Choosing The Right School of Martial Arts
One of the questions I get asked most frequently, in several
different variations is about which martial art an individual
should study. Generally which martial art, and more importantly
which school to choose are fundamental decisions someone should
make. My answer is usually something along the lines of, choose
the school and the system that you are going to stick with and
stay with it for the rest of your life.

The reality is that the answer is going to be different for
every person. What I will attempt to do in this article is give
you a set of general guidelines. I will talk in very broad
terms about different martial arts, and what to look for in a
school. Ultimately every teacher, at every school, in every
system is going to be completely different.
1. Dispelling a common myth
Just like with religion and politics, many people honestly
believe that what they do is the best thing in the world. One
only has to make a cursory study of the psychological principle
of cognitive dissonance to see why this is so. So many schools
out there claim to be teaching, the ultimate, deadliest, most
secret, guarded system of self defense ever invented by the
gods of combat. To be quite blunt they are full of crap.
In one respect, much of this stuff is a marketing stance. Heck,
everybody wants to study the best thing in the world. If such a
thing existed everybody would study it. Some martial arts
schools can become very cult like as well, and this is where
the cognitive dissonance comes in. The practitioners actually
believe their marketing stuff.
The truth is that style is not going to fight for you you are.
Every person is different and there is not one best system for
everyone. It would be quite scary for me to face a sumo
wrestler in combat, but it would also be silly for me to expect
to take up Sumo and be good at it.
Claims of superior systems that can make you as deadly as a
Navy SEAL in 24 hours also stem from American culture. It is
unfortunate that we of the MTV and Internet generation are
always looking for a shortcut, a quick fix. It makes many of us
miss a lot of very valuable and important stuff.
2. Lets start with you
If I can help you answer a few key questions about yourself and
your interests, you will have done most of the work toward
picking out a martial arts school that is best for you.
First and foremost, what do you want to get out of martial arts
training? Yes, yes, I know you want to learn self defense put
that on the list. But people study martial arts for a variety
of reasons. You want to get some exercise, you want to meet new
people, you want to get rid of stress, you want a new hobby,
and you think the uniforms look cool. Really think about it and
write down your reasons. Everything is valid and your reasons
are your own. Then I would prioritize your reasons which ones
are more important than others. Maybe getting into shape is
your main goal if so, that may help determine a place to
study.
3. What style?
Now, lets talk a little bit about systems or styles. A system
is just the type of martial art you will be studying like
Karate, Kendo, or Kung Fu. The differences between styles may
also help you to determine where to look.
The main difference between most martial arts style is focus.
Some arts like Tae Kwon do focus on large kicking movements,
while others like Kendo focus on a particular weapon. Body type
and interest (as we discussed before) will help you think a
little about style focus. For example: I am built like a
fireplug short and wide, am somewhat slow and am very
interested in the self defense aspect of training. Ketsugo
Jujutsu turned out to be the best style for me as it focused on
unbalancing the opponent, the kicks were low to the ground, and
the fighting in close where we short guys excel.
Beyond focus is a scale of formality to informality. To me
formality is a measure of emphasis on things like training
etiquette, ceremony, style of dress, method of addressing
seniors etc. Many Japanese and Korean styles are very formal.
On the far end of the informal scale you might have a cardio
kickboxing class at local gym. On the far end of the formal
scale you might have a style like Kendo which places a lot of
emphasis on appearance and etiquette.
Neither formal nor informal is better or worse; it is a matter
of preference. I personally enjoy some of the formalities of
traditional Japanese martial arts. For me they build character
and shape a strong state of mind that carries over into day to
day life. For others, the formalities may be difficult to grasp
and they may wish for something less formal.
The following is a list of styles I have arranged from most to
least formal. This arrangement is from my own best knowledge
and is neither absolute nor inclusive. Many would rightfully
disagree with where I have placed things on the list, but this
is meant to be a general guideline. Again, every single teacher
in every different school is going to be different. This is
meant as a starting point:
Formal
Kendo / Kumdo
Aikido
Tae Kwon Do
Karate
Jujutsu
Kung Fu
Silat
Ninjutsu
Tai Chi / Bagua / Hsing-yi
Arnis / Kali / Escima
Capoeira
Kickboxing
Boxing
(Continued on next page.)
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