Tom
Integrated Kung Fu Academy
Kung Fu - Kickboxing - MMA -Self Defense
Media, PA -Delaware County
I was born and raised in the third largest city in this nation. I am no country boy. I learned all these things in the city and surrounding districts. Anybody can learn almost anything if they have the desire and the capacity. I don't think everyone should learn to trap. But I do feel that most people refine their skill sets with very little foresight into the reality of what could be. They tend to develop their sets based on what they want rather than what they need. Not enough diversification. Too focused on money. I don't disagree with trade, I just think we went the wrong way with it.
I brought up the hypothetical to show how it is not black and white. There are very few universal rules when dealing with social behaviour. And many of the jobs people do to get by are harming us all. We have a long way to go. I'm sure you can agree with that.
It's very unlikely that the person you have to fight next time in the street who happens to train the same style as you do.
The reason that we train TCMA is to solve problems. We don't know whether our problem will come from boxer, MT guy, wrestler, BJJ guy, ... We don't have luxury to choice that.
http://johnswang.com
More opinion -> more argument
Less opinion -> less argument
No opinion -> no argument
lol, that quote wasn't about martial skill sets. But it could be. I like where you took that. And it speaks directly to the point I was making to David. You don't know what life will throw at you. If you spend all your time mastering computer science then an Em pulse wipes out everything, now how useful are you? That's when knowing simple things about living naturally come in very handy.
Another analogy would be when somebody puts years of training into learning a field of study that becomes obsolete right when they are trying to enter the work force. You know everything about something nobody cares about or will want to use because there are better options. Diversification is key. You don't have to be a jack of all, master of none. But you should spread out as much as you can while maintaining a realistic quality of life. Balance.
Many years ago all computer science major had to learn:
- programming language,
- computer architecture,
- automata theory,
- numerical analysis,
- data base,
- operation system.
Today the computer science market are for:
- website design,
- search engine,
- antivirus,
- application server,
- ...
It's much easier to teach Taiji in Chen village. It's much harder to do so outside of China.
Last edited by YouKnowWho; 11-15-2012 at 07:29 PM.
http://johnswang.com
More opinion -> more argument
Less opinion -> less argument
No opinion -> no argument
Yeah, even when designing electronics, I have software that makes it much easier to design a circuit than using a breadboard and a calculator.