Dear Thai Buddhists, I am a Buddhist from Sri Lanka ! Please protect Buddhism of Thailand with the Muay Thai culture ! Buddhism in Sri Lanka is slowly diminishing ! Please keep it strong in Thailand ! I am saying from one Theravada brother to another Theravada brother !
Getting punched & kicked in the head feels contrary to being healthy in the long-term. I admire the dedication and effort that is put into a fighting career, but let's not delude ourselves. After 20 years of this, you will pay the toll on all those concussions. It's definitely not good for your memory.
I guess you have to find balance and proper training, and differentiate for yourself if it's for self improvement or winning g a tournament amongst other things. If you aren't dedicated to being the best in the game you don't need to put yourself through the same trauma on your body. You can take a more "casual" approach. I learned this at a young age that you do not need to train or spar like it's a real fight, because you will lose you ability to function normally. I got into the ring with someone much better then me hoping to learn and all i got was head trauma and massive stomach pains, and a dissapointed dad. That taught me how to differentiate bad training to good training and how to use practical application in training. Jumbled thoughts not well structured, but I hope it makes some sense.
I'm running 3 youtube Channels: 1) Torq4712 64K Subscribers 2) Ashish Ranjan 12K Subscribers 3) Torq Talks 160 Subscribers (It's new and on MMA, going to make it big) if you need any help mail me @ torq4712@gmail.com Always have been a martial artist and an MMA Enthusiast, just want to help
Unfortunately what happened in Japan cannot happen in India. In Japan, it was pro-wrestlers trained in Catch wrestling and Judo that started MMA promotions. These catch wrestlers set up gyms in Japan to train new talent. For instance, Taka Dojo, Tiger's Gym, Pararestra, etc. Japanese MMA league Pride FC was greater than UFC is. The catch is that pro-wrestling was already popular in Japan and the infrastructure already existed. There was huge money in it. The Japanese public wanted to see real fights instead of staged works. In India, the general public doesn't care about any other sport than cricket. How many Indians even know who Vijender Singh, Mary Qom, Sushil Kumar, and Yogeshwar Dutt is? Compare this to other countries. Is there a single American who doesn't know who Muhammad Ali is or single Russian that doesn't know who Fedor Emilianenko is or a Brazilian who doesn't know who Pele is? Unless the public's attitude changes, I don't see any hope for MMA in India. MMA is popular in every country that sends elite fighters to the big leagues.
from malaysia history before have country Name SIAM then come Trible name Sukho-Thai Invaded SIAM Now SIAM gone Thailand is refer to Trible name Sukhothai thai Where Siam land...?? gone forever that mean Siam and Thai not same race mybe same religion Budha
Siam is basically Thai people and before there were many Thai kingdoms (Ayuthaya, Sukhothai and etc). So all the people from all those kingdoms were Siam people. Thailand is still Siam it is just renamed
I found this. They explain each style. Praya means "Lord" in case your guys confuse about their nobility ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-lShxcnFCg9Q.html
I am so glad Muay thai is finally getting more tradition, Wish Kalaripayattu got the same since it's a Martial art for war as effective as Muay thai but even more dangerous since Kalaripayattu focuses mostly on Killing the opponent by striking nerve points. It's a forgotten art that merely survived the British ban on practicing it