Guys, its much harder than you think. You gotta train your body, mind, and bones to take the pain including the after affects of bruising and trouble typing at your desk job. I did 3 bricks for my 2nd dan and even a few aspirins and a case of beer and bbq afterwards didn't help.
It's not that hard bruv They are designed to break and if you do any sort of proper fist conditioning (especially for years to become a 5th Dan) this is nothing
Aspirin isn't a painkiller numb nuts it just makes your blood more liquid, and of course breaking bricks is hard but it's one of the core elements of any bare handed martial arts.
@@waterlegend72 Ok you stupid tool, go on let us watch you break real bricks, of course there's cheater like everywhere but there's also people who are the real deal, you never done martial arts to say that for sure.
My Dad was a 3rd degree black in Taekwondo. He taught me all the moves. He can karate chop through thick thick wood and more with ease. But me I about broke my hand.
Not really , I just broke a wood plank of about 6-7 cm for by belt exam , its not that hard tbh.@@HOTPLATEGAMING My teacher tho , the trainer for the nacional Spanish team David Escribano , has broke bricks before as demonstations of what hard work and discipline can help you achive
So none of these actually “break” as you would think. In this case break means break the formation in which they are stacked, not breaking them in half. You can clearly see this if you pause/play quickly.
Lol they have a section in the mould that allows for them to break clean to a custom length and you put metal in each layer to allow space for breaking
Yeah, i'll do the training, spar, learn all the forms, but Ive spent enough of my life injured that im not going to do it over trying to do something that has absolutely no point at all besides impress those watching. Boards? Sure. Bricks? Not necessary
You just kinda do tbh , but if you are asking on a training that allows to break things , you mainly want to focus technique , strength and conditioning.
I am not impressed by this technique. First, the black belt put spacers in between the bricks, which left a gap. Second, the strick was applied between the weakest parts of the bricks. The strick was not applied on the brick itself. In short, this was a poor demonstration of martial arts skills.
Don't be dumb. This video just shows what its title says. The point of this video is to show his potential strength, but you only see those bricks getting broken?
Yeah , but you need to have a material that will break , like sure , I can break wood , but I cant punch a hole through a table , different materials have different properties XD