Taekwondo Teachers

Carver Brownie Troop Donates to Refuse to Lose
Brownie Troop 1241, 2nd graders from Carver Elementary School, recently presented a check to San Marino Unified School District Superintendent Gary Woods earmarked for the Refuse to Lose campaign. The troop sold 1,181 boxes of Girl Scout cookies this year and their donation represented almost 30% of their total proceeds.
my taekwondo teachers friend
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JUDO~Wall Clock~ karate tae kwon do judo gift $15.99 This BRAND NEW wall clock measures 10 inches in diameter. It has a black plastic frame with a clear cover. Graphics are rich and vibrant and will last a lifetime. These clocks make a great accent to any room in your home or business. A perfect addition to your kitchen, bathroom, bedroom, family room or anywhere. The clock has precision quartz movement and operates on 1 AA battery (not included). P… |
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Taekwondo: Webster’s Facts and Phrases $16.95 Ever need a fact or quotation on “taekwondo”? Designed for speechwriters, journalists, writers, researchers, students, professors, teachers, historians, academics, scrapbookers, trivia buffs and word lovers, this is the largest book ever created for this word. It represents a compilation of “single sentences” and/or “short paragraphs” from a variety of sources with a linguistic emphasis on anythin… |
Lotus Karate

Know any martial arts that focuses on counterattacks and techniques instead of speed and strength.?
I have heard that knowing martial arts that focus mostly on speed and strength fade and diminish as someone ages. I have just started out and have not learned any techniques yet, but if this is true, would learning techniques that create a lot of focused power that can smash bones be a waste of time if I cannot use them in my 50’s? Or should I just continue to practice karate and kickboxing? Also, if I ever have to face someone who is bigger, stronger, or faster than me, what kind of martial arts should I practice? I hear that Lotus Self Defense is pretty powerful. What should I do as a novice martial artist?
i would have to say go take jiu-jitsu and when you get older take aikido , but kickboxing is kicka** though
ANIS CHEURFA 2009: One Night At Practice… TRICKING @ White Lotus Martial Arts Center
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Shaw Brothers Golden Arms Lotus Asian Cinema Kung Fu Old School Juniors V-Neck Black T-Shirt $39.99 An awesome cotton juniors tshirt for any shaw brothers fan! Available up to XL!… |
Philosophy Karate

Jeet Kune Do – Bruce Lee Combat system and philosophy
Jeet Kune Do ( JKD ) is the name Bruce Lee gave to his combat system and philosophy in 1967. Originally, when Lee commenced researching diverse fighting styles, he gave his martial art his own name of Jun Fan Gung Fu. However not wanting to form another style that would share the constraints that all styles have, he instead gave us the method that made it.
JKD as it survives today – if one wants to view it “refined” as a product, not a process – is what was left at the time of Bruce Lee’s death. It is the result of the life-long karate skills development process Lee went thru. Bruce Lee said that his idea isn’t an “adding to” of more and more things on top of each other to form a system, but rather, a winnowing out. The metaphor Lee borrowed from Chan Buddhism was of constantly filling a cup with water, and then emptying it, used for describing Lee’s philosophy of “casting off what’s useless”. He also used the sculptor’s mind-set of starting with a pile of clay and hacking away at the “unessentials” ; the final result was what he considered to be the bare combat necessities, or JKD.
One of the ideas of JKD is that a fighter should do whatever is critical to protect himself, irrespective of where the systems come from. One of Lee’s goals in Jeet Kune Do was to break down what he told were limiting factors in the coaching of the traditional styles, and seek a fighting thesis which he believed could only be found in the reality of a fight. Jeet Kune Do is at present seen as the genesis of the modern state of half-breed martial arts.
The idea of cross-training in Jeet Kune Do is like the practice of Mixed martial-arts ( MMA ) in modern times – Bruce Lee has been considered by UFC president Dana White as the “father of mixed martial arts”. Many consider Jeet Kune Do to be the predecessor of MMA due to its syncretic nature. This is especially the case with regard the JKD “Combat Ranges”. A JKD student is predicted to learn various combat systems within each combat range, and therefore to be effective in each one of them, just as in MMA.
Visit the official jeet kune do website
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Beginner Kyokushin Karate Techniques : Philosophy of Kyukushin Karate
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SDI Interview and Philosophy (Self Defense and Martial Arts Inc. Series) $39.95 Video Reviews were previously completed about other videos developed by Mr. Saladino and not necessarily the programs listed. SDI Interview and Philosophy This is an exclusive interview with the founder and chief instructor of Self Defense Inc. (SDI) Joseph Saladino. You will learn a variety of defensive concepts as well as the justification and use of force. This program will put the final icin… |
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The Twenty Guiding Principles of Karate: The Spiritual Legacy of the Master $9.94 Gichin Funakoshi, “the father of karate,” once said that “the ultimate aim of karate lies not in victory nor defeat, but in the perfection of the character of its participants.”… |
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A Book of Five Rings – The Art of War for Samurai $0.99 The Book of Five Rings is a text on kenjutsu and the martial arts in general, written by the samurai warrior Miyamoto Musashi circa 1645. It is considered a classic treatise on military strategy, much like Sun Tzu’s The Art of War. There have been various translations made over the years, and it enjoys an audience considerably broader than only that of martial artists: for instance, some business … |
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Bubishi: The Classic Manual of Combat $15.71 Treasured for centuries by karate’s top masters, Bubishi is a classic Chinese work on philosophy, strategy, medicine and technique as they relate to the martial arts. Referred to as “the bible of karate” by the famous master Chojun Miyagi, for hundreds of years the Bubishi was a secret text passed from master to student in China and later in Okinawa. No other classic work has had as dramatic an im… |





