Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - The home of the n times square in the chestnut sister that unloading joints of kung fu is called ah, who can teach me how to do this kind of kung fu ah!

The home of the n times square in the chestnut sister that unloading joints of kung fu is called ah, who can teach me how to do this kind of kung fu ah!

Home of the N times, I also watched, the plot is very good, but that kind of kung fu is fiction. Because no one plays with human skeleton modeling so much that they can disassemble human tendons.

To dislocate a person's joints like they do on TV, in traditional martial arts, it's called dismantling the bones. That type of martial arts is very test kung fu, not a year or two can be practiced, you must have a very good power, or called have enough strength it.

The martial arts that are really going to be based on counter-joints are, in addition to traditional grappling, the jujitsu types - including Brazilian jiu-jitsu, aikido, judo, and so on.

Where takedowns are used in real situations, they can mainly only be used in situations where your opponent is defenseless or is already much less chi than you, which may be similar to what you see on TV, but in practice isn't very useful.

In judo, counter-joints are not the main technique; aikido and BJJ are more counter-joints and takedowns than anything else.

If you really want to learn a skill, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu is the best. Then Aikido is also good, very elegant movements, just difficult to learn. If you don't have a place to learn both near your home, then Judo is also very good. If neither is available, but you can learn grappling, of course, that's fine too.