.
@Da1n_0nly7 күн бұрын
That guy is too cool. Never tried over selling the art, understands how other people can view it and that no style is unbeatable. Also, his amount of respect was incredible ... I would like one of kids to get classes from someone like that
@cupes22314 күн бұрын
Not with that brick breaking. Ouch
@stephk52557 күн бұрын
I'm going to watch this 10 more times! "Maybe you're on the floor. Maybe not, but I'll hit you until you're on the floor." So much respect between you both. Wonderful to see! Thank you, Sensei!
@KARATEbyJesse7 күн бұрын
Music to my ears! 👍
@aragmarverilian82387 күн бұрын
For sure! This is going to help me so much when I work on my new book.
@sayajinmamuang5 күн бұрын
Hit you until you arrive 😂. I caught that line. Sounds like one of those lines in a kung fu movie. You could tell he's an experienced master.
@LizDelacruzCuebas3 күн бұрын
Congratulations you are really doing well at your age my finance are in rally in mess right now and great tip will really go along way in shaping my life im open for idea
@MayraAlejandraGarciaPuello-t1k3 күн бұрын
What a testimony!!!🙏🙏🙏I'm genuinely curious to know how you earn that much monthly
@emalieth82207 күн бұрын
I have never more clearly seen someone who is "dedication to the art" rather than looks. It looks like it took all of Jessie's skills to pull him out of his shell.
@Dsc18993 күн бұрын
yea you can tell by his chinese decor hes all about the art and not the "looks"
@neaituppi73067 күн бұрын
This is the guy you call a Kung Fu expert. Sometimes people just say that on reflex about someone.
@jamessummerlin95167 күн бұрын
His composure is extremely impressive, he seems no more tense while sparring than speaking. His ability to maintain such a short yet impactful striking distance should give anyone with half a brain reason to pause, this is no bullsh*t, real deal stuff. Thank you so much for this, it’s one of the most impressive displays of martial arts I’ve ever seen. This is definitely a form requiring a life long dedication and true determination.
@lazarussevy27776 күн бұрын
I want to like your comment, but it's at a perfect square now :)
@moslimislam57146 күн бұрын
He was a liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitle bit more tense while sparring. Don't go too far now
@jamessummerlin95166 күн бұрын
@ You see tension, I see focus. Tension interferes with muscle response, focus does not.
@jamessummerlin95166 күн бұрын
@ I misspoke or failed to express myself properly, you are correct. I was meaning emotionally tense, I was, long ago a boxer and martial arts enthusiast, I fully understand how a blow or block is delivered. Muscle tension is a completely different thing from having the proper frame of mind or having a tense attitude. You can be relaxed and fight, every time my head wasn’t in the game it was to my detriment. The whole reason that clown show goes on before pro-fights is to put the other fighter off his game, though if you’re truly disciplined it rarely works.
@DiogenesOfCa6 күн бұрын
Even if I twist my waist and drive with my hips and quads, my power is not even close to his.
@branni65387 күн бұрын
Jesse what stands out from all these great guys you get on your channel is not the art, style or technique, but the message they present. 👍
@Noyoda11127 күн бұрын
I really want to see extended sparring footage from Mr. Colussi. His composure and control is truly incredible.
@Dsc18993 күн бұрын
lol
@Joseph-fo9lhКүн бұрын
@@Noyoda1112 😂😂😂 you call that sparing?
@SkemeKOS7 күн бұрын
I used to be a massive hater on these kinds of styles, but I was stupid. This guy is very impressive. Great explosive power.
@kamadotanjiro77957 күн бұрын
That kung fu guy is the real threat their. That strike of him deal huge problem if they literally do it on a real one on one fight. On their demo sparring, they look stupid. Limiting their moves and their power blows. I think that kung fu master have something on his sleeve if that is a real fight. We all know Kung fu style don’t follow rules. All they need is to strike on the enemy weak spot which is the eye, throat part, balls etc.
@Enryu_CZX7 күн бұрын
There are people who still hates it.
@Smoothalcoholic7 күн бұрын
For every good eastern style master there are nine that are completely fraudulent while only being in it for money. So critical thinking is important
@HiramLoki7 күн бұрын
@@simonbrehm358Keehan actually had a solid karate background. He just wants a bit nuts after that. He was an early marketing genius.
@domokun8457 күн бұрын
@@simonbrehm358 and as always...restomp the groin.
@esegoldberg7 күн бұрын
Very impressive. I liked how you both sparred at a good pace and control level where people could see the good basics the Kung-Fu instructor had. I also liked what he said about having nothing to prove and that we need to find our own way but do it through training not watching martial arts videos. A little training each day goes a long way. I'm 66 and have survived various surgeries(neck microfracture, quadruple bypass) and still make time to train basics in Kenpo, Escrima, and Kuntao-Silat. Keep up the good videos...:)
@Jax-s9m7 күн бұрын
3:14 that "thank u" sounded so sweet haha He is kind and calm. i want to be like that. what a great master
@LukeKido7 күн бұрын
17 years of wushu training experience here, the later nine solely on souther styles and could notice Jesse instantly associated the deflect movements to yang taichi and wing chun. And man, he was so right, there are so many cousin movements between southern martial arts. Benjamin and Paulo Rubio were the coolest Jesse have shown us recently, dudes are so OP on combat but also so chill.
@micahthecomfortablehuman13247 күн бұрын
If I remember correctly, Benjamin is of the Foshan lineage, which is the same city that Ip Man and many other important lineages of Wing Chun come from. As a WSL Wing Chun practitioner, the way he talked about structure is very familiar to me, and anyone can see the parallels between the two in the rapid, continuous movement. Mind you, the Cheung Lai Chuen Bak Mei lineage also bears many similarities. In my opinion, its training looks a bit more slow pace and internal, so it looks closer to other Hakka styles, like Southern Mantis and Lungying, and their Fujianese cousins, like White Crane and Five Ancestors. My own Wing Chun teachers are starting to slow things down to nail down the structure, like how the Cheung Lai Chuen lineage might, but I see from this video that Benjamin has a very similar structure either way. Both lineages look great, and I'd like to learn both if I ever get the chance, being of Hakka descent myself.
@Raivon6 күн бұрын
Someone get Ranton to watch this ASAP he needs to see lv 999 WUDE Benjamin in action
@NicolasSorzano-nm3uw5 күн бұрын
He already did. He made a video on his second channel: Rantwo
@iNightTiger5 күн бұрын
yep and he actually disrespected the pak mei instructor
@NicolasSorzano-nm3uw5 күн бұрын
@@iNightTiger lol he really tried not to, but Ranton has no filter
@tfmg23133 күн бұрын
Ranton is a clown , an embarrassment to Shaolin.
@toemayvang2 күн бұрын
@@iNightTiger Ranton was speaking some truth tho
@philipmontanti73447 күн бұрын
I think Sifu realized not easy sparring Jesse. But both very respectful!
@tombayley71107 күн бұрын
Pak Mei has an established tradition in Europe. In the 1980 s Pak Mei practitioners frequently took part in kickboxing competitions in Holland. There is an argument that the Dutch approach to kickboxing favouring intense attack over evasive defence is derived from pack Mei.
@varanid96 күн бұрын
Really? About 22 years or so back, I corresponded briefly with a Pak Mei practitioner in Holland via Email. At the time I was training under my Bamboo Forest southern mantis instructor and found it next to impossible to find a martial arts school with similar energy after he left. Back then, it seems hardly anyone in the USA had heard of Pak Mei (or southern mantis). It never occurred to me that it might be popular in some European countries.
@blinxcoppola42466 күн бұрын
@@varanid9 Have you been at Robert Vogel's school? He is teaching some serious Ving Tsun, maybe that would be something for you?
@FuryoTokkosho4 күн бұрын
the tiger hunting stuff of pak mei is pretty unique, this branch in the video has kind of chasing hands techniques according to the video game. But Fatsan is more deviating in a lot of ways from original bak mei
@matthewmoore88617 күн бұрын
Always love the respect you show towards other martial artist, that takes a lot of humility!
@TheMonkeydood7 күн бұрын
The brick breaking with the knuckles is interesting. I personally don't think it's worth the pain, but he's obviously got great technique with it. Very cool style overall.
@ArcticGator7 күн бұрын
it would definitely suck to get hit in the throat with that, its a lot like some of the hand strikes in karate taken to extremes!
@AWingedDarknessAScionOfTheWind7 күн бұрын
Owwwe! But then you can't hit hard targets with leopard fists! 🐆✊
@TheMonkeydood7 күн бұрын
@@ArcticGatordefinitely, that would break the wind pipe.
@TheTruthPenguin7 күн бұрын
Most styles require hand conditioning anyway. They hit rice/sand bags, cloth covered wood, bricks, etc... Doesn't matter if you use the default fist, condition your hands is key
@maexpert117 күн бұрын
Just be careful knockin on my door with that 😂
@Kvnproduction9427 күн бұрын
Benjamin Colussi has alot of respect from me, hes such a kind man and really respectful
@Leynx-Et-Fenrir7 күн бұрын
I always joke about you going progressively full Street Fighters character, but you went SIFU first. Well played sensei!
@KevinLeeVlog7 күн бұрын
Wahhhh you beat you to Pak Mei!
@jamesfoong92527 күн бұрын
You should do Hong Kong Pak mei, since this was fatshan, and they are different enough styles to justify it. Seeing you with Thomas Cheng, who is one of the most senior in the clan and extremely powerful, would be awesome! (He is the Sifu of Adam Chan, who the martial man interviewed)
@KARATEbyJesse7 күн бұрын
My bad 😜
@FuryoTokkosho4 күн бұрын
Fatshan (Foshan) is more similiar to wing chun/ hung gar mix than original bak mei of cheung lai chung, which is a mix of Lau Man Ga (流民家; Wanderers’ Style), Lei Ga (李家; Li Family), Lung Ying (龍形; Dragon Shape), and the martial methods known as Ngo Mei Siu Lam (峨眉少林; Emei Shaolin in Mandarin). If you want to see an original bak mei practitioner have a look at it in Frankie Chan (陳勳奇) movies like Frankie Chan vs Jeffrey Falcon (Burning Ambition - 1989) or The Prodigal son - Lam Ching-ying vs Frankie Chan. I think Jackie Chan's Dragon Lord, 1982 has some too. Then you gonna see the difference, the tiger is never evading, but instead forcing its way through the opponent pushin and pulling them to the side if they resist with force, its a very manly style. i think monkey steals peach has an episode of authentic pak mei too
@FuryoTokkosho4 күн бұрын
Some techniques of bruce lee are pak mei too, like the trapping hammerfist combo or the kick that send the italian flying in enter the dragon.Most people seem to be already satisfied by learning jik bo and 9 step push thoroughly though.
@FuryoTokkosho3 күн бұрын
Do not sweat it, in the states is a different Pak Mei lineage. Have a look at Frankie Chan (陳勳奇) movies like Frankie Chan vs Jeffrey Falcon (Burning Ambition - 1989) or The Prodigal son - Lam Ching-ying vs Frankie Chan. You gonna see they are pretty different.
@otisbeck53277 күн бұрын
Pak Mei is White Eyebrow; he was reputed to be one of the Five Elders of Shaolin.
@micahthecomfortablehuman13246 күн бұрын
Depending on who's telling the legend, he's also the one who betrayed the Southern Shaolin Temple.
@antwango5 күн бұрын
@@micahthecomfortablehuman1324 thats why PakMei was alwasy the evil dude in the movies XDDDDD
@Puschit16 күн бұрын
From all the kung fu guys I've ever seen this is the one where I am convinced he is 100% legit. He doesn't need to break bricks (and Jesse doesn't need to sell his skill or pretend to be impressed), you can clearly see and even hear how powerful and precise his strikes are! He reminds of breakdancers that use popping and locking, which requires them to have total control over their muscles, relaxing and flexing within fractions of a second specific parts of the body. It looks fluid but actually requires a lot of strength and body tension. Watch the part starting 2:40, it's so fast, controlled and powerful you even hear swooshing sounds.
@blasgarcia14545 күн бұрын
Facts 100%
@br4tuna5766 күн бұрын
- when braking bricks people say "you should put on some tissue", but what's the point then. Just pure gold
@outerlast5 күн бұрын
putting layer of clothes, tissue or towel or others, may replicate the skin and meat covering the bones.
@FuryoTokkosho4 күн бұрын
you are right, if you break bones then there is always the danger that you are hurting yourself pretty bad, slicing the hand open on the bone fragments. Thats why original styles did practice for toughening the skin too
@Vilwar7 күн бұрын
In karate we also have the fist formation shown at the very beginning, it's named Hiraken, commonly used to hit soft parts of the body when you want to penetrate deeply to cause a lot of pain like in ribs and the commissure between nose and lips. It's hard to train because the training is painfully
@EyescatUrmah7 күн бұрын
En Shito Ryu a esa técnica para golpear se le conoce como "shokento" ... el "hiraken" es para raspar con las falanges de los dedos con el puño cerrado. Saludos cordiales. Oss!!
@RealRantwo6 күн бұрын
Great video! Will make a reaction to it today
@KARATEbyJesse6 күн бұрын
Can't wait!
@theincrediblewatoz6 күн бұрын
ranton you are my goat
@Maestroa7 күн бұрын
Amazing video with a high level of technical analysis and breakdown. I'm going try to implement some of this into my teaching. This is why I love this channel.
@KARATEbyJesse7 күн бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@sirliamgalvez52767 күн бұрын
I've never seen Jesse try so hard to hold back on sparring before
@alive47677 күн бұрын
EXACTLY BRUH while bro was struggling to even react
@Salsmachev7 күн бұрын
Yeah what was up with that sparring? It seemed really off. Jesse looked so slow compared to what we normally see.
@hdanielmartinez70457 күн бұрын
Agreed. We've seen him fight many times. I'm sure he had his reasons. He's always cordial, humble and respectful towards his guests.
@Viciousotk17 күн бұрын
He said he cant find an opening. Maybe is that. You never fight someone with a guard so perfect you didnt know where to start?
@G36-9997 күн бұрын
@@Viciousotk1 He is being polite, there are always openings. They are talking about Jesses speed here, not his inability to find a shot (which looks different)
@ezMedBooks7 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@KARATEbyJesse7 күн бұрын
Thank you!! 🙏
@volpe20777 күн бұрын
5:10 bro this exchange MURDERED me lmfao, perfect comedic timing Jesse!
7 күн бұрын
just realized using the fingers like that gives you almost 2 in reach. Man, this is very helpful in a distance stand
@grapht065 күн бұрын
still waiting to see REAL SPARRING lol
@javiermano97965 күн бұрын
Only receives possitive comments. This is not adding likes or suscribers. This channel is an ode to contemporary conformism.
@archangel986326 күн бұрын
"Could be a throw... Or I will hit you until you arrive on the floor." This phrase alone is more badass than a pile of broken bricks! Thank you, Senseis! 🤜🤛
@ohdude66432 күн бұрын
that statement is more like Ip Man movie quote than a real thing.
@yogiyoga14936 күн бұрын
06:19 "you can touch me as much as you want"... could come off the wrong way brother
@calo21957 күн бұрын
Woah, it's crazy how you can hear the air woosh when he performs his strikes, and he's not even wearing wide sleeves. That's really impressive
@FoxFireUnlimited7 күн бұрын
It's because his mic is brushing his shirt...the same sound would happen if he fell down or even just got out of a car or anything that would shift the mic.
@martinthe3rd6645 күн бұрын
@@FoxFireUnlimited I don't see no mics on their clothes. This sounds like it's recorded using a boom mic out of frame, but would be nice with conformation
@dis49805 күн бұрын
Its all about the snap or contraction toward end of movements. Very rewarding to do.
@antwango5 күн бұрын
its the "Snapping" or "Whipping" i always made it a point to achieve this feeling or sound effect when im practicing a punch or a kick... its the typical Bruce Lee sound effect! power comes from the joints not the muscles between the joints
@FoxFireUnlimited4 күн бұрын
@antwango The OP isn't referring to snapping to a stop/retracting when we do our techniques...they're talking aboot the whooshing sound.
@frankfranco72517 күн бұрын
Pak Mei also called Bakmei comes from the Hakka people. The Southern Dragon, and Southern Mantis (Chowgar) algo come from the Hakka. Southern Dragon (Lung Yi) and Bakmei are very similar in movement and principle. Bakmei is straightforward and designed to go straight through the oppnent. No wasted movements just obliteration.
7 күн бұрын
This guy moves with such ease and no-bullshit demeanor, that I am legit impressed and bit scared tbh :D Moving like very polite killer robot, really impressive
@herbertschwartz28677 күн бұрын
I don't practice martial arts, I watch this channel because Jesse comes across as someone who cares about what he's teaching you and how it is presented. Sifu Benjamin Colussi on the other hand, his confidence seems so strong, he legitimately scares the hell out of me.
@kmmahmud71777 күн бұрын
Fr😊
@ArkhBaegor7 күн бұрын
You should start, it's never too late!
@Bassoid7 күн бұрын
If he can break the brick like that, getting hit in any place with those fingers would probably hurt a lot. This was very interesting Jesse, his footwork really caught my attention - this has to be the "best" time I saw traditional (or traditional looking) chinese martial arts applied !! great video as always !!!
@bestthingsinceslicedrice7 күн бұрын
Yes I just had to rewatch that sparring since his footwork just like Jesse's principles of no wasted movement was there as well but it had the vibe of killing intent
@trueblue91016 күн бұрын
No crossover whatsoever
@anbernicguy7 күн бұрын
Call me weird or stupid, but I think traditional martial arts should be applied in physical-mental development and self defense instead of sports.
@hessdefense4 күн бұрын
Many of us do just that. Be well.
@ruslanshavkatov46612 сағат бұрын
This martial art along with many other traditional martial arts won't work in defending yourself
@hessdefense12 сағат бұрын
@@ruslanshavkatov466 Give us some examples and let's break it down.
@ruslanshavkatov46612 сағат бұрын
@@hessdefense Steven strangles has a video of a bjj guys getting challenged by multiple traditional martial to see who's martial art is better. They all lose. I'm pretty sure one of them even tried poking out his eyes. If you're actually trying to debate this, you more than likely never fought or trained in legit martial arts
@hessdefense9 сағат бұрын
@@ruslanshavkatov466 True I don't know much that's why I was asking. I was hoping for some specific technical breakdown, analytical type conversation about the qualities or weaknesses of some of the arts.
@cjdvingtsun17 сағат бұрын
Wing chun and judo practitioner here both over 15 years. It's nice to see other chinese martial art practitioners with his skill. General a lot even teachers don't possess that ability to create that kind of energy and understanding on body mechanics.
@RetroFeesh6 күн бұрын
I've been learning Isshinryu since June and one of the brown belts I spar with has a background in Kung-fu this is spot on the way he spars. His movements are insanely fast and it's hard to get through his guard. I have gained a lot of respect for Kung-fu through the months of sparing him. I can't imagine how much harder it would be to face someone who's studied Kung-fu exclusively for a long time.
@PandaAmanda-b5p5 күн бұрын
Isshin-ryu is a good style. I like a lot about the Okinawan styles. It is great that you Respect the challenging qualities of your classmate! (Honestly, I sometimes get an ego reaction from classmates that challenge me like that). Can you ask him directly if he knows some forms or drills to assist you to enhance your skills? I kick myself that I did not ask classmates to help me to get better, in situations like that, over the years. 🙏🏼
@PandaAmanda-b5p5 күн бұрын
Sometimes, I felt a sense of awe,sometimes I felt defensive, in situations like that (psychologically). I could have learned much more from training partners, at times. There were times that I embraced the challenge, put my ego aside, and improved or deepened my skills....sorry! Did not mean to go on so long, your situation got me reflecting upon experiences. Sometimes, the short essays in "Zen in the Martial Arts" by Joe Hyams helped me with the challenging training partners.
@vaibhavgurung55855 күн бұрын
The colossus and blood on his knuckles reminded me of Bruce Lee. Breaking that brick with that kind of fist formation was very impressive. Hats off to this man’s dedication to his art. Thank you Sensei Jesse for bringing such talented martial artists on your show for us!♥️👏👏
@ronaldlee75667 күн бұрын
Nice collab to both Sensei Enkamp and Sifu Colussi for complementing Karate and Kung Fu techniques for each own perspectives.
@micahthecomfortablehuman13247 күн бұрын
If I remember correctly, Benjamin is of the Foshan lineage, which is the same city that Ip Man and many other historic lineages and practitioners of Wing Chun come from. I'm sure anyone can see the parallels between the two in the rapid, continuous movement. As a WSL Wing Chun practitioner, the way he talked about structure at 2:30 and 3:29 is very familiar to me. This is where Benjamin's humility actually actively makes his structure better. If you have too much ego, you'll be too focused at the point of contact and try to overpower the opponent directly and with strength rather than using your structire and applying force indirectly. These exercises (chi sao included) are about testing, not competing. Mind you, the Cheung Lai Chuen Bak Mei lineage also bears many similarities. In my opinion, its training looks a bit more slow pace and internal, so it looks closer to other Hakka styles, like Southern Mantis and Lungying, and their Fujianese cousins, like White Crane and Five Ancestors. My own Wing Chun teachers are starting to slow things down to nail down the structure, like how CLC lineage might, but I see from this video that Benjamin has a very similar structure either way. Both lineages look great, and I'd like to learn both if I ever get the chance, being of Hakka descent myself.
@k.ahnung70307 күн бұрын
A good example of what a human is capable of when he really wants to achieve his goal. Like the people who train Kyokushin karate he seems to have eliminated the concept of physical pain from his life. Utmost respect!
@KARATEbyJesse7 күн бұрын
Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional 🙏
@shawnmiller81697 күн бұрын
Dit Da Jow and Tui Na helps... one of the least known, appreciated or seen parts of Chinese Martial Arts is the healing aspect. A lot of Chinese Martial Arts practitioners have tough, conditioned hand... but no callouses. 🙂
@amyb.63687 күн бұрын
He's so relaxed it almost looks like he's not doing anything!
@DOLLACROSS7 күн бұрын
Jesses Huh at 5:13 😂
@KARATEbyJesse7 күн бұрын
He caught me by surprise 😅
@Flokoli16 күн бұрын
The pause right before makes it even more funnier
@victorespino56504 күн бұрын
That was the best lol
@DJAraRealSalsa6 күн бұрын
The ginger fist strikes in Pak Mei and its sister styles are lethal in close combat when attacking the neck and throat areas, especially when using the style's short range power generation.
@trollking994 күн бұрын
There's less surface area on the strike compared to a regular fist, therefore more power is concentrated in a smaller spot.
@SachaGreif3 күн бұрын
I think there's probably been more deaths by ginger allergy than ginger fist…
@toajay18164 күн бұрын
I think the most important thing about this guy is that he is all in. What I mean is that often I see videos of "kung fu" guys sparring or fighting but when they spar or fight none of the technique they talk about using or practicing is used whatsoever and it just looks a hot mess just a bunch of flailing arms. This guy, from start to finish actually used his style of fighting you could see some of the forms he showed off during the match in real time as action and reaction.
@BauKim7 күн бұрын
Jesse mentioned it to him, but his frame is the kind of structure I want to try and practice. It's apparent that body has been trained for toughness and speed. The continuous effort he's put in is what I respect. Also, seeing the execution of his art, it strengthens my belief that while different styles and schools of martial arts may focus on certain principles, the practitioner and their effort is what really gives life to the art.
@jeffreydheere47374 күн бұрын
That is a very in control, strong, polite, and humble human being right there.
@OverSooll7 күн бұрын
It is so rare to see a Kung fu expert dare to spar on camera and actually using the style under pressure (instead of reverting to bad kickboxing), although it is a light exchange and Sensei Jesse is equally capable, it seems master Benjamin is for real, each of his strikes there can end the fight. It would be great to see him defend against a wrestler (how does pak mei work against takedowns). Impressed by the content !
@boshirahmed6 күн бұрын
these arts are now all western inluenced and use clear styles from boxing in including hand and foot positioning.
@stevenburton49666 күн бұрын
nah. it looked like it was still reverting to the more main stream kickboxing stuff. especially the positioning, the posturing and reposturing. only slight difference is the hand gaurd.
@Adeus5556 күн бұрын
The ground defense of Bak Mei is lacking... Something new practitioners are trying to tackle.. no pun intended
@MagTvest5 күн бұрын
@@boshirahmedoh they been that for a long time, actually since the first european ships arrived
@silversky9004 күн бұрын
"him defend against a wrestler"? Ok 😂😂
@TheFosterJourney6 күн бұрын
5:11 😂😂 jesse says, "huh"!?! We know, Jeese...We all know this soft spoken warrior is the real deal!
@JamesIanGilliam7 күн бұрын
"Find your own way... go practice what you believe in"
@samahnpowell25627 күн бұрын
It's so nice seeing how you take in all this knowledge jesse and add it to your own style.A true martial artist
@ZenDragonYoutubeChannel7 күн бұрын
Good light contact sparring. If you're down Jesse, I'd love the opportunity to do some Kung Fu vs Karate sparring. Maybe MMA rules, but Karate vs Kung Fu or kickboxing sparring. I have 2 pairs of MMA gloves which have thick padding like amateur fight gloves rather than pro fight gloves... and they allow for me to use tiger claw and snakestyle (mind you snake I'm not targeting the face, it's mostly just distaction... both to avoid eye pokes and to protect my fingers it's meant for the throat or eyes or as a distraction, so I use it as a distraction along with tiger palm strikes and kicks)... or it could be Kung Fu kcikboxing vs Karate, closed fist vs closed fist, if you'd rather that. Just some fun respectful sparring. :) I work as a pedagouge and have a 5 year old son, so I'm a little tied down, but if I have to come to Sweden I'll try and make it happen, and if you wanna come visit me in Denmark we can make it happen... I even have a ring I can set up in my garden (can vas and 4 posts with ropes), although maybe with the weather as it is, it's better if we use the matted area inside my house... unless we do it on a good day. :) Let me know if you want... and if others would like for this to happen, drop a thumbs up maybe a comment.
@franco49283 күн бұрын
i meet one guy in china, i saw him trainning alone with punching bag, i hold him pads for him as i did a lot of muaythai, and he showed me some kung fu later, it was amazing, they hold crazy amount of strenght and techniques.
@renatoabrigo69657 күн бұрын
Wow! The way he break the bricks are different from the other styles. I hope there are more content like this. I hope also that you have another collab with Erik Paulson. I love that episode.
@Bazilisk_AU7 күн бұрын
OH ! I'VE DONE THAT FORM ! I HAD NO IDEA IT WAS FROM PAK MEI ! I was taught by an Australian Guy called Luke Holloway. He predominantly taught Silat at the time but he has a bunch of traditional Chinese martial arts experience and he was part of the local Lion Dance Troupe at his Wushu Club. He moved to Japan for a while and as luck would have it, I had moved to Japan to teach English and he was in the same Prefecture as I was - so I trained a little with him then too ! (I was predominantly focused on Tricking and Acrobatics at the time though so didn't become a full time student.
@boxingbull5237 күн бұрын
2:00 not to be that guy but, those "bricks" are really easy to break. I've used those for pavers. If you wear work gloves and punch or chop them. They'll break and your hand will hurt but, won't bleed. They're meant to break easy so you can cut them into shapes to fit together.
@vivalaliberty7 күн бұрын
Do you REALLY need to break all the fun and the illusion here? Annoying dude.... 🤪
@8triagrammerКүн бұрын
I have a ton of respect for this by allowing a free spar and putting himself out there. More kung fu masters need to do this.
@Liesl_Cigarboxguitar7 күн бұрын
I love your videos Jesse..you are so authentic ❤.. your opponent is awesome too 🙏🙏
@KARATEbyJesse7 күн бұрын
I appreciate that! Just doing what I love 😊
@sebideee7 күн бұрын
@@KARATEbyJesse i love what you do, but i thirsting for more
@billbill60945 күн бұрын
This guy moves _exactly_ how the character he mocapped in Sifu moves in game. Extreme dedication to that kind of movement. He even does something I noticed in game that I thought was just visual flair: he will snap into a position quickly, but after there's a perceptible bit of "rebounding" where his limbs like hardened rubber snap back from the most extended position to a less extended one. Since he does it in real life that's more than just visual candy for the game, so I wonder why they do that in Pak Mei. It seems like a variation of the concept of Fa Jin that Sensei Seth explored not too long ago in Gung Fu. His stance is unique with how he curved his legs and keeps his torso straight for structure, but it almost reminds me of how Victorian era pugilists stood. Since hitting to the face wasn't encouraged, they would put one hand forward to prevent strikes from reaching their bodies and keep the other chambered for straight body shots. He just doesn't lean back. The front hand concept reminds me also of what I've seen karate stylists use or even my own muay thai long guard, when I can't fight someone inside so I stuff their shots with extended arms and get to the clinch, sacrifices head protection but if I'm doing it I was probably getting lit up anyway. I would appreciate if he'd do an interview where he explains some more about his stance, strikes, and especially that rebounding thing he does after striking.
@peybak7 күн бұрын
I liked the stance and the slick movements. It's very reminiscent of kung fu movies.
@TheRisky93 күн бұрын
I love how you have become an advocate for traditional martial arts. Watching the martial art communities on the internet, you would say that traditional martial arts had run its course and was dead in the light of MMA. We knew what "really" worked, said internet 20 years ago. I was always skeptical of this viewpoint and felt that the problem lay in how people trained in traditional martial arts and not the styles themselves. Until I started Aikido in an actually good Aikido dojo, did I realize that there was a lack of actual study in many classes. You go, bow, did what sensei told you, and if you did it wrong, sensei jumped in there, without you asking, and told you how to correct. In this Aikido dojo, there was more than just doing, but actual experimenting. This lack of experimentation led to the misapplication of katas. Katas are really foundational, but they have to be applied correctly. You start with the kata itself. Then you go from a kata to a specific drill, then from a drill to a game, and finally from a game to a sparing match. And that is how you master techniques. Many schools stop with just the kata. They might get into the drill. But rarely, if ever, do they turn it into a game. And that game is where we fall short.
@bestthingsinceslicedrice7 күн бұрын
You want light sparring or do you want to kill ourselves? Huh? Im 💀🤣. But on a serious note I wish the vid was longer since there where so many interesting things Sifu Benjamin showed
@mans_anden4 күн бұрын
I would have liked for this to be longer. Would really want more content with this guy!
@sidmanazebo7 күн бұрын
Love to see this guy step into a ring with a boxer.
@sidmanazebo7 күн бұрын
@stevethomas-ul3rk who?
@thecasuallongsword7 күн бұрын
so maybe a alleyway with no gloves or wraps? Full contact? Same weight class and same age?
@sidmanazebo6 күн бұрын
@@thecasuallongsword sounds good to me.
@blissfelix2 күн бұрын
an old sifu once told me , never box a boxer or wrestle with a wrestler because you will always lose. Fight to your own strengths not theirs. I have huge respect for boxers, amazingly fit, conditioned , fight IQ and I love watching skilled guys who can slip, to my uneducated eyes it looks like magic. But if you take off the pillows on a boxers hands and fight under on a hard floor with no rings and Pake Mei rules ( no rules basically, all about survival) , I am pretty sure you will see a different fight and outcome. I have seen boxers who sparred in my old school. They had amazing movement and fitness but the moment they get their shins, ankles kicked , feet stamped on with shoes, slapped , ears , hair grabbed , fists smashed with elbows , hammer fists , kicks to the thighs and calves , kneed in the face when they bend to slip punches , elbow strikes to the sternum they did not want any more. Having said that , the best seniors I had, all had western boxing experience.
@ren-shen2 күн бұрын
Both guys are great and legitimate. It's excellent to see the respect for traditional martial arts. They form the perfect foundation for whatever madness exists in MMA nowadays. The lack of traditional training shows up in deficient stances and striking ability. Georges St-Pierre is testament to the benefits of traditional foundations. You're a legend, Jesse.
@sabbi28967 күн бұрын
Really cool and sympathetic guy
@Rustice4356 күн бұрын
"The only westerner who learned the complete style in China" - no, he's not the only one who learned the style at all, and he doesn't learned the complete style in any way. The only one who did that was Johnatan Barbary, and he is the one who gave Benjamin all the contacts to learn the style in China.
@SoundBoy8087 күн бұрын
Bro. Sifu Colussi is someone who absolutely represents. Practice. Practice. Practice. Respect due. usss!
@SeonStronghold4 күн бұрын
"...but if you are not, I will hit you till you arrive on the floor..." I love that.
@minutemartialarts31525 күн бұрын
Jesse was very nice to him in their zero contact spar. It's obvious that style is useless against someone with basic kickboxing skills. Any style that focuses on catching strikes is essentially useless. That guy would get knocked out by the average boxer or kick boxer
@durry233 күн бұрын
sounds like youre talking about Jesse here.
@MattMurdog3 күн бұрын
@@durry23Jesse knows what works and what doesn't, but the other dude would get demolished by an amateur boxer
@81Garret3 күн бұрын
You obviously didn't see his skills at play@@MattMurdog
@lunaticz0r2 күн бұрын
@@81Garret at play where? the 30sec sparring where nobody really commited (because they agreed to not really go hard obviously)? Hard to see is all, I mean his 10 principles..I could see 2 present/active in his sparring stances...Still looks cool and as he said: fid what works for you/us/me!
@81Garret2 күн бұрын
@@lunaticz0r you're using time as your reference and it shouldn't be. There were several times he showed great restraint with moves that would've been lethal. Watch it again.
@marcustrebonius34105 күн бұрын
This guy is absolutely lethal! I think he would do very well in a MMA fight, with a bit of grappling training. His technique, speed, agility and power are all top notch!!
@joshuajohnson54197 күн бұрын
My dad did Kung Fu for most of his life competing multiple times in China, and I’ve always wanted to get into a Kung Fu form, but I honestly mean this with the greatest respect, but I think there’s a strange type of arrogance that is holding Kung Fu back. Granted I get Kung Fu is a catch all for a massive amount of styles, but for general purposes anytime you watch a video or go into a gym with that says “Kung Fu” it just has a strange almost arrogant aura around it. I mean I am 100% sure this guy is great at what he does, but it’s just weird when they make statements like “this form will kill” so it’s not great in sparring, or “ we can spar but just know I could kill you”. As someone who trains and competes in Muay Thai, I just find it an extremely strange way of behaving almost like there over compensating or trying to justify there form constantly. Go into a Boxing, Muay Thai, even a respectable karate dojo, at most these guys will say they have the most effective technique, but none of them carry this weird humble arrogance like starting sparring with “regular sparring or spar to kill”. I mean it’s called sparring not murder, if I had that attitude in Muay Thai I’d bring a gun or knife to the gym, then I’d win every fight lol. I get these guys are passionate about there form and are probably use to having to defend why they do Kung fu, but I feel like if they could be confident and realistic and cut the strange arrogant ‘protagonist’ energy it would attract so many people.
@blacksage36537 күн бұрын
Hmm I think you might be getting the wrong read of him. Its just a different type of training, I don't think its about arrogance. I think its more like you as a Muay fighter stepping into a new gym and asking a new partner if you're going just hands or just feet or both. Yea someone could mistakenly take offense as if you were showing off by mentioning that, but it could also simply be a legitimate question as well. Are we doing throws and sweeps too? I think its all legitimate. In his specific case I think his style involves sweeps, takedowns and sweep/takedown follow-ups so he may have been friendly gauging the intended level of exchange.
@varanid96 күн бұрын
You are not wrong. And that lack of never challenging themselves is what's led to huge degradations of understanding their own schools. Can't use something effectively, can't even spar properly, if you don't know what the purpose of your principles actually are. Karate also suffers from this. Also, a lot of that attitude comes from different schools competing against each other for students; it's a money thing. You mainly find it here in the west and Taiwon, especially after the Kung Fu movie boom of the '70s. Go to mainland China and, if you can even find traditional "Kung Fu' instructors, you'll find they've never even heard of most of these "masters" in the west. You'll also find that they aren't secretive or mystical, but tickled pink that a foreigner wants to learn their skills.
@nicoquijano17464 күн бұрын
Jesse, you continue to come out with great video stories. Thanks for sharing.
@nndaystar7 күн бұрын
You rock Jesse! You're one of the reasons I got into Karate, I'm a yellow belt now! Thanks man!
@KARATEbyJesse7 күн бұрын
That is awesome! Rock on 👊
@peterschwarz88354 күн бұрын
Danke Jesse für das super Video, echt beeindruckend der Kung Fu Kämpfer!!!! Deine Videos sind einfach die besten , und machr richtig Spaß anzusehen!!!! Mach weiter so, in diesem Sinne. OZU 🥇
@solaufein13743 күн бұрын
This kung fu fighter looks really skilled and tough. Stance, power, speed. Very respectable.
@Tpazmachine4 күн бұрын
"This is normal and you are my guest", that is why you are still talking. "It's respect". Nice guy 🤣
@mellonhead95687 күн бұрын
Feels like Choy Lay Fut Panther Fist or hung gar..... like a hyrbid of Wing Chun and Choylay fut
@KARATEbyJesse7 күн бұрын
Interesting 😎
@edwardrhodes15187 күн бұрын
I see Wing Chun there, too. Choylay fut-I don't know, as I was never exposed to that style.
@Kcseales7 күн бұрын
It is a totally different style than Wing Chun. But the origins of both are the same. This is why you may see in Pak Mei he does something which "looks like" bong sau, but the application is different. Only thing I'm curious about in Pak Mei are their kicks. I know all Wing Chun kicking ideas, but I am curious about what Pak Mei does. I seen a couple in the game, but would love to see it from a real person.
@Duskshadowraider7 күн бұрын
I study tiger Kungfu when I was watching this , I notice how leopard like those strikes are
@maxhensley16857 күн бұрын
As I understand it, Pak Mei and Wing Chun are fairly closely related styles. I don't think either is nearly as closely related to Choy Li Fut, but they're all Southern Chinese martial arts, and developed in around the same area, and there are some things all the martial arts in that region tend to have in common, and probably at least a bit of cross pollination.
@WOLFLIVING054 күн бұрын
Off course make 2/4 more videos with this guy Amazing guy I like/love him ❤❤❤❤
@ErlinBytyqi7 күн бұрын
Can this guy survive a fight with a Muay Thai fighter for 2 minutes?
@bocahcebol28157 күн бұрын
depend. if it Buakaw, i doubt it
@stuffilike67557 күн бұрын
No. The answer is no.
@oliewray83576 күн бұрын
No his finger punchs are the dumbest thing it has no logic
@donovincable58426 күн бұрын
Except that there's similar strikes in older forms of true muay thai. Used to kill people on the battlefield. @@oliewray8357
@skyblue27085 күн бұрын
No.
@MikeBrown-ov2ol4 күн бұрын
the amount of respect that was shown in the video between you two was heartwarming and inspirational. It truly showed what martial arts should be about. Contest and respect, as well as the will to teach each other without any intention of hurt inflicted, except upon oneself as part of training. A true microcosm of amazing sportsmanship and fighting arts.
@RudolftheV7 күн бұрын
This guy reminds me of Master Ip Man, I always wonder what his Kung Fu moves would look like in a modern setting! If anyone are interested in Kung Fu/Chinese Martial Arts, I definitely recommend you to watch the Ip Man movie series. Those films are incredible, although a little bit exaggerated but that what makes it incredibly enjoyable!
@cheramiejoubert7 күн бұрын
Watch everything the ip man stunt director woo-ping yeun has done. From the earliest Jackie chan and jet li masterpieces like once upon a time in China and drunken master (snake in the eagles shadow is my personal favorite for Jackie broke all of his front teeth out in the final fight) kung fu hustle, kill bill, the matrix, crouching tiger hidden dragon, unbreakable. He literally made all of my favorite martial arts movies. IMDB for the win! You won't be disappointed.
@Acoto6 күн бұрын
Thanks for showing that sparring footage. Seeing it implemented against a resisting opponent helps alot.
@williamleitz35517 күн бұрын
Ranton's been real quiet since this video dropped
@vinterkriger7 күн бұрын
Ranton is a douchebag anyways. Can't fight but his narcissism is strong.
@michaelterrell50617 күн бұрын
Honestly, for a guy who spent a relatively short period of time training at the Shaolin temple, he presents himself as almost being an authority on just about every style of kung fu, and he almost always mentions how they don’t work…even if he didn’t study them.
@joeysingingchannel7 күн бұрын
@@michaelterrell5061 that pissed me off massively in the last Self Defense Championship. Like, there are kung fu schools that spar. I spar. Jeff Chan has sparred kung fu schools. Frickin' Natan has a background in kung fu as well as karate. C'mon. Stop trying to give kung fu a bad name.
@taip4n7 күн бұрын
He’s doing daily uploads
@williamleitz35515 күн бұрын
@@taip4n yeah that was the joke lol
@Kai-qr7ho5 күн бұрын
He'd be a cool villain in a movie.
@Chum_Kiu6 күн бұрын
Would love to see more features with Sifu Colussi!
@joegodfrey80446 күн бұрын
Best video you have made in a while, this is what I want. Stuff grounded in realality.
@robertpapp90137 күн бұрын
The pak mei guy is a legit martial artist I have seen him working with other people on other KZbin video channels
@KARATEbyJesse7 күн бұрын
He’s the real deal 💪
@cc68617 күн бұрын
I like how the movement is right from where your elbows are most of the time...right next to your body. I wouldn't have to stretch my elbow backwards before I strike. I like that.
@KhallDrake5 күн бұрын
He said he had a hard time seeing openings, but considering principles of bajiquan, I saw a few. Its definitely a more practical style of kung fu, though. tighter circles leaving fewer openings.
@jamesnapier38027 күн бұрын
Obviously, the guy is the real deal.
@clffreak7 күн бұрын
Maybe, but no matter how badass your style is, you should still tuck your chin... Besides, all this kung fu stuff is BS. If you don't believe me, just ask Master Ken.
@James-wd9ib6 күн бұрын
1:40 those aren't fired bricks, they're cement blocks... e.g. worse, much harder