Jul 25, 2008

What Is Your Martial Art Level Belt? - What style do you do and what belt are you?

Free Web Hosting, No Ads > General > Health and Fitness (WellnessPostive.com) > Martial Arts, Karate, Ninja...
Pages: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6

free web hosting

What Is Your Martial Art Level Belt? - What style do you do and what belt are you?

spikie
I do wadoryu Karate and I am a yellow belt

Belt order goes White, White Black tag (don't know if any other clubs do this), Orange,Red,yellow, Green,Blue,Purple,3 browns, 1st dan etc

Reply

shadowx
Humm, seems odd to me. i didnt go for long, though i really want to start again, but ours was something like, white, which was effectively, none as that was the colour of the "belt" which weas tied around the karate...um..."gowns" to hold them together and on you, then i think it went straight to yellow, then maybe orange red brown black or something. That was in the UK so maybe it varies by strictness, EG in ...japan/china where ever karate was started first, they might be very very strict on things unlike in the UK where its almost a hobby.

Reply

spikie
shadow i live in the uk and do it as a hobby.

Reply

SNiped
I do shotokan Karate and am currently 1st dan, got to wait till im 18 to go any higher sad.gif But i geuss that should give me lots of practice time.

Reply

Naruto14
Well I just started so I diden't learn nothing with my Sensi yet also I am a white belt.

Reply

demonatashadow
I take Karate (I take more than one martial art, Kendo, Akido, etc.). I am a second degree degree black belt but I haven't gone farther because I've been doing Kendo, which I think is a lot more affective than Karate.

Reply

narutorasengan17
my cousin used to take karate lessons, and i happened to go with him to a few of them, i learned a few things...but not enough to really earn me any belts, lol, it was a fun experience though...

Reply

Unstoppable

I practice Judo.
I live in a small country though, so I only have to do a 20 minute bike ride, not much of a 'workout' there.
I train only two times a week, each time one and a half hour. I go for a half an hour run every sunday and I do some weightlift every day for an hour...
But really it's not that much... I'm not the perfect muscular man you see on tv.


Reply

Yratorm, LightMage
Hi unstoppable, I practice ninjutsu (not the style made popular in the west), also karate, including strikes, nerve attacks, combat-effective throws and some kansetsu holds - we train for about four hours per day on four days a week - different kinds of training aimed at hand-eye co-ordination, balance, power, speed, reflexes, evasion, etc. One day in the week is devoted to running, half of which is sprinting and half reasonably fast 'cruising'. Two days are devoted to weights - one to upperbody weights and one to lowerbody weight exercise.

No belts in our ryu - you progress if you can stand the pace, which is gruelling. Not many last the first week. The first two months are devoted to massive conditioning, improving the various systems of the body, striking capability, etc. After two months, you can take out any single attacker - then the real training begins. It's amazingly interesting and fun.



Small off-topic note to unstoppable (my apologies, all):
QUOTE(Unstoppable @ May 24 2007, 02:46 PM) *
I do some weightlift every day for an hour...

Don't do weights everyday, that ruins the effect of the weight training - weight training should be done just once or twice a week (say just the upper or lower body) and around ten sets for each exercise that you do - that and careful control of diet and rest should give you adequate results for muscular development, if you'd like that. Note also that you CANNOT do ANY other type of exercise on the day you do your weights, this causes catabolic reactions in the body that prevent muscular development - no martial arts, no aerobics, no running, nothing else. On the days you do weights, do ONLY weights, on other days you can do your martial arts/combat routine, whatever appeals to you. Good luck. If you'd like any more info, PM me.

 

 

 


Reply

Furry_homeboy
Just opinion, but for all the people who feel discouraged or anything because they cant move up a belt rank, remember your still the same person no matter the belt rank. So dont worry if you cant move up. You could remain a 1st dan for the rest of your life but practice every day and perform as a 10th dan. No need to get hard on yourself, just keep trying your best. This is still a fun topic though, i'm not discouraging you. I myself am a purple belt although of course belt ranks are different most places.

Reply

Latest Entries

mrdee
QUOTE(iGirl301 @ May 3 2008, 01:27 AM) *
I do kung fu I am a green/white belt

Could you let us know which style of Kung Fu, please (there are so many)?
It would also be interesting if you could let us know the order of the belts in your particular style, from low to high.


Reply

iGirl301
QUOTE(spikie @ Mar 30 2007, 03:43 PM) *
I do wadoryu Karate and I am a yellow belt

Belt order goes White, White Black tag (don't know if any other clubs do this), Orange,Red,yellow, Green,Blue,Purple,3 browns, 1st dan etc



I do kung fu I am a green/white belt

Reply

Keyboard
I enjoyed the Art for seven years, earning a black belt in Tae kwon do and a/an third degree brown belt in shotakon. I loved it until I broke my knee and my career ended quickly sad.gif

Reply

Bluebear
My brother never wanted me to start with martial arts, even though I wanted to for a while. My family has a history in martial arts, with this I mean Taekwondo. My cousin was almost accepted for the Olympics, and his brother was quite good to. My uncle used to do Taekwondo too. My brother trained for several years, and I have picked up some things when I watched the trainings... but I never started, a bit to late now I guess.

Anyway, my brother has black belt. My cousin also. Both of them have some extra stuff too, but I have no idea what it is called. I believe my third cousin has red belt.

Reply

mrdee
What do you mean, 'it is the highest level - They've gone as far as they can go'?
(I am speaking for karate, not sure about Tae kwon Do).
In my style (Shotokan Karate), you do indeed go up to black belt, but then it really starts. You get to your black belt and become Shodan (first Dan), but then you go on working to get Nidan (Second Dan, the level from which you can become an independent instructor), Sandan, Yondan, Godan and so on.

If they really think karate stops at getting your black belt, they are either totally misinformed or they have completely the wrong idea about karate.
Karate is an art that should be perfected for the rest of your life, and don't think that, after getting your black belt, there is nothing more to learn, because I can assure you, there is, and lots of it.

Reply



Got an Opinion! Express your Views! (no registration):-
Add your Reply/ Opinion/ Views/ Comments/ Suggestion/ Questions/ Queries etc.
Posts with decent grammar & English will be accepted and please refrain from profanities.
For asking a Question, We recommend you to sign-up (for free) so that you can track the topic easily.

Nature of your Post*: Opinion/ Reply/ Comments
Question/Query
Feedback to us.
       
Name   Email
Title/Question*

(Maximum characters: 10,000)
You have characters left.
Confirm Code:

Pages: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Recent Queries:-
  1. tiska aikido - 68.80 hr back. (1)
  2. 16 force of attack in aikido - 107.10 hr back. (1)
  3. what is karate belt order - 164.22 hr back. (1)
Similar Topics

Keywords : belt, style, belt,

  1. Martial Arts
    (4)
  2. Martial Arts Of Noobs
    which one should i do? (19)
    I am getting out of high school and heading out to college. I have been wrestling for a long time
    and have loved it, but I don't plan on wrestling in college. Rather than wrestling in college
    what kind of martial art is out there that is fun to learn and will provide me with the same skills
    as wrestling? I think martial arts is a fun thing to do. I have a friend that is a black belt, but
    I could never be up to his skill.....
  3. What Is Martial Arts Exactly?
    Fighting, or anything? (2)
    I was looking through the topics in this section, and I saw yoga as a form of martial arts. And I
    started to wonder what exactly martial arts was. I thought it was the art of fighting, or practicing
    for fighting, or it at least had to have something to do with fighting. So how does yoga fit into
    that? So, I was just wondering, does anyone have a concrete definition of martial arts? Does it
    have to do with fighting, or just motion or something like that? /huh.gif"
    style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":huh:" border="0" alt="huh.gif" />....
  4. Chinese Kenpo
    Martial Arts (4)
    I have studied martial arts for self defense only. French Savate was too deadly to be
    practical in anything but a fight to the death. Tae Kwon Do provided great exercise and could be
    effectively used in a fight. Tae Kwon Do provides great tournaments. I was surprised how safe
    tournament fighting was. Movies sensationalize to the max, of course. But, the best form that I
    found for walking away, unscathed (without killing anyone) was Chinese Kenpo . My sefu (master) was
    a total maniac, but the students were great! Has anyone studied an unusual fighting st....
  5. What Is The Martial Art Called Where..
    you fight with a stick? (10)
    I'm not sure if it's Kaedo but it looks pretty weird (or was it Kendo?) with the black
    suits. I want to learn the martial arts where you fight with a stick, what's the most done
    sport where you fight with a stick? Preferably an ancient one /smile.gif"
    style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":)" border="0" alt="smile.gif" />....
  6. Aikido
    The Japanese Martial Art (2)
    Greetings, all. I was wondering if there is anyone in the community who is practicing, or is
    considering practicing the Japanese martial art of Aikido. If so, is there anyone who would like to
    share the techniques involved in it? From what I know, Aikido, unlike the other martial arts, is
    more about channeling your opponent's energy against him/herself, rather than relying on a
    full-out attack style (punching and kicking), like karate or judo. There's also an interesting
    philosophy behind it, as well documented by the great teacher Morihei Ueshiba. So...from h....
  7. How Do You Train For Your Martial Art, Sport?
    What's Your Way? (15)
    Ok, so I was inspired to write this after a conversation with some fellow boxers from my local gym.
    I would just out of interest like to find out how everybody trains, and if there is a trend between
    the intensity of their training and their related sport. As a boxer, and also a martial artist I
    have to say that I don't really follow a set program. I am very much one of the people that
    prefer to just simply train and train, and not make any days off, or set programs, or easy shifts,
    or 'rewinds' or what ever else the latest trend tends to be. I prefer to fo....

    1. Looking for belt, style, belt,

Searching Video's for belt, style, belt,
advertisement



What Is Your Martial Art Level Belt? - What style do you do and what belt are you?



 

 

 

 

ADD REPLY / Got an Opinion! Remove these ADs! RAPID SEARCH! Free Web Hosting [X]
Express your Opinions, Thoughts or Contribute more info. to help others.
Ask your Doubts & Queries to get answers, So that "Together We can help others!"
Register FREE for AD-FREE forum, Create your own topics, Ask Questions, track topics, setup subscriptions & notifications and Get a Free Website w/ Email and FTP.
500MB Space *No Ads*, CPanel, FTP, PHP, MySQL, EMails - 100% FREE