Why do people THINK they can Fight??

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Sensei Seth

Sensei Seth

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 3 300
@SenseiSeth
@SenseiSeth 13 күн бұрын
Go get your own copy of UFC 5 for Playstation and Xbox! x.ea.com/ufc5/SensiSeth
@dorjedriftwood2731
@dorjedriftwood2731 12 күн бұрын
I was fighting into college through martial arts and I know I cannot fight like that anymore at all. If I had to fight I would be hoping that I am still durable and that they simply have zero idea what there doing which I think is fifty fifty but still I would definitely sustain some sort of injury just exerting myself at that level of violence. I don’t think people realize that their tendons and joints aren’t nearly as supple past 28 and any violent activity even if you take no damage your going to get hurt just throwing strikes or wrestling. I just think people do not experience that level of violence. Nobody understands the full on overwhelming psychedelic tunnel that is trying to absolutely destroy another human being or worse that intent being imposed upon you and trying to think about what to do or what’s legal. It’s like being in a car crash for two minutes, anyone who thinks that there good at fighting who hasn’t been through that is almost certainly going to end up slipping and falling or simply freezing up and freaking out.
@MrPainGame
@MrPainGame 12 күн бұрын
hold up… how did you comment that 13 hours ago when…. You posted the video 2 hours ago 🤨🤨
@Amerplaygames
@Amerplaygames 12 күн бұрын
getting a UFC game sponsorship is huge holy moly
@willtherealrustyschacklefo3812
@willtherealrustyschacklefo3812 11 күн бұрын
To be fair you did ask if they "CAN" fight, and obviously every human on the planet "CAN" fight if necessary. You never asked if they can do it well lol.
@unwnme
@unwnme 11 күн бұрын
It's better to think you can fight than not, in a self defense situation. Seems like a natural evolutionary thing to develop in us. That's why people think they can fight, in my humble opinion.
@DadpoolCosplay
@DadpoolCosplay 12 күн бұрын
You need to run that again at a bar when people have had some drinks.
@ReDuVernay
@ReDuVernay 12 күн бұрын
How is this NOT the top comment?!
@lilmanq7746
@lilmanq7746 11 күн бұрын
They would think they can fight because they’ve never been in a fight
@neotim5
@neotim5 11 күн бұрын
@@ReDuVernay it is now. Asking intoxicated people to share thier drunkness to the internet might be hard to monetize tho.
@raydrexler5868
@raydrexler5868 11 күн бұрын
Some dumbass would misinterpret the question and get mauled by Seth.
@stephengeier7918
@stephengeier7918 11 күн бұрын
This should be a "KZbin Nobel prize" nominated comment
@andrewberg8333
@andrewberg8333 9 күн бұрын
I think the biggest reason people have so much confidence they can fight is because they’ve never gotten their ass kicked
@deanwinchester57
@deanwinchester57 7 күн бұрын
I took dozens of face punches and face kicks to learn how to guard my face and still I suck really bad 😂
@chrishayes5755
@chrishayes5755 7 күн бұрын
almost any semi-athletic male can fight.. so yes, they can fight. fighting WELL or at a high level is an entirely different question.
@CynHicks
@CynHicks 5 күн бұрын
I've been wooped more than not. 😅
@SparkeIce
@SparkeIce 4 күн бұрын
Of all the "boxing", "kickboxing", and "jui jitsu" i have gotten my ass beat far far far more often then not.
@Dex_Zuid
@Dex_Zuid 3 күн бұрын
Often those people also pick on smaller/easier targets.
@pineapplesmoovey7898
@pineapplesmoovey7898 9 күн бұрын
you know someone can't fight when they reference 'anger' lol
@BigDaddy-je2nq
@BigDaddy-je2nq 7 күн бұрын
Cold anger wins over heated anger
@tommyglonczi
@tommyglonczi 7 күн бұрын
@@BigDaddy-je2nqshouldn’t be angry at all. Anger does not help your fighting ability, if anything it makes you perform worse..
@BigronnieTriceps
@BigronnieTriceps 7 күн бұрын
@@tommyglonczi Yes, when you get into a fight in the streets you shouldnt be angry at all......Like bro what do you think leads to people fighting in the streets? They get fucking angry at each other and fight. Jesus Christ......
@jkosh2046
@jkosh2046 6 күн бұрын
​@@tommyglonczinot completely true. I've trained in multiple forms of martial arts for nearly 40 years. I have many years of muscle memory built in. The problem with anger when you have training is that your body can take over if you can't control your mind. I've done things in anger that I don't remember and have been behind bars because of it. Even though I've learned to control myself better through the years, the only person I fear is myself. But I'm not most people in my ability to fight and honestly there are many times I wish I didn't know how. I actually had a dream last night that I lost control of my anger and was destructive. There was a point that I consciously knew what I was doing was wrong but was unable to stop my anger. Probably my biggest fear.
@Craig_Doll
@Craig_Doll 6 күн бұрын
1000%
@seansnyder2855
@seansnyder2855 12 күн бұрын
"do you feel you could defend yourself today" Seth sounding like a god damn batman villain about to start his k spree.
@nekrozclockwork
@nekrozclockwork 12 күн бұрын
Seth(if he was evil): do you think you could defend yourself? Random guy:not really Evil Seth (rolling up sleeves): good...
@KentPetersonmoney
@KentPetersonmoney 12 күн бұрын
I would like to see Seth fight Jake Paul.
@MrMaxBoivin
@MrMaxBoivin 12 күн бұрын
@@KentPetersonmoney yes.
@DariusFisback
@DariusFisback 12 күн бұрын
I tested for 2nd degree black belt, but I didn't pass. I didn't pass because I used techniques that I learned from another school. I was outsized, and outmatched, but I adapted, and what I did use was effective. The judges said they wanted to see more of the set techniques from their school, so I have to take the test all over again in a few months. I don't feel like I failed, but I do feel frustrated because I successfully defended myself in an as close to a real life situation as it can get. The instructor testing me was twice my size, has been training longer than me, has a history of no control, and came at me with full force. I still came out on top, but I didn't use techniques from their school. I guess in the end I didn't display the material they wanted to see. I don't really know what to make of it because I did what I was instructed to do in a pinch, which was to do at least something, and never stop, or hesitate. After the results I received a lot of positive feedback from the crowd, and was assured that in that situation I was fully capable of defending myself.
@dusandragovic09srb
@dusandragovic09srb 12 күн бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@Jehsuis1
@Jehsuis1 12 күн бұрын
Nowhere is the Dunning-Kruger effect more clear than when it comes to fighting and violence in general. The better you become at it, the more aware you become of how vulnerable you are.
@Fadogar911
@Fadogar911 12 күн бұрын
yes, but... i would agree that i'd rather just avoid any fight against anybody, even though i'm trained AND big... i know what can go wrong, even against an untrained smaller guy, so i'll avoid it whenever possible. However, given my training and size advantage, I do feel confident that I could defend myself better than the average person.
@pagenotfound7248
@pagenotfound7248 12 күн бұрын
I've trained kickboxing every week, for the past 2 years, and I think I've only just now started to say, yeah, I might be able to hold my own, maybe, but even then, chasing a fight is so stupid 😭
@FalseProphetFallacy
@FalseProphetFallacy 12 күн бұрын
@@pagenotfound7248I’m relegated to a “sure” or “maybe
@maxgehtdnixan4913
@maxgehtdnixan4913 12 күн бұрын
And the last thing you do if you have any brain at all is tell people you CAN'T fight.
@HumanAki
@HumanAki 12 күн бұрын
Beautifully put
@eazypeazy33
@eazypeazy33 10 күн бұрын
How can you tell who can actually fight? The polite humble guys with cauliflower ears & guys that can dance oddly good.
@HolofoilKev
@HolofoilKev 12 күн бұрын
My uncle was a boxer so I absorbed all his power and therefore can fight.... What a smart man...
@asgacc8789
@asgacc8789 12 күн бұрын
Does it work if I have a boxer nephew instead?
@grave8590
@grave8590 12 күн бұрын
@@asgacc8789it does work in that instance, just not in the inverse
@randomtvninja
@randomtvninja 12 күн бұрын
Not just any boxer but the world champion boxer! Makes a difference 😂
@B-Killin
@B-Killin 11 күн бұрын
@@asgacc8789Unfortunately not. It has to be up the family tree for you to gain ancestral fighting abilities, not down the tree 😂
@zwf5266
@zwf5266 11 күн бұрын
I would have fought so hard to not roast him. When Seth said "Oblique Kick" he knew he was cooked
@Shocker51817
@Shocker51817 12 күн бұрын
“Depends on the level of anger” - the man thinks he's the Incredible Hulk!
@MrMaxBoivin
@MrMaxBoivin 12 күн бұрын
Seeing red and getting angry is really not helpful in a fight.
@Quick--
@Quick-- 12 күн бұрын
Lmfaooo
@lilmanq7746
@lilmanq7746 11 күн бұрын
@@MrMaxBoivinit actually is better than being calm and not knowing how to fight, the more angered guy has usually more andrenaline and if you both don’t know how to fight he would usually dominate you since he would be willing to take every hit of yours to fk u up
@znail4675
@znail4675 10 күн бұрын
​@@MrMaxBoivinActually, adrenaline can do wonders in a fight.
@bradshortland6169
@bradshortland6169 10 күн бұрын
@@znail4675yeah it makes you fight worse, then gas out. But hey you can take a couple more non-knockout shots. It pretty much makes you better at getting beat up
@milton7763
@milton7763 7 күн бұрын
17:11 This is the exact type of guy he was expecting to meet all the time: every answer measured to sound tough; _constantly_ checking the reaction of the girl next to him to see if she is impressed; skimpy basis for his overconfidence
@andremaia6497
@andremaia6497 2 күн бұрын
i think you think youre a psychologist and dont really know what youre saying either. to me it looks like the guy was just trying to get his girlfriend involved in the conversation by facing her from time to time.
@mmdetoro
@mmdetoro 12 күн бұрын
02:00 refreshing to see an honest man with no ego issues...
@whiskbiscuit7199
@whiskbiscuit7199 12 күн бұрын
french dude was cool as hell
@alexstone9099
@alexstone9099 12 күн бұрын
Fr, he's just a chill dude.
@necromancer6405
@necromancer6405 11 күн бұрын
@@alexstone9099 Fr = France so it works out.
@michaelhansen9403
@michaelhansen9403 11 күн бұрын
Freedom fries
@realMaverickBuckley
@realMaverickBuckley 10 күн бұрын
There are so many dudes like that in Southern France. Granted, they're usually wealthy AF, which is why a street fight is the last thing they've ever thought of, but.. not uncommon in France and Monaco.
@MarkTheKickerHarrison
@MarkTheKickerHarrison 12 күн бұрын
Should’ve interviewed some random high school guys, you’d get some crazy answers
@peybak
@peybak 12 күн бұрын
Maybe interview them in a group.
@MrWinning43
@MrWinning43 10 күн бұрын
Oh god ya 🤣🤣🤣
@mattw7949
@mattw7949 10 күн бұрын
You need to add a few pretty girls within earshot.
@cadenlewis213
@cadenlewis213 9 күн бұрын
@paybak why in a group? I’m a sophomore btw
@marcelmeyer6984
@marcelmeyer6984 9 күн бұрын
​@@cadenlewis213 couse kids like you tend to overreact in a group
@dkel4341
@dkel4341 9 күн бұрын
I think training makes people more cautious because they see just how skilled some people are. They realize there’s always someone bigger and badder and they know what it’s like to be humbled. Regular people that have never fought or have only fought school yard bouts, don’t have any kind of grasp on what it’s like to face an advanced practitioner in Muay Thai, Bjj, boxing, wrestling, etc… Chances are if you’ve trained more than a year in anything, you will beat 95%+ of people around your size that have never trained. At the end of the day though, it’s just not worth it. Anyone can get caught with a haymaker and hit their head on the pavement when they fall. It is not worth being brain dead or going to jail for causing someone else to be.
@BenInGame
@BenInGame 12 күн бұрын
“Depends on the level of anger” is the most obvious answer ever
@yarinelmaliach1444
@yarinelmaliach1444 12 күн бұрын
Its also wrong
@Mbstr1
@Mbstr1 12 күн бұрын
@@yarinelmaliach1444 He means when someone gives that answer it's obvious they don't know how to fight. Doesn't take a genius to get what he meant tbh....
@JeeYaoKuneDo
@JeeYaoKuneDo 12 күн бұрын
​@@yarinelmaliach1444 It's implied that people who have 'Hulk logic'and (angrier = stronger) don't have combat sport/self-defense experience. Duh...
@HolofoilKev
@HolofoilKev 12 күн бұрын
Did you mean oblivious?
@BenInGame
@BenInGame 12 күн бұрын
@@HolofoilKev no I mean it’s obvious they are giving that answer in ignorance. If I went up to a meathead on the street they’d most likely say something similar.
@tonygallagher6989
@tonygallagher6989 12 күн бұрын
If someone I don't know asks me if I know how to fight, I say no. If someone is interviewing me for a KZbin video and asks that question, I have even more reason to say no.
@jellevanbreugel325
@jellevanbreugel325 12 күн бұрын
self defense takes many forms... 🤣🤣🤣
@subratadhar7698
@subratadhar7698 12 күн бұрын
smart. because if you do beat up someone , his legal team will pull that video up and f you over.
@TomEVP
@TomEVP 12 күн бұрын
Youre right
@Sikorsky1111
@Sikorsky1111 12 күн бұрын
me too, I dont have anything to prove.
@pingu6028
@pingu6028 12 күн бұрын
exactly, I dont think that many people are delusional (there are certainly some) but not being able to fight is just something you wouldnt admit on camera. Like having a small dick, not getting women and stuff like that
@Corey_Vlogs
@Corey_Vlogs 5 күн бұрын
I think the confidence comes from not having their confidence tested. Everyone remembers their first day in BJJ or Muy Thai you walk in feeling like “I can hang with these guys” and you leave thinking “I’m a helpless little child” really opens your eyes
@thomaslink9020
@thomaslink9020 12 күн бұрын
I'm definitely in the top 20% of fighters if we include women, children, and the elderly.
@jujutrini8412
@jujutrini8412 11 күн бұрын
😂 Don’t forget the disabled. 😂
@JD2jr.
@JD2jr. 11 күн бұрын
That's a great way to look at it, thanks.
@randydiebold325
@randydiebold325 10 күн бұрын
Yeah, that was exactly my thought process when the question was asked. Martial arts people are like in the top 1% and think about things in that mindset. If any human was randomly selected and you're a man 20-50 in reasonably decent shape, you have great odds of winning.
@i-never-look-at-replies-lol
@i-never-look-at-replies-lol 10 күн бұрын
I have a team of 100 women, children, and elderly that can beat you
@Lukas-py4dr
@Lukas-py4dr 10 күн бұрын
Dont forget handicapped people and overweight/underweight ones
@thendolethole2381
@thendolethole2381 12 күн бұрын
I have a friend who’s 20kg lighter than me , does not train at all , a bit overweight.I’m a personal trainer and who does boxing and I’m a BJJ Purple belt. My friend still thinks he can beat me in a fight.
@PhotonBeast
@PhotonBeast 12 күн бұрын
If only we all could have the level of confidence of your friend. :)
@ReactEditsPapas13
@ReactEditsPapas13 12 күн бұрын
But you KNOW he can't beat you is what you're saying.
@mr.brightside7496
@mr.brightside7496 12 күн бұрын
Show him the error of his ways
@fireandiron4181
@fireandiron4181 12 күн бұрын
The problem is that people who have never been humbled view themselves as like the main character in a movie, where if they were to ever be attacked, they would just know what to do. Add to that, that there is still a lot of people who buy into the old "Oh I'll just poke them in the eye and win instantly" or "I'll just break their finger and win instantly", or the best one of all "I'll just kick him in the nuts and win instantly" People don't realize that those things, while painful, are not going to prevent someone from continuing to attack you.
@Ultr4l0f
@Ultr4l0f 12 күн бұрын
​@@fireandiron4181... or how hard it is to land those techniques. Like the last(?) dude who said he would kick the knees. How would he hit the knees if he never trained a kick in his life. "I would just ..." is always a tell they dont know what they are talking about.
@MrBenwaan
@MrBenwaan 10 күн бұрын
Love how, when you got a bunch of reasonable, thought out answers that were counter to the narrative and content you were making; you included them. Made this quite interesting and feel pretty credible.
@conradsutton1456
@conradsutton1456 11 күн бұрын
My son watched this one with me. We both have been doing Karate for about 10 years now. Our class does sparring from light contact to full on fighting with gear. II asked my son does he think he can fight and I loved the humble answer he gave me. "I don't know. Honestly, I don't think about it. I mean sparring isn't a real fight but I think it helps me be more prepared.I just try to remember all the things you say about avoiding having to fight."
@knightveg
@knightveg 11 күн бұрын
Is it dumb question really If you're expecting a fight in the streets then yeah you need some experience in martial arts But real violence is nothing like a arranged fighting, Example you could get out of a car and someone could hit you on the head and steal your wallet What sparring can you do in martial arts what make you ready to deal with something like that
@Zeziliath
@Zeziliath 11 күн бұрын
That kid of yours really gets it. Good job.
@Zeziliath
@Zeziliath 11 күн бұрын
@@knightvegthats not what martial arts is about. There is no technique against a sneak attack, and there are little to no ways of defending yourself unarmed against a armed opponent, especially if he sneak attacks you. So yeah, if you want to learn martial arts to become John Wick, thats not gonna happen. But if you’re trained in Martial Arts, and you have learned to fight full contact, you have many advantages. I know how it feels to be punched in the face many times. I also have great cardio, which is a big part of Martial Arts. This is going to be your biggest advantage, most people gas out after throwing a couple of punches at full power. A good martial artist has great advantages in a physical confrontation. Nobody has a advantage in the situation you described.
@marsonofjo344
@marsonofjo344 10 күн бұрын
​​@@knightveg That is real world scenario. Cats always play sneak attack on their siblings. Eagles mostly sneak from above. I think that is the number one thing to train in martial arts. You eliminate more than half of your potential opponents if you see them coming. Like when you notice someone is bad eyeing you. You have time to assess, prepare, then act accordingly. 😂
@Kroitk
@Kroitk 10 күн бұрын
Don't want to be the one to rain on your fantasy parade, but Karate is pretty useless in real combat or even high-level MMA. I know this because I did Taekwondo for 8 years, black belt 2nd dan, and then I went into MMA (Boxing, BJJ, combat Sambo) and realized how little it actually helped and how quickly you can kick someone who only did Karate/Taekwondo. This was also the consensus by others in my gym who came from a Karate background. No wrestling/takedown defence, distance management becomes useless when you're in a non-Karate bout, horrible hand striking/boxing, etc. Karate/Taekwondo are borderline sports not real combat, good for teaching kids discipline and making them feel confident, but after a certain level it just because a fitness/sport and you/your son would get your asses handed to you by an amateur boxer or mma practisioner with twice as less years of your experience--let alone someone who also put 10 years in.
@yareyare5537
@yareyare5537 12 күн бұрын
"DO YOU FEEL LIKE YOU WOULD BE ABLE TO DEFEND YOURSELF TODAY?" PROCEEDS TO ATTACK:
@deonjohnson4376
@deonjohnson4376 11 күн бұрын
Lmaooo
@KickyFut
@KickyFut 10 күн бұрын
I think this sounds like an Icy Mike video!😂
@E1zzzZ
@E1zzzZ 9 күн бұрын
"Alright so now I'm going to fight you and you'll have to defend yourself."
@kiranraavi4240
@kiranraavi4240 12 күн бұрын
That squirrel was ready to answer your question until you said “people”. You straight up excluded its whole species disrespectful af bruh no wonder it walked off
@HazardousClim
@HazardousClim 11 күн бұрын
I know. That was … nuts
@KONGISKINGKONGISMYGOAT
@KONGISKINGKONGISMYGOAT 10 күн бұрын
Ahahahahahahahhahahahahha 😂 Leave
@time2chill121
@time2chill121 10 күн бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@SenseiSeth
@SenseiSeth 9 күн бұрын
lol this is great
@MA-ji1iz
@MA-ji1iz 12 күн бұрын
I train so I don’t delude myself about fighting on “da gritty streetz”. I hope to never get into a non-consensual fight. Training should open your eyes to how dangerous the world could be.
@TheElbowMerchant
@TheElbowMerchant 12 күн бұрын
Yessir. Nothing humbles you faster than the realization that intention means very little when you don't have the training and experience to see your intentions through with effective action. Learned that real quick in the sparring ring and on the mats. I never thought I'd go into a martial arts gym or dojo and school someone who had been training for awhile, but the speed and ease with which they made me look like the beginner I was really was staggering.
@jerryKB2GCG
@jerryKB2GCG 12 күн бұрын
Martial arts rule number 1: Thise who run away today live to play another day. Be aware of your surroundings
@danb3529
@danb3529 12 күн бұрын
I've trained on and off for about 20 years now. Hold a second degree black belt in TKD before branching out and training in wrestling, boxing, kickboxing, muay thai, and jiu jitsu. It there's one thing I've learned in that time, it's that I'm probably better trained than about 60-80% of people and I want NO part of a fight. First off, the consequences are MASSIVE, and the reward is minimal if it exists at all. Training is one thing, actual violence is different. Second, you never know when that ONE person is a jiu jitsu black belt or a golden gloves boxer and just wrecks you. In a gym / training environment, this is really great: iron sharpens iron. But in a streetfight, once you're out, you're totally helpless. No thank you.
@goukhanakul
@goukhanakul 12 күн бұрын
I probably find myself in the most peaceful state post roll or a good sparring session. I’m normally a very chill and respectful individual but after a good sesh im going xtra chill.
@amang1001
@amang1001 12 күн бұрын
Facts...
@MikeBrown-ov2ol
@MikeBrown-ov2ol 9 күн бұрын
I've served as an infantry officer in my country's army and I have had quite a bit of training in hand to hand and knife fighting as well as close quarters firearms fighting. That is where I learned that I don't really know much about those topics and that the intricacies of such abilities go far beyond what a human being can learn in one lifetime. I can confidently say that I really don't know much about fighting at all.
@penttikoivuniemi2146
@penttikoivuniemi2146 8 күн бұрын
Out of curiosity, how much does infantry train hand to hand and knife-fighting where you're from? It honestly seems like a waste of time to allocate much time on it in the modern world where even firearms seem to be getting more and more obsolete in today's drone and missile warfare. Of course it makes sense to have some idea because it's always possible you have to defend yourself, but that stuff is so complicated that just doing some training here and there is unlikely to actually drill it into you.
@MikeBrown-ov2ol
@MikeBrown-ov2ol 8 күн бұрын
@@penttikoivuniemi2146 Sure thing, glad you asked! My country gives officers university education, in which pure military skills are neglected a little. There are several additional courses that people can enroll in in order to hone other abilities like fitness, sports, shooting competitions and even driving lessons for special vehicles and more weapons training. I took courses in hand to hand fighting and physical fitness (as the main focus of that part of officer education is to study and I didn't want to lose my physical fitness and mental sharpness as well as reaction time when it comes to fighting). Close quarter gunfight simulation always was part of my schedule because of my superior at that time, being infantry himself as well, organized such events for "his" guys (meaning other infantry or tank guys or in short "mudlovers" as he lovingly called us). The amount of training varies quite a bit case by case, as you see, so my country and even more so my fellow comrades / brothers in arms offered options to hone physical skills whilst being mostly engaged in mental activities at the army university. Hand to hand and knife fighting was taught by an ex special forces guy, cqb simulation was trained by people who had practical experience from deployments in Afghanistan and two times I had the pleasure to do simulated combat with guys from the US and France. (I'm from Germany). So after all I'd say hand to hand and knife fighting is about as low a priority as it gets, when it comes to standard military training here, but if you're interested, you're offered options to take additional courses. I had those courses and sparrings for 3 years, most times it was practical training/sparring twice a week and physical fitness and endurance training 3 times a week. Of course that is way, way less than a professional would train, it doesn't even come close, yet it's also a lot more than the average, even more than the average soldier, and the more I learned, the more I realized I knew absolutely nothing. I hope I could give answers to some of your questions, feel free to ask away if questions remain or if anything of interest was stated unclearly. I appreciate your interest in the subject! Training methods should always be scruitinized in order to provide the best possible training, that you do that shows a lot of practical intelligence concerning the subject!
@penttikoivuniemi2146
@penttikoivuniemi2146 8 күн бұрын
@@MikeBrown-ov2ol Thanks for the answer! Practical training/sparring twice a week is a bit more than I would have expected, but it's still in the ball-park of what I figured, especially since you said it includes optional courses. I know somebody who used to be an infantry (or maybe artillery? Can't recall) officer here in Finland, and he basically said he took a few crash courses in basic training and then never really did any hand to hand after that because it was optional and he wasn't super interested in it at that time.
@MikeBrown-ov2ol
@MikeBrown-ov2ol 8 күн бұрын
@@penttikoivuniemi2146 In a military sense it doesn't really do too much good to learn that kind of stuff, as most likely you won't be needing it anyways. And honestly, Finland has shown in quite impressive fashion that by the sisu of your people, you can defeat any foe that is foolish enough to test you :) Huge respect!
@milton7763
@milton7763 7 күн бұрын
Your attitude is great. The soldier in this video made me roll my eyes: “yeah, I grappled a bit on a mat and did some light strikes in sparring - I’m totally ready now for a real fight!”
@Squashylemon
@Squashylemon 12 күн бұрын
They won a fight 10+ years ago against someone who couldn't fight and think that means they can fight.
@michaelhansen9403
@michaelhansen9403 11 күн бұрын
Nobody picks a fight with someone they think has the advantage
@Squashylemon
@Squashylemon 11 күн бұрын
@@michaelhansen9403 Then you've never been in a fight before lol.
@jonaskarlsson5901
@jonaskarlsson5901 10 күн бұрын
@@Squashylemon avoiding fights is a thing ya know. And picking the right fight is also a thing
@Squashylemon
@Squashylemon 10 күн бұрын
@@jonaskarlsson5901 All the logic in the world goes out when you're angry enough trust me and usually fights don't start because someone is happy.
@jonaskarlsson5901
@jonaskarlsson5901 10 күн бұрын
@@Squashylemon you have definitely not been in a fight
@AwestaKhalid
@AwestaKhalid 10 күн бұрын
“how would you prepare if you HAD to fight a bully the next day?” I love the woman who said she’d try to get a good night’s sleep. It’s a funny yet interesting answer. And not a bad one.
@Nitrous-ej5zy
@Nitrous-ej5zy 9 күн бұрын
I habe had this happen to me. And NO, you get zero sleep waiting for the beating to end.....
@cdawg0717
@cdawg0717 8 күн бұрын
That’s what I would have said and drink plenty of water lol what else can u do
@milton7763
@milton7763 7 күн бұрын
Certainly better than the guy who thought he was gonna learn MMA skills _in_ _a_ _day_
@letsdothis9063
@letsdothis9063 6 күн бұрын
Having been in that situation more than once, I can say this. There is ZERO sleep happening.
@olahwam5278
@olahwam5278 6 күн бұрын
Getting into a real fight as an adult humbles you quick
@TallBison
@TallBison 12 күн бұрын
people when they're online: just the absolute worst. people in real life: generally quite reasonable, nice to talk to.
@Smorgasvord
@Smorgasvord 10 күн бұрын
Kinda makes you jaded when you realize that most people are really just assholes when they know there are no consequences for it.
@treakfly
@treakfly 10 күн бұрын
@@Smorgasvordthis is partly true. But remember that algorithms drive the most engaging content, which sadly promotes enraging content, since this gets people riled up to keep watching and comment and share the absurdity. This filters the whole world down to the most unhinged
@ozonelayercake
@ozonelayercake 10 күн бұрын
I'd guess roughly half of all online activity is from bots/ foreign agents just trying to stir shit up. Russian troll farms are very real. There's gotta be other countries doing it.
@a-buttonace
@a-buttonace 9 күн бұрын
​@@treakfly That has nothing to do with it. I've been on those video chat apps and I've been out in public. People are far bigger jerk offs when they're not physically in front of you, especially the young ones.
@SchecterIsKING
@SchecterIsKING 9 күн бұрын
To be fair, most the people who are reasonable online are reasonable in real life. The people that are assholes online you don't really run into them much in the real world because they're busy in mummy and daddy's basement typing some outrageous shit. 🤷🏻‍♂️
@rotorbob
@rotorbob 10 күн бұрын
I love the honest French dude.
@DMWBN3
@DMWBN3 9 күн бұрын
Its their tradition 😊
@MadaraUchiha-xb7dp
@MadaraUchiha-xb7dp 9 күн бұрын
​@@DMWBN3What do you mean by that?
@Cigarbawz
@Cigarbawz 8 күн бұрын
@@DMWBN3what is the tradition?
@mastahkiller9044
@mastahkiller9044 8 күн бұрын
True
@ghijkl
@ghijkl 5 күн бұрын
Two honest French dudes
@johnwhitfield3547
@johnwhitfield3547 2 күн бұрын
Bro at 1:50 was a real one. Honest answers without thought for his ego. It takes courage to admit you have shortcomings, and gives you a real foundation to build upon, should you choose.
@fujow120000
@fujow120000 12 күн бұрын
I’ll never forget this quote I heard long ago: “you will not rise to the occasion, you will fall to the level of your training and experience.”
@Cjwize-144
@Cjwize-144 12 күн бұрын
Cobra kai
@Inaluogh
@Inaluogh 12 күн бұрын
The last dude was trying WAY too hard to impress the lady.
@jujutrini8412
@jujutrini8412 11 күн бұрын
And she wasn’t buying it! 😂😂😂
@aidenjohnstone5982
@aidenjohnstone5982 11 күн бұрын
Haha I'm getting first tinder date vibes
@Crum24
@Crum24 10 күн бұрын
Lmao fr, and not to judge but dude seemed a little old for her
@mydroidx1013
@mydroidx1013 9 күн бұрын
​@@Crum24and she a bit too untrained for him.
@DrMakak
@DrMakak 8 күн бұрын
Yeah bro, goofiness aside, Seth did him dirty
@RazaSid
@RazaSid 9 күн бұрын
Love this topic! I was the most confident when I stopped training. When I do train, I avoid fighting. Great content as usual, Sensei Seth!
@lewispeart2344
@lewispeart2344 12 күн бұрын
Im a Judoka, 2nd dan, 15 years of training now and used to compete at a very high level. I hate real fights, ive been in a few situations in my life where ive needed to defend myself and it always felt awful. But yes the Judo did come in clutch every time.
@EngineerMK2004
@EngineerMK2004 12 күн бұрын
I'm a Judoka who has been in real fights as well. They are always surprised when thrown. Plenty of time to escape, afterward.
@CanadaFree-ce9jn
@CanadaFree-ce9jn 12 күн бұрын
That is the humanity of the whole thing. An attacker would think nothing of your head smacking the sidewalk, but you and I would feel awful at the damage we caused if we did the same thing. The attacker would likely be cheering with his friends, but we would likely be shaking and angry that we were ever put into that position to have to cause that damage. Thirdly, we'd likely receive more jail time then the attacker, because, "training".
@KINGSOMALIA
@KINGSOMALIA 10 күн бұрын
@@EngineerMK2004 when you toss them on the ground, do they usually just sit there stunned?
@gwertzusmaximus4674
@gwertzusmaximus4674 10 күн бұрын
​@@KINGSOMALIAmost of them do. If you get thrown onto the ground unprepared you are mostly completly shocked and most of the time out of breath.
@shawntailor5485
@shawntailor5485 10 күн бұрын
Yup conscience has quenched a few fires ,its a sucky position but thats the price ​@@CanadaFree-ce9jn
@JomToons
@JomToons 10 күн бұрын
I’m so grateful for my 3 years of wrestling and 1 year of Jiu-Jitsu experience. It’s humbling to think about how skilled lifelong martial artists are - it really puts things into perspective and reminds me never to underestimate anyone. I’d love to explore boxing and Muay Thai in the future when the time and funds allow!
@alexcameron2352
@alexcameron2352 9 күн бұрын
So because world class fighters are better than you, you can't fight? I wish criminals thought that way
@Theboyking43
@Theboyking43 9 күн бұрын
Yup! You truly don’t know how helpless you are till that first day you step on the mats. After that it takes true discipline and humility to grow in your training.
@-PURPLE-HEAD
@-PURPLE-HEAD 6 күн бұрын
But the thing is, when you compete in those environments you’re playing by their rules -in their arena. Real fights are different! In other words, it’s NOT “anything goes”
@spaldychops
@spaldychops 6 күн бұрын
@@-PURPLE-HEAD you sound like Bradley Martin lol
@captainrex45
@captainrex45 8 күн бұрын
Honestly, this is just my opinion, so please don't take it too seriously. I'm 28, nearly 29, I've been in about 4 fights in my life, 2 of them ended with both of us walking our separate ways, the 3rd one i knocked the guy out, the forth one i can't say because KZbin won't let me type the word, but it was bad. You can have all the training in the world, but all it takes is one mistake, and the tables turn. Same with soldiers, they train but when it comes down to the real deal, it's different in a way. If someone is mad enough and confident enough, can take more punishment than you, is stronger than you, all of these things ARE a factor 100%
@JosephBannister-k3p
@JosephBannister-k3p 12 күн бұрын
From working in biker bars in the 1990s as a bartender, I can say most people who think they can fight, can’t. The ones who could actually fight had a few go to moves that would just dust the other person, assuming relative size. Most moves I saw were 1-2 punch, over hand right, and of course haymaker. I saw some judo throws for sure. And a judo throw on the concrete floor pretty much ended things right away. Never saw any kind of BJJ work, but UFC hadn’t really blown up that much then. I will tell you what I did see, if two guys were in the same club, they’d throw a few punches, then wrestle around before they either tired out or other members broke them up. If it was two guys not affiliated with the same group, I saw knives. That shit was ugly, and someone or both were headed to the hospital. And other people would jump in almost right away. Those nights, I would just go out the food window to the kitchen, backdoor, hop on my bike and leave.
@sahamal_savu
@sahamal_savu 12 күн бұрын
Sometimes, when I bump into some hilariously over-confident 20 something year old, I wish he could see some of the things we've seen. When you see what can happen when someone pulls a knife, it changes the way you look at the world.
@JosephBannister-k3p
@JosephBannister-k3p 12 күн бұрын
@ that’s for sure. There are usually no winners of a knife fight. Prison or hospital or mortuary.
@mattoltman7122
@mattoltman7122 10 күн бұрын
Having a conversation with our instructor for bjj and Muay Thai (oddly enough not judo) we asked him what he used most to end fights and he said, “I’ve never had anybody get up from a throw.”
@onnicent303
@onnicent303 10 күн бұрын
Work in a bar in 2024, the most impressive moves youd see is extended clip, sawed off shotgun and a granade launcher :D
@reggiestockton8166
@reggiestockton8166 6 күн бұрын
Lol I'm a 1-2 punch kind of guy 😂 anthing to setup the right straight really. Most guys that can't fight always walk up trying to use intimidation with their chin sticking out and I can't help myself 🤣
@MonkeyModder12
@MonkeyModder12 12 күн бұрын
Training has made me much more cautious and much quicker to let things go. The world is a dangerous place and people can be very unpredictable. The last thing I want is to not come home to my wife and kids because I was fighting an ego battle and got my head split open on concrete. Fighting "on the streets" is almost never worth it.
@theKashConnoisseur
@theKashConnoisseur 12 күн бұрын
When I started training at 13 I figured that I could probably beat 90% of the untrained masses. When I started concealed carrying later in life, that's when I learned how little fighting skills actually matter in a real self defense scenario. I still train martial arts because I love it, but when I'm thinking about defense I'm going to train my draw-to-first-shot times more than my boxing or my BJJ.
@Megladong
@Megladong 10 күн бұрын
What makes someone a good fighter?? Usually a very mean older brother..
@UncleTermite
@UncleTermite 6 күн бұрын
That’s definitely an advantage I had one and grew tougher then anyone i knkw even have a few boxing bouts , grappling and dud Martial arts fir over 3 decades ,my son is an on,y child and it’s night and day he doesn’t have my drive .
@reggiestockton8166
@reggiestockton8166 6 күн бұрын
Exactly 😂 I learned to fight being raised around a bunch of jail niggas and having to fight for my cereal 😂
@CoachKyleZ
@CoachKyleZ 12 күн бұрын
They beat up their imaginary friends. How can real people be any different?
@BlackHatGhostAnon5670
@BlackHatGhostAnon5670 9 күн бұрын
Visualisation is more powerful than you think. Many highly decorated fighters and athletes use it.
@CoachKyleZ
@CoachKyleZ 9 күн бұрын
@@BlackHatGhostAnon5670 visualization is great when you actually train.
@BlackHatGhostAnon5670
@BlackHatGhostAnon5670 9 күн бұрын
@@CoachKyleZ I agree
@Craig_Doll
@Craig_Doll 6 күн бұрын
Best comment
@hawk5592
@hawk5592 12 күн бұрын
I could beat a T. rex in a fight tbh
@TheDragonKhan
@TheDragonKhan 12 күн бұрын
Real
@DannyKTurns
@DannyKTurns 12 күн бұрын
You couldn’t beat Mr T
@TheElbowMerchant
@TheElbowMerchant 12 күн бұрын
You were the reason they went extinct. They would rather cease to exist than catch those hands.
@hawk5592
@hawk5592 12 күн бұрын
@@TheElbowMerchant that’s what I’m saying bro finally someone understands
@trump45and2zig-zags
@trump45and2zig-zags 12 күн бұрын
Use that jab and you got it! Lol
@Shrapnel82
@Shrapnel82 9 күн бұрын
Perhaps it's some evolutionary deal. For example, if average guy were to go against Jon Jones in an MMA fight, belief in ability to fight is better than accepting the inability to fight. Of course, accepting your limitations and not ever getting into a fight is always the best, however, if you actually have no choice, it is better to believe you can fight. The reason is if you are in that situation, fighting on Jones (or any other top level fighter), and you believe you will get savagely beaten and can do nothing about it, then you will get savagely beaten. However, if you believe you will fight, you will at least try something, and most likely get savagely beaten, but there is maybe a 1% chance you could get luck, the other guy gets unlucky, and something happens in your favor. If it's an average guy who can fight (bad guy who gets into fights often because he is a bad guy), you might have a 25% chance, maybe 15%. It would be better than if you do nothing and resign yourself to fate. It's like the advice about deterring predators by appearing intimidating, causing just enough doubt that the wolf, or bear might not consider you easy prey. You certainly are, but there's a slim chance the predator reconsiders, which is better than no chance. Same with human predators. If you signal "I'm weak and can be easily beaten", there's a good chance you'll be attacked. If you are weak and can't fight, but put on a credible display of "I'm a badass, don't mess with me", you might trigger a second thought. It also might not work, and you'll still get pummeled, but a slim chance is better than none.
@BigronnieTriceps
@BigronnieTriceps 7 күн бұрын
Bro.....Jon Jones has never lost a fight to another PROFESSIONAL fighter. Not only that, but the very top of the UFC divisions. These are the best fighters at that weight class and Jon Jones has not lost to a single one of them. That should tell you that as an average man there is no fucking way in HELL you would even stand a 1% chance in a fair fight against Jon. Youre delusional.
@TheElbowMerchant
@TheElbowMerchant 12 күн бұрын
I just see red, and bodies hit the floor! Love those guys. Truth is, even though most hope they'll rise to the occasion, they will inevitably fall to the level of their training, which is often none. Even so, it would suck to move through life in constant fear, so that level of delusion might just be necessary to get through the day without being anxious every step of the way.
@thealkymyst
@thealkymyst 12 күн бұрын
Men that have not trained in violence are still dangerous, and your attitude says either you don't train or if you do its always in a controlled safe way.
@sahamal_savu
@sahamal_savu 12 күн бұрын
Hah, you nailed it. I mean, why so many (men in general) have to conjure some false bravado so they don't become an anxious mess. I lost those delusions when I was quite young so I just lived with the fear. You come to appreciate it...that fear has saved me from some seriously horrible situations (criminal charges, serious physical injury, possibly being stabbed during a street fight.)
@HaroldBluetooth-uz1zz
@HaroldBluetooth-uz1zz 11 күн бұрын
@@sahamal_savuI think wrestling should be mandatory for men in high school.
@CandaEH
@CandaEH 11 күн бұрын
@@sahamal_savu I don't think its bravado, just male stupidity.
@blacksabbathmatters
@blacksabbathmatters 10 күн бұрын
So you think life is just a daily game of walking around through a world of people looking for a fight? Maybe its just you and your insecurity.
@Jenjak
@Jenjak 12 күн бұрын
After a 4 years of intense training and 4 k1 fights, my confidence level is surprisingly lower than before...
@eddard9442
@eddard9442 12 күн бұрын
You must have insane cardio out compared to the average person.
@SIMUL4CR4
@SIMUL4CR4 11 күн бұрын
Just means you're actually pushing yourself and growing. People who don't train don't even know how little they know. I'd rather have a clear grasp of my abilities than false confidence any day. All the best in your fight career.
@notproductiveproductions3504
@notproductiveproductions3504 11 күн бұрын
Update us after another 4 years
@Bruh-ui9lo
@Bruh-ui9lo 11 күн бұрын
Check your t levels
@toddianuzzi9296
@toddianuzzi9296 10 күн бұрын
Lol it's crazy how that works
@umargordon4339
@umargordon4339 9 күн бұрын
I have training, but i dont enjoy hurting people & if i do get into a fight i always assume the other person knows how to fight if im going to fight them, especially when defending myself. But i think self awareness & being aware of your surroundings with a bit of experience will give you a nice advantage if you train. Judo, jiu-jitsu & boxing is my background
@xuanfe
@xuanfe 12 күн бұрын
Possibly that no-one realises that fighting needs so much technique. Real fighters make a proper punch look very simple to do, so no-one thinks they ever need to be trained in that motion. Everyone just assumes they can already do that. I think a lot of people still believe strength alone wins fights, and also believe that anger gives them strength, so somehow they’ll just win by out-muscling opponents
@FalseProphetFallacy
@FalseProphetFallacy 12 күн бұрын
Then look at Dricus and Emmett 😂
@user-uo8mx3cv5k
@user-uo8mx3cv5k 12 күн бұрын
I think it's because fighting is seen as such a primitive thing, that the idea of martial arts being highly technical and requiring IQ doesn't really register to the average person. Fighting is just violence for the untrained, but once you start training, you'll realize why it's considered an art, and you'll definitely realize that there's levels to it and it will be incredibly humbling.
@znail4675
@znail4675 10 күн бұрын
It actually takes a lot of martial arts training to get better then someone with no formal training. It requires training until the techniques are done by reflex, then they are better then the natural reflex.
@1337skillzor
@1337skillzor 10 күн бұрын
untrained and unexperienced people also don't realize the amount of damage and pain you could receive in a real fight. and how quickly it could go sideways. they think they'll be able to just keep pounding and wiggling their way out of any scenario if they're angry enough. there's a deep understanding that comes with getting your lights turned off during training/mock fights
@blacksabbathmatters
@blacksabbathmatters 10 күн бұрын
​@@1337skillzorThats because those " untrained" people arent out there running into proffessional fighters, so size and strength usually prevail. And on average folks arent starting fights with people bigger than they are. On average people arent out there starting fights at all. Cuz guns.
@EduardoDoctor
@EduardoDoctor 12 күн бұрын
The boxer guy said "just learn wrestling real quick" 😂
@necromancer6405
@necromancer6405 11 күн бұрын
I mean, not wrong. If neither know how to fight and one of them knows how to take the other off their feet, the guy doing so will be better off. Not hard to learn one takedown and train that for a day to get some experience. Better than doing nothing, eh?
@fizzywhizzbanger5610
@fizzywhizzbanger5610 11 күн бұрын
This is actually really solid advice. It's really not difficult to drill a double leg takedown over the course of a day; if you drop under somebody's first punch and bowl them over, there's a good chance you're going to knock the wind out of him, plus you're now in a mounted position able to hammer away in the couple of moments your opponent is stunned.
@JD2jr.
@JD2jr. 11 күн бұрын
Also the dollar store version of 10000 techniques vs 1 technique 10000 times. Better to focus on one thing, Newbies learn enough in a 45 minute class to use it against other newbies, you could learn enough in a full day to be better than someone else who didn't prepare.
@lambanator4221
@lambanator4221 11 күн бұрын
​@fizzywhizzbanger5610 not if I have my wrestlers block in place 😂. I kid of course.
@123Conqueror
@123Conqueror 10 күн бұрын
Yes that's a dumb answer you can't learn wrestling in 1 day and without a proper coach
@zarathos3082
@zarathos3082 Күн бұрын
One thing you can do to do better in “tomorrows fight” is gather as much intel as possible. Find out what martial arts background the other fighter has. Know your opponent.
@umustwantme
@umustwantme 10 күн бұрын
Even as a guy who trained for years, I have 2-3 minutes in the gas tank. So someone with less skills, and a better gas tank, can still put you in a bad position. Some of the toughest people I have ever trained with, are the most unassuming. So, DONT FIGHT, unless you must!
@lolcow6668
@lolcow6668 10 күн бұрын
You need to pace yourself better then. If you gas out that fast
@time2chill121
@time2chill121 10 күн бұрын
That's what fighting is...The gas tank. ..I know how to fight because of martial arts and getting into a bunch of street fights...but when you have no gas tank anyone could win
@tbasxpower7555
@tbasxpower7555 10 күн бұрын
@@lolcow6668he’s probably a heavyweight but yea pacing breathing relaxing important knowing when to use that extra strength and aggression is important too
@Palaecro
@Palaecro 9 күн бұрын
This is the main reason I know I'd be screwed, I got health issues that have shot my gas tank. Running wouldn't even be an option. I gotta get good at de-escalation.
@game-zer0387
@game-zer0387 9 күн бұрын
2-3 min gas tank is insanely bad. But tbh street fights doesn't last that long so you're probably fine 😂
@misunderstoodmadman6230
@misunderstoodmadman6230 12 күн бұрын
I have around 20 years in martial arts, i have a small amateur record, have been in street fights and i am a decently sized person. Whenever the "who would win in a fight " conversation starts with my friends everybody basically gives me a "slight vantage" . I don't try to argue because i just find it funny. People really think that they can overcome years of training with anger.
@russoga
@russoga 12 күн бұрын
I can overcame you. With the knife I carry on my pocket. Thats the point. Your just showing your ego. I doubt you even got in real fights. I got. It is not funny. And I am not proud of it nor do think I am better than others. Only with my knife. You would loose 99% chance against the knife. Never underestimate real world and people actions.....
@Nightmare-go7kf
@Nightmare-go7kf 11 күн бұрын
Anger actually makes you fight worse and like not a little worse a shit ton worse
@lilmanq7746
@lilmanq7746 11 күн бұрын
@@Nightmare-go7kfyeah because you tend to lose all your form, but if you’re angered usually you also tend to go harder
@thethinkingman5645
@thethinkingman5645 11 күн бұрын
The masses are always emotional Each and every single one FEELS unique but statistically aren't Ego is the biggest reason for failure
@steezyszam
@steezyszam 11 күн бұрын
@@lilmanq7746 fair, but it doesn't matter if you can't control it and can't hit anything
@yamilsantos6533
@yamilsantos6533 3 күн бұрын
LOL IT'S NOT MUCH OF A CHOICE SINCE IF SOMEONE TRIES TO HURT YOU YOU HAVE TO DEFEND YOURSELF THAT'S NOT BEING A COWARD THAT'S BEING BRAVE IN MY BOOK
@George-xf1pr
@George-xf1pr 11 күн бұрын
My spidey senses would be going mental if some random bloke came up to me and asked "do you think you could survive an ambush right now?"
@definitlynotbenlente7671
@definitlynotbenlente7671 11 күн бұрын
Would it still be a ambush then?
@SenseiSeth
@SenseiSeth 11 күн бұрын
Better than “can you fight?0
@George-xf1pr
@George-xf1pr 11 күн бұрын
@@SenseiSeth I'd check the bushes before answering
@vlnow
@vlnow 11 күн бұрын
I worked in a very rough pub as a young man. I learned to sense the vibe that occurs before a fight, and i will leave any bar or situation when i feel that vibe. Even if i dont know why, or who is going to kick off. Its a vibe in the air. And i learned also to descalate if in such a situation and talk it down. Or run . These skills are way better than being good at fighting i think. Because the best thing is to survive, not to win, even if you could. The prize the winner often gets is police trouble anyway. Or revenge and drama. Fighting is stupid.
@onlyP3AK
@onlyP3AK 9 күн бұрын
true but when u can't run u can't run
@cadenlewis213
@cadenlewis213 9 күн бұрын
So you scared to fight? Hel nah
@zakzac1
@zakzac1 9 күн бұрын
Energy. Some people can read or sense energy better than others.
@marcelmeyer6984
@marcelmeyer6984 9 күн бұрын
100% man, but if you can't run you can't run and you should know how to avoid getting damage
@maxmustermann7794
@maxmustermann7794 9 күн бұрын
@@marcelmeyer6984 I agree, knowing how to defend yourself in situations where you really can't run, for now at least, is good. Even though I can't and just pray to the gods that being tall scares them off haha I think a lot of people get into bad situations not because of getting attacked but soley because of their own stupid shit, avoiding that alone keeps you out of trouble so much. Learned that the hard way lol
@MinussyChan
@MinussyChan 6 күн бұрын
The first guy thinks life is a cartoon where the angriest wins a fist fight
@LifeandLiesSyra
@LifeandLiesSyra 11 күн бұрын
I think the main reason is "fake it till you make it" as a defense mechanism. Any fight is the worst possible moment for someone's life and if any doubt arises you will be screwed before even starting. For this reason genetically we are absolutely overconfident. When you train you can tame that and be more nuanced and skilled.
@symbolsarenotreality4595
@symbolsarenotreality4595 12 күн бұрын
Bouncer of 17 years here, most people's idea of fighting and what a bouncer does is quite different to reality. A good bouncer neutralises violence instead of creating more of it. It is 99% social and 1% physical. The majority of the time I am taking peoples backs in a double overhook while they are already fighting someone. ITs pretty stupid to stand in the middle of a fight I learned early in my career, and as any ref knows when butter bean is swinging.
@averagehuman9834
@averagehuman9834 12 күн бұрын
Dunno if I am just dumb, but I feel like you meant double underhook, but if you did mean double overhook, it'd be really interesting to know how you did it cuz most people shoot for underhooks and give you overhooks
@symbolsarenotreality4595
@symbolsarenotreality4595 12 күн бұрын
@@averagehuman9834 double overhook from behind with hands clapsed on spine, if you underhook from behind you end up in a full nelson
@averagehuman9834
@averagehuman9834 12 күн бұрын
@@symbolsarenotreality4595 What do you mean by hands clasped on spine
@SIMUL4CR4
@SIMUL4CR4 11 күн бұрын
@@averagehuman9834 Second bouncer/martial artist here. He means you clasp your own hands behind their back pressed up against their spine, pinning their arms. You don't go for underhooks, because usually you are pulling them off someone and your priority is stopping them from striking further, so you need to tie their arms up. Also, it's a less size-dependant technique than underhooks/fullnelson. If you're big enough, you can grab them however you want, but he's right, 90% of physical removals end like that. However, the real point was that 95% of the time we're using words, not physicality.
@averagehuman9834
@averagehuman9834 11 күн бұрын
@@SIMUL4CR4 So if I am reading this right, you run between two aggressors and get the double overhook to move out the more aggressive one while your friends deal with the aftermath, which makes sense. And the reason why I brought this up despite this not being the main point is that it is only part that confused me while everything else made sense. Btw, if you care to extend the conversation, imagine you get hit by double underhooks, how could you deal with that
@TheWillToFight
@TheWillToFight 9 күн бұрын
I think the people you’re looking for you won’t find because they’re behind their computer screens
@ArkhBaegor
@ArkhBaegor 12 күн бұрын
lmao Seth just ROASTING the guy at 17:18 right to his face with a big smile, absolutely savage.
@satyre81
@satyre81 12 күн бұрын
My absolute favorite part of the video, lol. Dude had no idea.
@HolofoilKev
@HolofoilKev 12 күн бұрын
Do we not absorb the power of our family members?
@callumdent
@callumdent 12 күн бұрын
@@HolofoilKev Only if you defeat them and absorb their soul.
@MRFLOPPYmr
@MRFLOPPYmr 12 күн бұрын
​@@HolofoilKev X times 0 is still 0 🤷‍♂️
@jackmehoff915
@jackmehoff915 12 күн бұрын
Seth should be roasted he plays karate
@stevehamoen
@stevehamoen 10 күн бұрын
17:14 - "A little hand me down. I like how that passes through the family. This guy was great. It passes down. I box now" (without training of course) AMAZING!
@Warrior-l4h
@Warrior-l4h 8 күн бұрын
He's joking about it but he's actually wrong. A lot of what makes a person exceptionally good at something is genetics.
@NostradamusJr
@NostradamusJr 7 күн бұрын
He should learn about Lamarckism and acquired characteristics lol
@Pppp-yf4lj
@Pppp-yf4lj 6 күн бұрын
ya duh?? its called jeans
@davidglenn2739
@davidglenn2739 8 күн бұрын
I am subscribed and I sometimes watch your videos, mostly because, while I have taken a little Karate, I have much more experience with other styles, but I love this video. Very interesting and entertaining. Keep up the good work!
@cannafarmer
@cannafarmer 10 күн бұрын
The more fights you've been in the less you want too fight. The sh!t hurts
@notmyname9625
@notmyname9625 8 күн бұрын
Until u get CTE.. then u want to fight everybody
@deanwinchester57
@deanwinchester57 7 күн бұрын
Yeah. The head concessions are really bad + low kicks really hurt
@cannafarmer
@cannafarmer 7 күн бұрын
@deanwinchester57 you aren't lieing, that's a Young man's game, once you get older you've taken too much damage. I know I used to have an iron jaw and I then I could get knocked out by regular guys landing a good hit near the end.
@TVCMASTER1
@TVCMASTER1 6 күн бұрын
@@cannafarmerone of my biggest fears is loosing a tooth to a knuckle lol
@cannafarmer
@cannafarmer 6 күн бұрын
@TVCMASTER1 I'd trade all my teeth to fix my brain , it's not the same and I am meaner than I used to be for sure. Be careful of the 🧠 man 👊
@rns7426
@rns7426 12 күн бұрын
As a judo black belt when people say “can you fight?” I reply, no but I can grapple some. That’s how I feel about it. For the guy that said wrestling is the easiest thing to learn, never wrestled.
@SIMUL4CR4
@SIMUL4CR4 11 күн бұрын
Grappling is way harder than striking to pick up, you're correct. And I'm saying that as someone with a striking background.
@JD2jr.
@JD2jr. 11 күн бұрын
He's not wrong, tho. You can't be a good wrestler in a day, but if you only have a day, wrestling (grappling in general) will be the only thing that can significantly improve their chances.
@rns7426
@rns7426 11 күн бұрын
@ I feel that and agree. If you can’t wrestle you can’t fight. But yeah, good luck leaning and making anything work from wrestling or judo quickly. Those are sports where you can be that guy or kid that is athletic and walks onto a ball team and becomes a stand out immediately. You walk onto a mat and you get your ass kicked. For a long time before you hand out any ass kickings. Seen lots of kids and lots of men walk away from it because they couldn’t be a sport hero like they were in football, basketball ball, etc . Combat sports aren’t easy and they take grit and tenacity like no ball or field sport.
@JD2jr.
@JD2jr. 11 күн бұрын
@@rns7426 Sure, but again, after one class you can easily have a noob throwing a super aggressive osoto that flattens every other noob. The only way to beat an experienced grappler is with your own experience, but the hypothetical isn't about winning a competition with trained opponents.
@jonaskarlsson5901
@jonaskarlsson5901 10 күн бұрын
@@JD2jr. you talk like you are a wrestler...
@DutchDiederik
@DutchDiederik 9 күн бұрын
People who actually know how to fight never get into fights in the street because they know how dangerous fights can be.
@darrentupman8143
@darrentupman8143 12 күн бұрын
learning how to fight makes you confident but also less confident at the same time. You see the level of skill and damage people can cause, and alot of these people look unassuming. In a room of ten people, yes im confident, but also realise there could be wrestlers, thai boxers and BJJ players who look like regular people
@russoga
@russoga 12 күн бұрын
Even with 10 skinny boys untrained you will be dead, dude.... you have 0 chance....
@darrentupman8143
@darrentupman8143 12 күн бұрын
@ I didn’t mean 10 at once I mean like 10 random people on average
@russoga
@russoga 11 күн бұрын
@@darrentupman8143 I still think you cannot fight 10 people, dude. Even average. Real life is not Jason Statham movie.
@mrman6335
@mrman6335 11 күн бұрын
@@russoga dont think he means all of them at once
@russoga
@russoga 11 күн бұрын
@@mrman6335 I know. But still dout he could handle it.
@Jake-pz7oi
@Jake-pz7oi 12 күн бұрын
2:45 this man’s kindness and sincerity is really challenging all my previous feelings towards ‘the French’ anyone else?
@ufis567
@ufis567 10 күн бұрын
Why would you generalize a nation of tens of millions of people representing cultures from all over the world
@arnbloodbound3650
@arnbloodbound3650 10 күн бұрын
​@@ufis567...The french don't really like foreigners. And that is an understatement, so that's why.
@Idk98268
@Idk98268 10 күн бұрын
Are you joking or have you never realized that generalizing is incredibly stupid and wrong 100% of the time?
@jean-christophearsenault2104
@jean-christophearsenault2104 9 күн бұрын
The french stereotype is that they are effeminate where I come from. But it doesn't make sense!
@joshhale9355
@joshhale9355 8 күн бұрын
People that are training or have will be the first to downplay their abilities. I did BJJ and competed for about 10 years, I know I can fight and yet I’d still say “I hope so”. It’s always those overly macho guys that’ll say “oh hell yeah I can fight I’m so strong and cool” and they’d get put on their ass immediately.
@kavishkanathaniel9912
@kavishkanathaniel9912 12 күн бұрын
Seth trolling the last guy with the boxing being passed down through the family comment 😂
@joshuanederstigt3463
@joshuanederstigt3463 10 күн бұрын
3:45 this guy didn't even speak English fluently (not hating, it's clearly a second language) and still managed to sound far more intelligent than 99% of random people who are asked that question
@fire.dragon1976
@fire.dragon1976 9 күн бұрын
49 years old, and have been training Muay Thai off and on for 30+ years. I have seen tons of new guys over the years come into the gyms thinking they are straight badass and they all last 1 month tops. AND if they do get to the sparring stage, they gas out way too quick. The humble ones are the ones who last.
@GameOn0827
@GameOn0827 12 күн бұрын
"You have 24 hours to train, what do you do?" Binge watch Sensei Seth, duh. Basically the cheat code for invincibility.
@wayneholmes637
@wayneholmes637 10 күн бұрын
Buy a plane ticket...
@sebfox2194
@sebfox2194 9 күн бұрын
Brown nose Sensei Seth, and hope he likes your comment. Then you can 🪦 happy.
@GameOn0827
@GameOn0827 9 күн бұрын
@@sebfox2194 Do bots respond to replies?
@FIxt00l
@FIxt00l 12 күн бұрын
The squirrel: Best defense?! No be there! (proceeds to flee).
@bratosin1
@bratosin1 10 күн бұрын
Asking people that they can fight is like asking them can you run 1 mile but they never tried running 1 mile , it's very hard to understand what it feels like if you never tried by yourself
@Itisstillok
@Itisstillok 12 күн бұрын
I think that the fact that this person-to-person video interview, makes people make a more restrained assessment of themselves than they might actually think about themselves. On the flip side, I can imagine that an interview on a university campus with friends listening might give a person more reason to make an overstated assessment of their abilities.
@SoundBoy808
@SoundBoy808 12 күн бұрын
I have done martial arts my whole life, and I enjoy sparring (Not full contact) . I hate fighting. I have literal ZERO desire to actually punch or hurt someone. Its a very big mental step to WANT to hurt someone, which is needed for actual fighting.
@PhotonBeast
@PhotonBeast 12 күн бұрын
It really is. I had a friend (who was trained/training in TKD) give me a lesson once (as someone who never did any kind of martial arts before) and even to this day, I distinctly remember when they were holding a kick pad and had me practice a basic roundhouse. Despite all the encouragement, despite knowing I wasn't going to hurt them in any way, despite consciously wanting to kick (and kick through) with power, I could still feel my body and mind pulling the kick at the last moments every single time. And as you said, that was just a practice situation. Yeah, maybe the scales would balance slightly different in an actual fight, but I know that that mental barrier would still be there in some form or fashion.
@russoga
@russoga 12 күн бұрын
You are saying it as you would not get hurt too into real fights LOL what a big ego.....
@stedyedy23
@stedyedy23 12 күн бұрын
What's sparring without full contact
@SoundBoy808
@SoundBoy808 12 күн бұрын
@@stedyedy23 its sparring? If you ask that question you have never sparred.
@SoundBoy808
@SoundBoy808 12 күн бұрын
@@russoga it might be relevant if it made sense?
@JordanBlue1
@JordanBlue1 9 күн бұрын
The second guy was so honest
@PhilippeArantesTina
@PhilippeArantesTina 12 күн бұрын
Because they never fought. i realised i knew nothing till i started praticing kick boxing and sabate. And to me... a good fighter is the one that can descalate a possible figthing situation
@casketthefriendlybed9699
@casketthefriendlybed9699 12 күн бұрын
Plenty of them have fought but theyre just fighting bums with no training and a crowd of idiots who hype them up. Ive been around these type of people growing up since i was a kid and myself always getting into fights every other day on a norm. There are exceptions where its people who never got into a fight and simply just has anger issuee or lying to themselves for a confidence boost or to intimidate others so people wont try them which you have people who get bullied so much and cant fight that thats the route they chose go down cause 70% of the time it works
@Florian-d4o
@Florian-d4o 12 күн бұрын
How is that a good fighter? Sorry but thats some pseudo wise bs
@PhilippeArantesTina
@PhilippeArantesTina 12 күн бұрын
@@casketthefriendlybed9699 exception of people who never got in a fight ? Gues it depends of where you live cause where i grow up the exeption is the people who got in fights.
@casketthefriendlybed9699
@casketthefriendlybed9699 12 күн бұрын
@@PhilippeArantesTina You didnt read what I said "There are exceptions where its people who never got into a fight and simply just has anger issuee or lying to themselves for a confidence boost or to intimidate others so people wont try them which you have people who get bullied so much and cant fight that thats the route they chose go down cause 70% of the time it works" I know this for a fact, ive grew up around violence and my schools itself wasnt allowed in regular schools. All behavior problemed kids either in gangs or wannabe gang members, i understand this mentallity 100% those schools are like being locked up in juvi facilities like Horizons/Spotford/Crossroads. Same exact mentality youd get with a sprinkle of people who are in and out of psych wards on meds or shouldnt be on meds because they just randomly snap if theyre taking them. The mentallity doesnt magically change because youre in a different location, it carries on to the next. When theres that person whos always getting bullied(typically the quiet person) they either snap or they do and act a certain way to come off intimidating so people will leave them alone, i use kids being bullied as a prime example because thats where you will notice those patterns more
@casketthefriendlybed9699
@casketthefriendlybed9699 12 күн бұрын
@@PhilippeArantesTina Doesnt matter where you live. You didnt actually read what I said
@phyrisl2
@phyrisl2 12 күн бұрын
I think many who train/compete will realize how vulnerable they are, but that training does confer some advantage. What worries me is that in competitions I've adrenaline dumped so hard that it makes me concerned that despite all my exercise, that I could lose my head and gas out.
@Kurakumakachilibaba
@Kurakumakachilibaba 12 күн бұрын
That is actually the advantage of sparring and getting into competitions, you get used to the adrenaline dump while getting punched in the face or grappling until you learn to manage it. A lot of people don't realize whether it's a fight or flight response the adrenaline dump screws over your body brain connection.
@calebwithak
@calebwithak 14 сағат бұрын
Naivety breeds confidence. That’s why you knowing about fighting and how to fight makes you sometimes question yourself because you have a greater understanding of all the negative possibilities.
@shyahisotalo7826
@shyahisotalo7826 11 күн бұрын
A bully wouldn't say "a certain time and be there" thats like 1950's to 1980's Hollywood. An actually bully would just sabotage you any opportunity they could.
@Squashylemon
@Squashylemon 12 күн бұрын
We spend so much time thinking about how we would do in a fight that we convince ourselves that thinking is enough and we don't need training.
@tenslein8977
@tenslein8977 8 күн бұрын
Fighting does come naturally to an extent and most people are not formally trained, so people are not wrong when they say they can fight. They are competent compared to the average person.
@helloneighbor11
@helloneighbor11 7 күн бұрын
The average person is an average fighter
@benjaminstevens6043
@benjaminstevens6043 12 күн бұрын
dude, i cant believe you ran in to Squirrell Master...what a legend. I havent seen him since half-baked!
@MW-dd8vk
@MW-dd8vk 12 күн бұрын
It’s interesting. People who can’t fight overestimate their abilities but People who can fight underestimate their abilities. I think it’s a case of Ego vs Humility
@JC-oy3ns
@JC-oy3ns 10 күн бұрын
That is pretty much the exact definition of the Dunning-Kruger effect.
@Warrior-l4h
@Warrior-l4h 8 күн бұрын
The thing is, many people who can fight are also pragmatic. Why train all the time if you're not a professional fighter? The only kind of fighting experience that matters is where the other person is intending to knock you out. And even then, it is better to not risk permanent injury. People who "train" are massively underestimating those who don't.
@EmperorsNewWardrobe
@EmperorsNewWardrobe 9 күн бұрын
People don’t necessarily think they can fight. They claim - in front of a camera - that they can fight. Doesn’t take a lot of thought to realise the difference or the reputational costs of NOT giving answer
@irishninja9857
@irishninja9857 12 күн бұрын
The Dunning-Krueger effect basically explains this. What's weirder than people thinking they can fight, despite a lack of experience , is when all their friends also think that person can fight despite never actually seeing them fight.
@theKashConnoisseur
@theKashConnoisseur 12 күн бұрын
All of my friends telling people I could fight saved me from having to fight people back in school lol.
@russoga
@russoga 12 күн бұрын
Majoriry of people never got in fight. I got and I am literally the one here saying I DONT UNDERESTIMATE OTHER PEOPLE. NEVER! It just show how many men have big egos.......
@alfanscholz8663
@alfanscholz8663 12 күн бұрын
​@@russoga Not egos, it's just a matter of comprehending the question. Everybody can fight, it doesn't matter if they have never fought before. I can swim even though I've never trained for it. The more appropriate question is, how good are they at fighting?
@alfanscholz8663
@alfanscholz8663 11 күн бұрын
@@russoga ?
@russoga
@russoga 11 күн бұрын
@@alfanscholz8663 I dont know. But it matters? You can still loose to unexperienced people. Its not just about knowing how to fight or if you did some sparring with your partners at gym. Real life is not that simple as in light sparrings. Thats what I mean. Understand?
@HarrisTheHeckler
@HarrisTheHeckler 12 күн бұрын
You nailed it. People assume they're going to be fighting someone else that can't fight/is at their skill level. I also think, for men, saying you can't fight feels like an admission of weakness. If you admit you can't protect yourself then how can you protect your loved ones if necessary? Easier to claim competency.
@TheMike48
@TheMike48 8 күн бұрын
"Depends on my level of anger" LMFAO This vid is gonna be a banger
@metalface_villain
@metalface_villain 12 күн бұрын
outside of people who train, everyone i know think they can beat absolutely everybody. i think it comes from ignorance and ego, hell sometimes i even catch myself thinking i could beat people who i got 0 chance against xD
@RK_peace
@RK_peace 10 күн бұрын
French dude with green backpack was quite honest and humble, refreshing.
@cutmovies586
@cutmovies586 4 күн бұрын
I like how you show the normal reactions of people. I feel like its depolarizing, a unique thing on the internet. Brings people together.
@TheSuperGringo
@TheSuperGringo 12 күн бұрын
Because some people have more intent than training, then I've also seen people who had a lot of training, but when the time came, they didn't have enough intent.
@twobirds01
@twobirds01 10 күн бұрын
16:44 this dude being so confident in his mental toughness when he’s never actually trained before is wild, it makes more sense to me thinking they can fight, because they’ve watched it and think they can replicate it, this dude has no idea about his mental toughness and is so confident that it’d be great😂
@stevejung6470
@stevejung6470 7 күн бұрын
That guy was the most oblivious and most ego..
@JKDVIPER
@JKDVIPER 8 күн бұрын
What i try to do is, be as ready as possible without obsessing over it, training to a detriment, or gas lighting ourselves by overconfidence. 😁💯💡
@tsak912
@tsak912 12 күн бұрын
The toughest part of fighting is managing your heart rate.
@charliesimar7541
@charliesimar7541 11 күн бұрын
It's more challenging when you have a heart murmur.
@theaikidoka
@theaikidoka 12 күн бұрын
I agree with Seth - I think a lot of people conflate the ability to easily get angry and the willingness to lash out, with the ability to skillfully use violence. That is ESPECIALLY true if they think it means they can fight against a resisting opponent. In my experience, MOST people DON'T want to actually hurt someone else - what they really want is for the other person to back down and to show subservient behaviour. In other words, they don't want to actually snap an arm, but they want people to think that they can and would and therefore not give them any attitude. How many times have you seen people puff out their chests, wave their arms threateningly and yell things like 'come on then, I'll kick your ass'? If they REALLY could fight and were willing to, they wouldn't do that, they would just attack immediately and mercilessly. What they want is for the other person to back down hurriedly. I'm not saying people who do that are always unable to fight, I'm saying the idea of being a hard case is appealing, the reality is scary and often really dangerous.
@amyb.6368
@amyb.6368 10 күн бұрын
At the same time, when you've been in a real fight and know the damage they can do, you'd want the other person to back down before you get there. Though I suppose the quiet confidence that comes of skill would be more apparent and make the other person think twice before it ever got to you having to flail around.
@mr.f_dnb
@mr.f_dnb 7 күн бұрын
Love this video 🙌 its a question that most of these people seem to have never been asked, so its really interesting to hear their answers
@chancepaladin
@chancepaladin 12 күн бұрын
seth is clearly planning some ninja turtle shit in central park
@torstenscott7571
@torstenscott7571 12 күн бұрын
The difference between interviewing random people vs the internet trolls is that the online trolls can vomit their insecurities without the consequences of having to prove their imagined fighting skills. This leads me to think that one's own ego, which can inhibit even the idea of training or admitting weaknesses, is in fact the biggest obstacle to becoming a better fighter. Then again, if I just get mad enough and see red, then training doesn't matter!
@vectorrondon5852
@vectorrondon5852 10 күн бұрын
Man I see red and I wake up standing up and see bodies on the floor 😼 (I am one of those bodies)
@SchecterIsKING
@SchecterIsKING 9 күн бұрын
Show some respect. That last guy had a great uncle that was a boxer like 70 years ago, so he could obviously kick everyones ass. 😭
@DrSuess360
@DrSuess360 9 күн бұрын
😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂💀💀💀💀💀💀
What's Harder: Striking or Grappling?
20:33
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