| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | Ballarat, Australia | |
| age | 29 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 4 months |
| seen | Feb 28 at 22:07 | |
| stats | profile views | 1 |
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Feb 1 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Dec 31 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Dec 13 |
comment |
Finding my - center - hara - t'an t'ien Find a really really good Tai Chi teacher - they'll fix that posture in a few weeks. |
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Dec 10 |
comment |
Are there good alternatives to wood for weapons? Solid Aluminium? Not hollow? |
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Sep 6 |
awarded | Editor |
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Sep 6 |
revised |
Why drop the bokken vertical prior to a downstroke? corrected spelling |
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Sep 6 |
suggested | suggested edit on Why drop the bokken vertical prior to a downstroke? |
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Sep 6 |
comment |
What are good martial arts for aging bodies? I second Tai Chi, but would drop Judo/Jujitsu, etc - particularly hard on the knee joints. Especially Judo. |
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Jun 4 |
answered | What does it mean to “uproot” someone in tai chi? |
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Mar 27 |
comment |
Established “curriculum” for MMA? No - as I said in the answer, I haven't seen the program in action. I only know the creator/instructor. |
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Mar 14 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Mar 14 |
accepted | What's the difference between Internal and External martial arts? |
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Feb 28 |
answered | How do I increase my wrist strength for punching? |
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Feb 23 |
awarded | Organizer |
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Feb 23 |
revised |
What's this posture called, and does it signify something added new tag |
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Feb 23 |
comment |
What's this posture called, and does it signify something done - you just type in the tag you want (at least that's what I did) |
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Feb 23 |
suggested | suggested edit on What's this posture called, and does it signify something |
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Feb 22 |
awarded | Critic |
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Feb 22 |
comment |
What's this posture called, and does it signify something I think this might be better named a "posture" - stance in my vernacular usually refers just to the feet and their positioning. |
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Feb 22 |
comment |
Correct usage of the title “Master”? I think this and many other questions are accepting answers too quickly - Shihan(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shihan) is a common Japanese title meaning Master and in Chinese Martial Arts Master is a quite common term. |