As I understand 合气道 characters stand for both Aikido and Hapkido. The main difference is different training focus. Hapkido has more balanced approach between striking and grappling and Aikido is more focused on grappling ,usually striking techniques get less attention .Still in the very broad sense is the same art. Just I do emphasize in the very broad sense. Pardon my ignorance.
Oh my god thank you so much. I asked you to do lapel grabs in one of your other videos but I never thought you would do it. Anyway I'm really grateful.
I used once okuri-ashi on a very tall bad guy on a sidewalk. After the fall he bent backwards like a warped 2 by 4... couldn't get up. The fight was over. I wasn't waiting for the cops, either...
Your channel is a GEM I am grateful to come across!! As a very very beginner person, interested in learning akkido from home your videos have provided some great information! Could you please do more 30 mins to 1 hour follow-along videos training beginners with the basics? For people like me showing how to do the moves at home, and guiding clearly as you show the moves. Thank you!!
It's wonderful seeing how all of these Sister Arts are related. Aikido is like the nerdy older sibling. Judo is the middle child and star-athlete of the family, while BJJ is the youngest and most creative of the bunch. Cheers!
@@rusiatevuetibau6333 Agreed. BJJ is a vastly less effective as a martial art and only teaches you to scoot around on your butt like a bitch, but I was trying to be nice. Yes, it's "Jiu-Jitsu", as well. "Jujutsu (/dʒuːˈdʒɪtsuː/ joo-JIT-sue; Japanese: 柔術 jūjutsu, pronounced [dʑɯꜜːʑɯtsɯ] ⓘ), also known as jiu-jitsu and ju-jitsu, is a family of Japanese martial arts and a system of close combat (unarmed or with a minor weapon) that can be used in a defensive or offensive manner to kill or subdue one or more weaponless or armed and armored opponents.[1][2]" Go butt scoot off to your JIU-JITSU class. Your "partner" is ready to "mount" you. Don't keep him waiting ;)
@@mattjorgensen2267 Every person alive today who practices "Judo" is practicing "Olympic Judo" that was developed in the 1930s, and has since changed dramatically (no kata, no weapons, very little ne waza, ever changing rule sets, etc...). Aikido started in the 1920s, perhaps a bit earlier if you allow for "Aiki-jujisu" and other name variants. Aikido is also based on koryu styles, uses medieval weapons for training purposes and is over all more "old-fashioned/"formal"/"traditional" and was never meant to be a "sport" in any way, unlike Judo. As a result, it is much more recognizable to its founding than "Modern Olympic Sport Judo"(tm), which is an entirely contrived form of entertainment with very little emphasis on it as a "martial art".
@@rusiatevuetibau6333 "Jiu-Jitsu" is correct and "BJJ" is "Basically Just Judo" and was "invented" by Judo students, like Helio and Carlos Gracie, et. al. Aiki-do, was also originally called "Aiki-Jiu-jitsu" and both Jigaro Kano and Moriehei Ueshiba were admirers of each others arts.
FFS, not one of those guys. Pedant. There are various spellings, just like all words that are similar in multiple languages. Please write it in the original kanji next time.
@@stevezy4772 That's bullsh!t. There is no letter-for-letter translation for kanji into languages other than Japanese. It's an entirely different system of written language. All the romance languages vary word spellings that mean the same thing, including romanji. Do you watch movies in a theater or theatre? Aluminum or aluminium?
Jiu-jitsu foi transcrito de maneira errônea através da pronúncia japonesa da palavra jujutsu. Federações de outros país caíram neste mesmo equívoco. Atualmente existe federações que usam da palavra jiu-jitsu e outra a palavra jujutsu.
Judo and juijitsu get used in mma all the time. Bouncers use aikido and japanese jujutsu wristlocks. Lower level fighters like yourself probably wouldn't benefit from using higher level techniques.