I Proved that Aikido Works in Self-Defense

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I used Aikido 7 times in self-defense: 6 times in the Ultimate Self-Defense Championship and 1 in a real life self-defense situation. Aikido by many is considered to be the least effective martial art.
#aikido #usdc #martialarts
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Welcome to the Martial Arts Journey KZread channel!
My name is Rokas. I'm a Lithuanian guy who trained Aikido for 14 years, 7 of them running a professional Aikido Dojo until eventually I realized that Aikido does not live up to what it promises.
Lead by this realization I decided to make a daring step to close my Aikido Dojo and move to Portland, Oregon for six months to start training MMA at the famous Straight Blast Gym Headquarters under head coach Matt Thornton.
After six months intensive training I had my first amateur MMA fight after which I moved back to Lithuania. During all of this time I am documenting my experience through my KZread channel called "Martial Arts Journey".
Now I am slowly setting up plans to continue training MMA under quality guidance and getting ready for my next MMA fight as I further document and share my journey and discoveries.
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If you want to support my journey, you can make a donation to my PayPal at info@rokasleo.com
SUBSCRIBE to see when the next videos will come out:
► bit.ly/1KPZpv0
Check the video "Aikido vs MMA" which started this whole Martial Arts Journey:
► • Aikido vs MMA - REAL ...
If you want to support me and this channel on a regular basis check my Patreon page:
► / rokasleo

Пікірлер: 375

  • @MartialArtsJourney
    @MartialArtsJourney10 ай бұрын

    For a limited time only 21% off for the brand new Martial Arts Journey rash guard: www.xmartial.com/products/martial-arts-journey-rash-guard?ref=MARTIALARTSJOURNEY Or use code "Rokas" to receive an additional 10% discount for all XMartial products.

  • @davidtice4972

    @davidtice4972

    10 ай бұрын

    Parts of Aikido can be used along with Judo, Catch Wrestling, Brazilian Jui-Jitsu, Boxing, Muay Thai ect.

  • @ArnasLeo

    @ArnasLeo

    10 ай бұрын

    that's awesome!!!!!!

  • @youareacoward8459

    @youareacoward8459

    10 ай бұрын

    See, I told you, your Aikdio will start to kick in when YOU can fight.

  • @Moses_VII

    @Moses_VII

    10 ай бұрын

    I think it's because of Ramsey's appearance in the USDC that XMartial, Ramsey's sponsor, decided to contact you. The USDC has been really profitable, not just entertaining and informative.

  • @johannesstephanusroos4969

    @johannesstephanusroos4969

    10 ай бұрын

    Rokas, is there a reason you pronounce Sensei like Ssensee? It bothers the heck out of me

  • @connorperrett9559
    @connorperrett955910 ай бұрын

    This dude went from Aikido teacher to Aikido hater to "Actually Aikido can work if you know what you're doing." True character development.

  • @laroybell3313

    @laroybell3313

    9 ай бұрын

    Martial Arts.......JOURNEY! That makes sense to me 🤷

  • @moyza_

    @moyza_

    9 ай бұрын

    Not that big a surprise, aikido was always a nice complementary martial art.

  • @just_j_like_the_letter

    @just_j_like_the_letter

    9 ай бұрын

    Legit, following this channel over the last few years has been like watching a real life anime

  • @Deimophobos

    @Deimophobos

    9 ай бұрын

    like all martial arts, I train wing chun, and I've seen a lot of people say that it's no good, but it's already saved a life once and a robbery in the street where I live, that's what my master says, you need to understand your system, and not use it as a rule but as a tool to use in different situations, if you want to memorize the technique you will die, but if you understand the basis of operation you can succeed.

  • @malcolmjelani3588

    @malcolmjelani3588

    6 ай бұрын

    Aikido was never a complete system. Osensei was told this directly by students who traveled and faced wrestlers. I don't think he ever addressed it

  • @davidcrawford8583
    @davidcrawford858310 ай бұрын

    The UFDC was and is one of the best things I've ever seen on KZread. Congratulations Rokas. Stunning content.

  • @MartialArtsJourney

    @MartialArtsJourney

    10 ай бұрын

    Thanks!! Already working hard on season 2

  • @davidcrawford8583

    @davidcrawford8583

    10 ай бұрын

    @@MartialArtsJourney Can't wait Rokas!

  • @eliaaam2262

    @eliaaam2262

    10 ай бұрын

    totally agree , amazing content , looked like a Netflix series

  • @jacobharris954

    @jacobharris954

    10 ай бұрын

    @@MartialArtsJourney who is next and have you took in criticism from Ramsey drewy ?

  • @JC3H

    @JC3H

    10 ай бұрын

    All the other participants seem to like USDC, but does why Ramsay Dewey think negatively, he even got into a argument with the organisers/referees

  • @joelhenry5489
    @joelhenry548910 ай бұрын

    That guy throwing the helmet at you was the most pure martial arts thing I have ever seen.

  • @MartialArtsJourney

    @MartialArtsJourney

    10 ай бұрын

    😂😂 High potential technique

  • @Merrsharr

    @Merrsharr

    9 ай бұрын

    @@MartialArtsJourney Of course , it would have worked better if it had been the pommel of a sword.

  • @annoyed707

    @annoyed707

    3 ай бұрын

    If only it was a pommel...

  • @camiloiribarren1450
    @camiloiribarren145010 ай бұрын

    Aikido may be focused on joint locks and seems very unlikely to work in most moments but there are times it can work like a charm. I love that Rokas keeps trying to make his original style work in different situations. If Rokas didn’t notice that he used aikido moves, he was in the mindset of Mushin (mind of no mind); aka he was in the zone and acted on instincts

  • @MartialArtsJourney
    @MartialArtsJourney10 ай бұрын

    For the record: when the two guys wanted to fight me, they probably would have kicked my ass, because I was then training only Aikido and without cross training it, I believe Aikido has very little effectiveness in self-defense. "Luckily" I then thought that Aikido works and that gave me enough false confidence you deter them from attacking. Yet as it's clear from the video if you know how to fight and have grappling fundamentals, you can use Aikido principles when attacked.

  • @titaniumteddybear

    @titaniumteddybear

    10 ай бұрын

    I've always wondered whether Aikido could be effective if combined with real sparring. I am overjoyed that someone put their body on the line and proved it to be true. Well done, man.

  • @PHIplaytesting

    @PHIplaytesting

    10 ай бұрын

    It was kind of weird watching this episode of the USDC for the first time and seeing how quickly and easily you were able to take the guys down in a couple of the rounds. After watching this video it makes more sense. These simple principles of redirecting energy really seem to work well against people using this more brutish, "untrained" approach.

  • @aurelianspodarec2629

    @aurelianspodarec2629

    10 ай бұрын

    Id assume if they were drunk and slow aikido could probably be effective but you know the situation better :D I can only imagine a drunken person with slow motion trying to grab you, you can easily do something with that

  • @nunninkav

    @nunninkav

    10 ай бұрын

    Rokas you underestimate your true potential. Seth said you were decievingly strong and tall. You have reach, size and speed. In a real dangerous situation, you would be really dangerous.

  • @aurelianspodarec2629

    @aurelianspodarec2629

    10 ай бұрын

    @@nunninkav In a real dangerous situation he would be dead, so would you and I and any UFC world champion

  • @gengotaku
    @gengotaku10 ай бұрын

    It’s priceless to see you admitting aikido works. “Ineffective “ can be said about any martial art depending on what you expect from it. You blocked the knife attack on the self-defense episode even when “ professional “ karate, Bjj and self-defense experts had no chance.

  • @6whatnext

    @6whatnext

    10 ай бұрын

    Yes ! Nobody else really proved there was an ultimate self defence system, pros and cons to each .

  • @Purwapada

    @Purwapada

    8 ай бұрын

    yes its great

  • @wojciechsawicki4733
    @wojciechsawicki473310 ай бұрын

    thanks for the caption around 3:25, I really thought this was real footage of you fighting

  • @MartialArtsJourney

    @MartialArtsJourney

    10 ай бұрын

    Yeah, I wanted to make sure I wouldn't mislead anyone...

  • @daprophet02
    @daprophet0210 ай бұрын

    Before I joined the military, I studied Aikido and Karate. While I learned early on that Aikido does not work in most situations, I learned that the philosophy of Aikido worked most of the time. Much like you did in your real world experience, I would use words to talk my way out of fighting, and ending the conflict without fighting. My Aikido Sensei would always talk about that philosophy all the time and it is still something that I practice to this day... Not that I am in any fights now that I am out of the military.

  • @DK-yz9xk

    @DK-yz9xk

    10 ай бұрын

    LMAO so you were just learning how to negotiate? 😭😭

  • @bloodwynn

    @bloodwynn

    10 ай бұрын

    @@DK-yz9xk Developing certain mindset for life is not negotiating.

  • @DK-yz9xk

    @DK-yz9xk

    10 ай бұрын

    @@bloodwynn bro reread the ops comment, he used his aikido philosophy to talk his way out of fighting….. that’s not a mindset, thats full on negotiation tactics, the mindset you are referring to is just called trying to stay out of trouble.

  • @bloodwynn

    @bloodwynn

    10 ай бұрын

    @@DK-yz9xk Maybe you're right.

  • @BiancaHuntPiano

    @BiancaHuntPiano

    10 ай бұрын

    Irimi tenkan your way out of things 😉

  • @ghostdude45
    @ghostdude4510 ай бұрын

    MY BOY USED KENICHI FOOTAGE FOR AN ILLUSTRATION?!?! Glad to see you noticing Aikido in your movements. Mainly, glad to see a future where Rokas is accepting of his Aikido roots AND benefitting from it here and there. This is the best timeline. Aside from the timeline where Rokas learned how to Aikido throw people with his mind. That's the timeline where Rokas fought Thanos. He didn't win... But he tried!

  • @MartialArtsJourney

    @MartialArtsJourney

    10 ай бұрын

    Kenichi is awesome 😎

  • @fredsleg2131

    @fredsleg2131

    10 ай бұрын

    Ha, I went to the comments after see that clip.

  • @ThirdPointInLine

    @ThirdPointInLine

    8 ай бұрын

    @@fredsleg2131 Same XD

  • @DsChauhan08
    @DsChauhan0810 ай бұрын

    The best Aikido and martial arts Channel

  • @dennisarrindell
    @dennisarrindell10 ай бұрын

    Awesome video! Please note: I've once seen a guy suckerpunch someone in a streetfight after offering a handshake to his opponent to 'end the fight". Instead he used the handshake to hold the guy in place and punched him in the face really hard. It cut his lip open. Lessons learned: be wary of accepting handshakes in a self defense situation. Maybe just keep distance and do a 'namaste/namaskar" or other 'greeting' sign from a safe distance (without touch and without losing sight of your opponent). If they insist on coming close for a handshake anyways they might be setting up an attack. Something to think about.

  • @orlandomarchena4885

    @orlandomarchena4885

    10 ай бұрын

    I wish that I could multi-like your observations about shaking hands. Oh wait, how about this: 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @perrosaurio725

    @perrosaurio725

    9 ай бұрын

    Honestly you are right, I did not think about this with the story. But I wont be coming closer to anyone who wants to harm me, even if they "change their minds", its better to be safe than sorry in this scenario.

  • @chrislaw4702

    @chrislaw4702

    3 ай бұрын

    exellent!!!!

  • @lucaambrogioni
    @lucaambrogioni10 ай бұрын

    Amazing video. I am happy that you are re-appreciating Aikido. There isn't a single geometry, and there shouldn't be a single martial art

  • @maxhensley1685

    @maxhensley1685

    10 ай бұрын

    The way I think of it, martial arts are less like geometry, which is pure and universal but only indirectly applicable to the real world, and more like logistics. There are general principles of logistics, but Canadian logistics are not the same as Bolivian logistics.

  • @Purwapada

    @Purwapada

    8 ай бұрын

    nice analogy@@maxhensley1685

  • @celestialode
    @celestialode10 ай бұрын

    Hey Rokas I think you should make a video were Aikido practitioners will try taking you down using "their" Aikido technique. There were multiple messages over the year proclaiming that "your" Aikido was the problem so now after years of training other fighting styles it would be great seeing how their style would work out in a real life scenario against some that now has the experience fighting back

  • @aa11ct9
    @aa11ct910 ай бұрын

    Amazing. I'm not a martial artist but I was just reading a bio on Ueshiba and your journey makes perfect sense with that. Aikido as a more philosophical art FOR WARRIORS. I think even Seagal said that one should learn Aikido only after having trained in various other arts. The icing of the cake and not the cake itself

  • @duran3d

    @duran3d

    8 ай бұрын

    That actually makes lots of sense.

  • @Getnodrama

    @Getnodrama

    5 ай бұрын

    Aikido will make you a better overall internally balanced human being. And through its physical aspect, done with the correct mindset. It is much more than just gymnastics

  • @sirrobin5242
    @sirrobin524210 ай бұрын

    I've been following your journey for about a year now, and you have greatly inspired me on my journey as well! The USDC is one of the greatest things ive seen on youtube to date! Cannot wait for season 2! Much Love and respect from Australia, Rokas!

  • @davidecappelli9961
    @davidecappelli996110 ай бұрын

    As far as I know, Jigoro Kano, the founder of Judo, was very impressed by Aikido and tried to bring it into Judo. Yoseikan Budo, for example, has something of this combination and appears to work very well.

  • @shumookerjee293
    @shumookerjee29310 ай бұрын

    The principles and core concepts of Aikido are absolutely valid. But as you've said numerous times, without pressure testing those will only take you so far. You had the muscle memory of the moves, but also the combat experience to leverage them in a real fight. Well done, sir! Now...when does Season 2 of UFDC start?!?! 😁

  • @spitzfire1107
    @spitzfire110710 ай бұрын

    I think most of the Aikido techniques are designed for natural reaction. One time my Dad told me that he neutralize an attacker carrying a butcher knife. When I asked him to show the technique I was surprised that it was an Ikkyo Pin the first technique of Aikido. What surprises me more is that my Dad wasn't even trained in Aikido. But he said when that moment happened his body just react that way.

  • @kasuraga

    @kasuraga

    2 ай бұрын

    I agree. It works best when you can instantly react to an attacker and catch them off guard, rather than thinking about how you'll take them down. You train till your reflexes react to where an attack is, rather than processing the attack as it happens.

  • @joope125
    @joope12510 ай бұрын

    3:20 thank you for the clarification. I wouldn't have been able to tell without that footnote

  • @MartialArtsJourney

    @MartialArtsJourney

    10 ай бұрын

    I didn't want to give the wrong impression that it was me and to take false credit

  • @M_K-Bomb
    @M_K-Bomb10 ай бұрын

    1:10 It was good to see this mentioned as Jerry from 'Fight Commentary Breakdown' said this was very Aikido like. And, I will admit it did seem like it was instinctual Aikido action used. It's pretty impressive how it really came back to him so instincual. I've heard that about martial arts training.

  • @1amazingtutorialchannel380
    @1amazingtutorialchannel38010 ай бұрын

    Win a fight without fighting. Thank you Rokas for that great story. You give me some hope that people are peaceful

  • @eastafrika728
    @eastafrika72810 ай бұрын

    Rokas, you may end up modifying Aikido or returning it to it's Aikijujitsu and Jujitsu roots. I personally did use Aikido in a street situation, it involved a triangle choke and my opponent passed out and started convulsing, we had to revive him. From my experience, if you apply jujitsu or Aikido realistically and with respect to how people really scuffle with you personally, you develop your own curriculum and mastery.

  • @titaniumteddybear
    @titaniumteddybear10 ай бұрын

    The mechanics of the human body don't change. And the laws of physics don't change. So all grappling techniques are fundamentally the same. And I would pay good money to go through that self-defence challenge. It looks amazing.

  • @manjitheerratic5127
    @manjitheerratic512710 ай бұрын

    The wonderful thing of the day is that after you have been training in so many styles in martial art. You don't discard Aikido completely out of your arsenal as I predicted a couple years ago. I do believe that Aikido and Tai Chi aren't completely non-sense martial art. This video, other related videos and your journey enforce my belief in the very purpose which let me started martial art. Thank you !!!

  • @nickgeffen8316
    @nickgeffen831610 ай бұрын

    You continue to inspire, Rokas. And these rash guards are the best I’ve ever seen.

  • @23Revan84
    @23Revan8410 ай бұрын

    Bro I love your content, just an amazing journey your having.

  • @BarmyDeer
    @BarmyDeer10 ай бұрын

    You did indeed! Brilliant job! 🥋

  • @karimgregni9803
    @karimgregni980310 ай бұрын

    Even if Aikido doesn't works, you are making it work! I see a lot of perseverance and commitment there! 💪👍

  • @HahnJames
    @HahnJames10 ай бұрын

    This is one of the best channels on KZread all around! I love your analytical style. I used Judo in a real self-defense situation once. A guy sucker punched me in the face, once. He was going to try it again but he didn't get the chance. I tell my students that their brains are their most powerful weapons in any given situation.

  • @BMO_Creative
    @BMO_Creative10 ай бұрын

    Cool Video Rokas! Yeah man! Aikido helped you again! You've become a VERY capable fighter!

  • @Fred-px5xu
    @Fred-px5xu10 ай бұрын

    Rokas stay awesomely good my lad!

  • @KaleCulain
    @KaleCulain10 ай бұрын

    I love how the usdc proved that while some styles maybe less effective they do have their practical applications

  • @intricate9666
    @intricate966610 ай бұрын

    great video with a great lesson at the end

  • @charlescollier7217
    @charlescollier721710 ай бұрын

    Excellent stuff, Rokas. The fundamental principles and movements of Aikido are sound. The training methods that are common to much of the Aikido world work against that, unfortunately. Now that you're training in more legitmate ways, the real possibilities and strengths of Aikido are emerging.

  • @luizndo
    @luizndo10 ай бұрын

    Amasing video. Good eye to see the Aikido technique been applied and how that did helps you.

  • @yorks_atheist3069
    @yorks_atheist306910 ай бұрын

    Im currently studying Aikido coming from a karate background and keep finding new meaning to k Karate kata from Aikido so its no surprise it goes both ways

  • @robinharwood5044
    @robinharwood504410 ай бұрын

    I’m glad you told us that was not actual footage of the incident.

  • @MartialArtsJourney

    @MartialArtsJourney

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeah, didn't want to be misleading

  • @cesarag0723
    @cesarag072310 ай бұрын

    Full circle. Well done! I hope you keep cross training. You’ll continue to be a better martial art for it, and your aikido will get better too. They work together and have strengths in areas the other art doesn’t. 👏

  • @robinator503
    @robinator5036 ай бұрын

    Man. You are progressing well. Very cool to see

  • @gabebain6375
    @gabebain637510 ай бұрын

    Great realizations. ;)

  • @mieralunarlunishion
    @mieralunarlunishion10 ай бұрын

    I once used a tenkan to 'score' a point in a kendo competition. A way bigger dude charged me while I was already close to the line. Instinctually, I just thought: 'nope' and let his energy pass, crossing the line. :)

  • @intricate9666
    @intricate966610 ай бұрын

    Amazing video Rokas

  • @martialgeeks
    @martialgeeks10 ай бұрын

    What a journey

  • @gengotaku
    @gengotaku5 ай бұрын

    I´m glad to see you're seeing the good of aikido instead of comparing it to other martial arts, which also have their flaws and won´t apply to ALL situations. I took my black belt in aikido from aikikai and started learning Tomiki aikido. This might come in handy together with my judo , in which I also got the black belt recently.

  • @anblueboot5364
    @anblueboot5364Ай бұрын

    Watching this reminds me of so many fond memories of my Aikido Dojo, my Sensei was always super honest and fair about his perspective of aikido saying: If you wanna be able to beat someone up, you better go and train somewhere else, you will not learn to be able to defend yourself. But that was never the reason I fell in love with it, I fell in love with it because of the movement and flow + calmness it brought into my life. And if I‘m honest there are other things in Aikido that will save ones life 2000% more times than a practical martial art will do. Which is, drum rolls, rolling and falling. I have never seen a martial being so complete and complex when it comes to rolling and falling from any position at any moment from any height. To me it is the single most complete system when it comes to how will I contact the ground without dieing. And ever since I started skate boarding or other dayly hick up, knowing how to fall and roll have saved me more from injury than knowing how to fight will ever do. To say it in the words of Thors, I have no enemy, in my soon to be 30 years of living there wasn‘t even a single time where knowing how to fight would have saved me.

  • @ozramblue117
    @ozramblue11710 ай бұрын

    Amazing having watched your progress since that very first vid where you tried your aikido vs an mma guy and got wrecked. Makes perfect sense how some of that is now coming full circle and after so much training against actually resisting opponents you’ve found you didn’t simply waste your efforts.

  • @Herowebcomics
    @Herowebcomics10 ай бұрын

    Sweet! You found ways to make Aikido useful! That is awesome!

  • @pst5345
    @pst534510 ай бұрын

    I am so excited to see how Jesse Encamp will do...

  • @mikeindiacharliehotelalpha2373
    @mikeindiacharliehotelalpha237310 ай бұрын

    Out of all the moves to avoid a fight with an Aikido-ka that guy chose a handshake, lmao. Ol' Shioda would have snapped his elbow clean in half.

  • @piwright42
    @piwright4210 ай бұрын

    Very nice, the last story is the best story. Throughly enjoyed this.

  • @rolandgdean
    @rolandgdean10 ай бұрын

    I'm SO glad to see you discovering the value in what you invested so much of your life into. I trained more of a "jitsu" version of the art from a sensei who trained in Japan and used it many times in security work successfully. We were always encouraged to pressure test our techniques after becoming familiar with them. I'm glad to see some of the self doubt you had going away because as Mr. Miyagi said, "No such thing as bad student...only bad teacher." That's where I feel you were let down...I feel like Jesse ALSO knew the value of what you'd learned and I believe that's why he has encouraged you as much as he has. Your art, like you said, is actually training how best NOT TO FIGHT and its techniques are proven and time tested.

  • @marcosyy87
    @marcosyy8710 ай бұрын

    Haha I loved the Kenishi demonstration! Awesome video

  • @user-dg2hh1tq7d
    @user-dg2hh1tq7d6 ай бұрын

    This is amazing that you have applied aikido skill and it's technical physics shifting gravity and shattering it with striking.

  • @Markus-_-
    @Markus-_-10 ай бұрын

    "Greatest goal of Aikido is to win a fight without fighting." I agree 100% like what's in the lyrics of the song: kaleidoscope world by francis magalona "You can't talk peace and have a gun"

  • @aetius2277
    @aetius227710 ай бұрын

    That is awesome. You are unknowingly becoming a true Master of aikido. Mastering the techniques, well enough, to administer them against, several world class athletes. Through experience, you have learned to adapt the techniques. It is awesome to watch your journey.. It is very unfortunate that every time someone who has practical experience figures out ways to implement the aikido techniques the real aikidokas come out of the woodwork and label what they are doing not real aikido. I guess if it’s not beautiful and flowey it doesn’t qualify Lol Great job much respect for you

  • @Dave-lx3vt
    @Dave-lx3vt10 ай бұрын

    "Not real footage of the event" 😂😂😂

  • @RedFoxGrappler
    @RedFoxGrappler10 ай бұрын

    Shoutout to that clip of Master Akisame Koetsuji lmao

  • @jasongresci4520
    @jasongresci452010 ай бұрын

    Wow. This is so interesting. I would love to write you. Absolutely wild !

  • @pofmartialarts
    @pofmartialarts10 ай бұрын

    So what basically happened during your journey, is that you started with aikido and movement skills, but no understanding of combat, and you have learned, and made a transition into a person who understands it. yes you have learned additional skills, since fighting is always more than one set of skills. combat is not about the style, it is about principles and sate of mind. your aikido was never the problem, but the lack of fighting understanding, that is common in many traditional martial arts (I come from Chinese martial arts, lot of combat misunderstanding there).

  • @pensandoenvozalta8415

    @pensandoenvozalta8415

    10 ай бұрын

    Maybe aikido WAS part of the problem, since the practice, in the terms he learned it from does not encourage exploring other forms of martial arts with "other philosophies" about combat. Its not the same if you teach a set of techniques as being complementary to other techniques that if you teach something as if it really works by itself for self defense. Maybe there are a few things in which people teach traditional martial arts that is simply wrong.

  • @pofmartialarts

    @pofmartialarts

    10 ай бұрын

    @@pensandoenvozalta8415 i dont blame the stylr, but the people. but hr shook ut off and went learning more stuff, and gained more skills and perspective of combat. he just didnt have a good teacher in terms of "not aikido"

  • @pensandoenvozalta8415

    @pensandoenvozalta8415

    10 ай бұрын

    @@pofmartialarts I understand what you're saying, but that's exactly the problem: resisting to detect the problem with traditional martial arts. Blaming the practitioner by sistemically denying something *could* or in fact *is* wrong with the discipline itself is problematic. It happens with a lot a martial traditions: people tend to question the individual practitioners instead of thinking about the martial system Problem is, with that mindset, you'll never be able to detect any flaw on the system (because of assuming, a priori, that the problem is always the practitioner and never the system). That mindset gets in the way of critical thinking. And that's other problem with traditional martial arts: critical thinking (questioning what the teacher says for example) is not allowed. And maybe that's the reason why its SO difficult for people to question their martial arts knowledge. They are trained not to.

  • @pofmartialarts

    @pofmartialarts

    10 ай бұрын

    @@pensandoenvozalta8415 i agree that in systems where critical thinking is forbiden, it is an inherant systematic flaw. however, it is still people. and some one who lacks critical thinking will probbly wont be any more than mediocure no matter what the system is. this is why traditional martial arts, are tarditional - they do not require original thinking. the original people break the pattern and become rogue "traditional" (as my self). so that is why i dont speak of systems, but of people. tah said, aikido as a system wasnt ment to be martial, but spiritual decipline. and mayb the question is what makes system a system... in my pov, combat is not about a system but about principles of war, of movement, of power producing and of psichology.

  • @pensandoenvozalta8415

    @pensandoenvozalta8415

    10 ай бұрын

    @@pofmartialarts I agree. The whole "system" idea maybe is flawed, at least in terms of, for example, self defense knowledge. There can be no "complete system" that integrates all the necessary wknowledge to learn to defend yourself properly, perphaps it requires a certain level of integration of different types of knowledge (grappling, striking, use of weapons, deescalation, self control, surrounding awareness, etc).

  • @andrewm4911
    @andrewm49119 ай бұрын

    Love your videos and the honesty, openness and sense of exploration, testing and learning. When people say “least or most effective” martial art, there is something missing- least or most effective for what. Sure, if you’re only looking at what you can use in a formal fighting ring (MMA or whatever) then I’d guess you’d want a range of techniques to use. But most people who do martial arts aren’t doing because they are in regular MMA competitions. I haven’t had to use “fighting” techniques against someone since I was a teenager. However, I have had to de-escalate situations and intervened once to take a spare away from someone who was attaching someone else. The mindset that I learned in aikido (and which can be learned in other “arts” such as zhan zhuang) was invaluable as I didn’t immediately escalate into uncontrolled aggression. The increase in awareness that I got through aikido also helped me avoid situations that were potentially risky. If I ended up being attacked by someone with a knife I’d like to think I’d do what was most sensible for the situation but I have no idea. What I do know is that in numerous occasions the ability to connect, blend, redirect and defuse that I learned through aikido has been invaluable. A “conflict” typically starts before any physical contact and the principles I’ve learned through aikido have been useable for verbal “conflict” as well as in other settings. Having said that I didn’t take up aikido in order to beat up other people or as a means of self defence. I took it up to improve my ability in other activities, to have fun, to get fit. It’s also been very effective for mediation, mindfulness and cultivation.

  • @dust_to_dust
    @dust_to_dust10 ай бұрын

    Nice, man. That was all great.

  • @youngjunkim834
    @youngjunkim83410 ай бұрын

    aikido is okay. Cool video

  • @MartialArtsJourney

    @MartialArtsJourney

    10 ай бұрын

    It's not as bad if you cross train. Without cross training it's quite flawed in my opinion

  • @ironjavs1182

    @ironjavs1182

    10 ай бұрын

    I also agree that in most cases without any experience of sparring/fighting against resisting aikido wouldn't be so effective, but if you do have that kind of experience you can apply aikido effectively. And the same applies to all martial arts!

  • @mariustresorus942
    @mariustresorus94210 ай бұрын

    Excellent, I knew that will happen, Aïkido can't be just crap. I say that but I'm coming from Judo / Hung Gar Kung Fu / Muay Thaï. Really happy for you. I think you're going to be the guy who will make aïkido working for street fights cause no matter what, street fights happen for oneself or to defend another person, that's all.

  • @riazzaman20
    @riazzaman2010 ай бұрын

    Excellent video, I think the way you applied aikido in these situations very effective and no doubt you were able to do this due to the skills you have built throughout your martial arts journey. Also, how you dealt with the real life application is exactly the outcome a real martial artist would hope you achieve. Congratulations

  • @billywashere6965
    @billywashere69659 ай бұрын

    Awesome video and glad to see it being used effective in semi-realistic scenarios! Hopefully this moves toward removing the stigma surrounding Aikido that it was "ineffective".

  • @danielxtma
    @danielxtma10 ай бұрын

    Kenichi, my favourite anime of all time.

  • @kamekonoha
    @kamekonoha9 ай бұрын

    This man is an inspiration

  • @rezlogan4787
    @rezlogan478710 ай бұрын

    I train in a hard style school with lots of striking, clinching, and weapons techniques, but we also train a lot of aikido principles: redirect instead of resist, use the opponent’s force against them, use avoidance, escape, or diplomacy prior to fighting. It really gives the best of both worlds. I can survive a bad scrap, but I can also defuse and avoid needing to. We also live by the philosophy that a bigger, badder weapon at distance is a NECESSARY part of good martial practice. I am trained to use and carry a knife, stick, or gun anywhere I go, since these are proven to make the fight easier and safer for me to win.

  • @chinochana
    @chinochana10 ай бұрын

    "Are you sure you want to fight?" sounds me more like Clint Eastwood's "Go ahead, make my day" more than Master Ueshiba's teachings 😂

  • @MartialArtsJourney

    @MartialArtsJourney

    10 ай бұрын

    Haha

  • @PaMuShin

    @PaMuShin

    10 ай бұрын

    He probably was lucky, if the drunk were using the hand shake for a pull in with switch to back to german supplex then rokas with the head into pavement it would definitely have accomplished a day.

  • @alexandresinger6892
    @alexandresinger68928 ай бұрын

    This is an excellent video, it reveals the power of a martial art in real life situation, and the most useful weapon ever you can use which is DOUBT. This single sentence : "Are your sure you want to fight ?" Is a life saver in many situations. These can be physical or mental, harassment, bullying, etc... When someone is doing something wrong or bad, don't just blame or defend, but interrogate on the purpose, the meaning, the stakes, the risks, the issue, etc. This is self-defense most effective move. Question. It can go further than de-escalation, disarm. Deserves a video on its own.

  • @gregbalberan3369
    @gregbalberan33699 ай бұрын

    So you indeed absorbed what's useful. Cool!

  • @itistoday
    @itistoday10 ай бұрын

    Hey Rokas, have you considered opening an Aikido Dojo again? I would love to attend it if you ever do. All of this self-discovery and learning on your part could lead to a new school of Aikido, a revival if you will. Would be so cool to see you do that.

  • @MartialArtsJourney

    @MartialArtsJourney

    10 ай бұрын

    Opening an Aikido Dojo is not really on my list of things to do yet, but I'm slowly starting to teach what I learned about functional Aikido here and there.

  • @DragonDreamVNY
    @DragonDreamVNY10 ай бұрын

    Finger lock - I wonder would that have been good from a disadvantaged position like that. Hard to do under pressure without hurting Jeff though I'm loving the coverage and cross pollination from my fav KZreadrs martial artists. I'll be getting your T-shirt framed soon from the self defense championships ❤

  • @MartialArtsJourney

    @MartialArtsJourney

    10 ай бұрын

    Awesome!

  • @nunninkav

    @nunninkav

    10 ай бұрын

    You don't do finger locks in a sporting situation dude.

  • @MarkoObradovich
    @MarkoObradovich10 ай бұрын

    Cool shirts bro 👊 I really like them 💪

  • @MartialArtsJourney

    @MartialArtsJourney

    10 ай бұрын

    Really glad to hear it!

  • @chadlpnemt
    @chadlpnemt10 ай бұрын

    Something I noticed over the years watching your channel trying to make Aikido work is that you are typically the aggressor. To me, if I were using Aikido (as you learned it) it would be strictly defensive in nature. Attacker grabs for YOU while you are neutral or trying to create distance, not you chasing them around trying to get a wrist lock or something else. That you've just started to make it work for you as the aggressor by training in other styles is good. I think your most effective use is someone is attacking you and you are giving space and when they grab you, do your Aikido. That is something you really haven't tried as far as I can tell. You might see if you can set up a video with a guy who doesn't know you or your background and see if it's something you can show. I'd be interested to see if my theory is correct. And by the way, with everything going on near your country, I hope for your safety and nothing escalates into your country.

  • @monkeyboy275bobo8

    @monkeyboy275bobo8

    10 ай бұрын

    Thats actually a very good comment.

  • @jonathanharoun5247

    @jonathanharoun5247

    10 ай бұрын

    Aikido is a much more psychological art than people realize. If your intent is to win, then Aikido doesn't just not work, but it doesn't exist to begin with. In Karate Kid 2, Mr. Miyagi refused to fight Sato not merely because of his philosophy of only using Karate for self-defense, but because he literally did not know how to use Karate for anything other than self-dense, since the very intent of using it only for such means was an integral part of his training. It was heavily implied that if Miyagi had fought Sato, that he would have just stood there and let Sato beat him to death. As Miyagi said, "win or lose, the result is the same".

  • @chadlpnemt

    @chadlpnemt

    10 ай бұрын

    @jonathanharoun5247 probably true but think about the element of surprise. You're walking home and some dude tries to grab you and maybe you act like you're nit wanting a struggle and you simply do the move when he thinks you're not going to fight. But forcing it during a fight will he harder to do.

  • @tomshepherd4901
    @tomshepherd490110 ай бұрын

    In your street self-defense situation, you handled it brilliantly. The best fight is the fight avoided. I once demonstrated some of the principles of Aikido to a friend who was a brown belt in Okinawan Karate. The next day, he excitedly told me how he had out sparred the blackbelts in his class by redirecting their attacks past him and counter attacking from the side or rear. So, the principles underlying all martial arts transend the arts themselves. If it works, make it work for you, whatever your style...

  • @lunathemie465
    @lunathemie46510 ай бұрын

    I LOVE YOU ROKAS

  • @MartialArtsJourney

    @MartialArtsJourney

    10 ай бұрын

    😁❤️

  • @IsaacLausell
    @IsaacLausell10 ай бұрын

    Awesome video and great examples! From what I have read and experienced Aikido training is not meant to teach you how to fight but how to recognize these principles in everything that you do. It is philosophy but intertwined and expressed through physics. I think since you transitioned into training to become a fighter your Aikido shows in that as well as it show in the work of dancer, musician or athlete that trains it. I know this might read kind of “hippieish” but like Bruce Lee said like water it takes the shape of the vessel that contains it. I see Aikido in a single or double leg take down, it is basically an Irimi Nage, just expressed differently. When Lyoto Machida launches a Mae Geri (front kick) as a faint and to drag him closer and generate forward momentum to land an Oi tsuki (lunge punch) that is also Aiki, in essence Atemi waza unbalancing the opponent before a technique.

  • @markmitchell8374
    @markmitchell83744 ай бұрын

    good description of aikido techniques in fighting. love it. Also your last street fight was aikido in the shin shin tradition with Tohei.leading their mind and confusing them with "are you sure you want to fight./" Followign the flow is true aikido.:)

  • @goreobsessed2308
    @goreobsessed230810 ай бұрын

    My dad taught me an arm grab push on their elbow. Ive won 3 fights with that one move.

  • @phreed2
    @phreed222 сағат бұрын

    Aikidoka here. I'm glad that Rokas went back to appreciating aikido, a beautiful martial art! I'm quite a beginner but have been practicing pretty hard so far. I used to do bjj before aikido and switched to the latter because I found it more interesting! I want to address the "it's uncomplete" argument: maybe judo and karate are complete? Maybe bjj is? Maybe wrestling? The answer to all those questions is a firm NO. Karate does not prepare you to fight a grappler, as well as judo gives you no striking skills. I think anyone has their own style, be it mixed or be it bound to a single art, that's ok but going around talking about the "completeness" of other martial arts is not useful imo. P.s. I am not shitting on judo and karate, that I deeply respect, I was just showing how the same logic can be applied to each martial art.

  • @matthewmoore8861
    @matthewmoore886110 ай бұрын

    Good stuff! I understand this is a simulation, but if you’ve ever been hit by a bare knuckle, it really changes a lot of this demonstration!

  • @basilistsakalos9643
    @basilistsakalos964310 ай бұрын

    Aikido are not the joint locks only. These are named gyaku waza and are part of the original Jujutsu/Taijutsu curriculum. Aiki is the principle of meeting and blending with an incoming force, irrelevant of its form, in such a way that is is neutralised. Aikido is the path of this principle. It is a skill based on this principle, as well as a tactic and a strategy. Any mma fighter who learnes this principle of blending with incoming force would develop very advanced skill.

  • @gdikari

    @gdikari

    10 ай бұрын

    Actually, if you watch carefully greatest fighters in MMA and boxing, you will notice a lot of "blending". Of course it will not look pretty and "flowerly" as in Aikido demos, but the underlining principle will be the same.

  • @basilistsakalos9643

    @basilistsakalos9643

    10 ай бұрын

    @@gdikari indeed, I agree. The only difference is that Aiki principle comes from the use of cold weapons and in my opinion is quite refined.

  • @faydoza
    @faydoza10 ай бұрын

    Let's see more kumite videos!

  • @BadaBarreto
    @BadaBarreto10 ай бұрын

    Nice Founding the real aikido. Not only the dojo ballet.

  • @noescapefromreality1749
    @noescapefromreality17499 ай бұрын

    Have nothing but my respect for this. While it is not my place or area to judge, it feels like real character development seeing you appreciate part of Aikido. There is something to be learned from everything, both good and bad. If you were interested on an Aiki pracitioner that cross trains and uses Aiki in an effective way for sure take a look at Paul Cale, guy is a legend.

  • @user-rw6ui5nv5i
    @user-rw6ui5nv5i5 ай бұрын

    Aikido is such a beautiful and graceful martial art

  • @laojiayilu6771
    @laojiayilu677110 ай бұрын

    I have only superficial knowledge of Aikido, but I be interested im you point of view: would you say you used Aikido or you applied techniques common to Aikido and other martial arts and other martial arts like Jujutsu, ... ?

  • @Samurai161177
    @Samurai16117710 ай бұрын

    I like this Channel. I am a fan of it. Martial Arts is a Longlife Study. But at the end is the spirituality of budo is the most important think to learn.

  • @aj5332
    @aj53324 ай бұрын

    Last part of it is a beautiful anecdote after all ❤😂

  • @SnoppysWingman
    @SnoppysWingman10 ай бұрын

    My partner and I like to refer to situations like the last as "verbal judo", where you're taking a potential or impending conflict and turning it on its head with control and grace (or, as the situation may demand, timing and decisive action).

  • @TheUnclefester13
    @TheUnclefester1310 ай бұрын

    I’ve never trained aikido, but I’ve always believed in its philosophy. I studied shito ryu karate, and Wally J small circle jui jitsu. Small circle in my limited observation was much like aikido in its vein of bend, don’t break philosophy. I hate Brazilian juijitsu, I trained in it for a month, and out of a school of thirty students only found one of the upper pupils that didn’t come off as an arrogant prick. That included the sensi as well. One of the worst of the bunch was always on me because of my karate background. He got started with me after class and I ended up in an arm bar in the parking lot. I pulled a box cutter out, and pressed it against his Achilles’ tendon without opening the blade. Told him broken elbow to a cut tendon his choice. I quit the class after that. Aikido gave me the mantra do no more harm than necessary. I enjoy your content sir.

  • @rodvan-zeller6360
    @rodvan-zeller636010 ай бұрын

    at 0:40, in real life strike the throat first, you will see how well the wrist lock works. Simple sequence, strike, break throw.

  • @nerdSupreme14
    @nerdSupreme1410 ай бұрын

    The Kenichi footage was cool, great anime

  • @flugendorffilms6130
    @flugendorffilms613010 ай бұрын

    Awesome

  • @IntegralMartialArts
    @IntegralMartialArts9 ай бұрын

    Nice to see both throws and joint locks in the mix here! Ueshiba did do a lot of Sumo along with Daito-Ryu. Many believe that Sumo is the pathway “back to the future” for Aikido!

  • @raydrexler5868
    @raydrexler586810 ай бұрын

    It bears repeating that all martial arts have roots in actual combat and therefore the basics can be applied in a real fight. This is the journey.

  • @coolwaterhubby5208
    @coolwaterhubby52089 ай бұрын

    Would like to know if Aikido is available on line in a course towards a black belt.

  • @Matt-pr6nl
    @Matt-pr6nl10 ай бұрын

    Nicely done, the most effective martial art is the one you don't have to use.

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