Kung Fu training with Shi Heng Yi – head master of Shaolin Temple Europe. @ShaolinTempleEurope

Big thanks to William Ustav for filming this 24 hours challenge and Shaolin Temple Europe for kindly hosting me: https://shaolin.online

☯️ BIO: Jesse Enkamp a.k.a The Karate Nerd™ is a #1 Amazon Best-Selling Author, National Team Athlete, Keynote Speaker, Entrepreneur, Carrot Cake Lover & Founder of Seishin International – The World’s Leading Karate Lifestyle Brand.

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WARNING: The advice and movements shown in this video are for informational and educational purposes only. Consult a health professional before engaging in any exercise or martial arts program.

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This video is under Fair Use: Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act in 1976; Allowance is made for “Fair Use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. All rights and credit go directly to its rightful owners. No copyright infringement intended.

#Kungfu #Shaolin #karate

Music credit: Scott Buckley – released under CC-BY 4.0 – www.scottbucjkley.com.au

40 Comments

  1. It’s these things that make me want to throw my phone away and study this and devote myself to this life of peace.

  2. that self reflection of ones own structure, makes one wonder , was i taught wrong, and or ive been doing it incorrectly this whole time?? great martial arts moments of training.

  3. Did the experience make you question your own style from certain aspects, or did you accept that there may be positives and negatives with every type of Martial Art?

  4. This is how you know this guy has a level of legitamacey. If a guy can explain the center line mechanics of his art hes well read. Every martial art has their own centerline theory, Boxing has centerline theory bases on the controlling shutting down of alternate lines of attack with hooks and defense, while dominating the center line of attack through jabs and crosses. Judo and wrestling share similar centerline theorys revolving around how a persons weight is affected the more their pushed off their centerline, and how best to go down the centerline for charging or grappling attacks. Every art has this,But i have never actually heard the concrete explanation for kungfu centerline theory. Always just assumed it was similar to karates, Wich beleives that the centerline is the only effective lane of attack and also the most powerful. Kungfus centerline theory instead seems to preach that the best way to controll and dominate all lanes of attack, Centerline and off-angle, You need constant momentum, kungfu seems to propose that instead of waiting on a single line of attack and just shutting down the rest like boxing, Or mma might do, You should put a guard capable of defend against all lanes of attack simultaneously. This makes sense because of the circular movement in their guards and momentum, Any other martial arts lanes of attack are forward, and to the side, The constant flow and redirection of kungfu fighters guardand attacks means they can, with proper training, seemlessly flow between every line of attack,Not needing to shut any down in order to dominate another. Have you ever been sparring with someone and their like a boxer or something, and then your sparringand all th sudden he hits you with a question mark kick,Dives into a iminari roll while your hurtand taps you out with a gogoplatta, The shock of a boxer beingable to flow off his usual lines of attack, would be the shock you experience when fighting a kungfu master. Every attack, regaurdless of wherethe previous one left the combatants, Is capable of coming from any angle. Somewhat a practical version of capoeria, The ability to flow unpredictably through attacks with ease.

  5. Can you describe the differences in shaolin vs other martial arts? I put my son in a kung fu class and he was trained in kickboxing/karate before but the punching styles were different – keeping the foot grounded instead of using the pivot from the leg up to the hips to generate power. He constantly gets corrected for the way he punches.

  6. He makes a very good point. With low mass, it's hard to get power from a linear attack. Angular momentum can be built without much mass. Hense the hook punch in boxing, Krav Maga, Russian Systema, Qian Bai in Kung Fu, Kage-zuki in Karate, Mat Wiang San in Muay Thai. Every technique in every martial art is rooted in physics.They are just different translations of the same concepts.

  7. Wow that is profound. “Letting go “ principle which is necessary when we experience pain in life. That’s right. How we deal with it is another thing. Kung-fu and karate is life.👍

  8. Great Channel and superb video! I trained karate as a kid, my Sensei gave an emphasis on strike control and stances. It really helped me a lot in mya martial arts training through out my life. As an teenager I begin training Aikido focusing on self-defense, it changed everything and gave me a expanded view of a true life and death situation. After some time I found a traditional Shaolin Kung Fu Master and begin my training with him. Everything that I thought I knew were useful, but lacked that kind of refinement show in your video.

  9. Hey man video is great, moments captured are beautiful and the master has an amazing presence, BUT the video has a HUGE FLAW = Narrator speaking from first person point of view, combined with cheese writing is slaughtering the video, story telling, overall quality and turns people off. His story telling doesn't match your personality at all, it's completely off as-well. Doesn't matter who is narrating, it's not YOU. Sorry just being honest. I'd give this video an A+ but with narrator it drops it to C-.

  10. After years of torture I still feel pain but can control reactions to it. Main line for me was am I losing use of this part of my body, will I be able to escape when chance comes. 😮
    😺🐦🤓

  11. Fantastic master and Jesse is always learning, A master once, A tree that grounds itself and bends with the wind can become almost unable to move. 43 yrs, JKD, And old style Shinto Shotokan Samuel. I encorpate many styles. Great vedio, My bow to the Master. Your pose is evidence of your modesty, but you are a great fighter, I wish I studied more now over the years. Thank you .

  12. I trained in Traditional Hungar for years, it was BRUTAL, but strengthen me like no other martial art and my core abilities are better now. I have done Judo, Jujitsu, Krate, kung fu the real deal fighting kung fu was the most brutal and effective.

  13. All body attacks are meant to get to head (especially just behind the ear) and neck. Body is far more fragile than folks acknowledge. No reason to fight anyone unless it is terminal, otherwise it is just silly ego based chest pounding.

  14. The area between your sexual organ and anus is a pressure point, you could care less about your balls if you get hit there, might die on the spot

  15. Straight line power vs round movements is actually profound. He opened with some mystique then proved he is where the rubber meets the road and can whoop some ass lol.

  16. I swear Shaolin monks are the most fascinating people.
    Some of the things they do, if you seen their training, it’s absolutely insane what they do.
    I could never.
    I do things like boxing jujitsu, wrestling Muaythai karate but when it comes to whatever training that is, it’s affective I’ll give them that but I could never I’d run out of stamina before it started truly.
    also these people I swear got to be some of the strongest people on the planet and if not, I don’t know what the meaning of strong is

  17. Ive got a question for you. You've been all around the world, practicing with many different profoundly knowledgeable people and have experienced more martial arts than most. Have you taken aspects of other arts, even if only philosophy, and integrated them into your own training and teaching?

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