Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - A sentence in Bruce Lee Thought: Everyone has his own Jeet Kune Do. What do you mean? Jeet Kune Do combines several martial arts.

A sentence in Bruce Lee Thought: Everyone has his own Jeet Kune Do. What do you mean? Jeet Kune Do combines several martial arts.

The purpose of Jeet Kune Do is to make it impossible and infinitely limited. Jeet Kune Do includes 10,000 families, but does not include 10,000 families. Bruce Lee Jeet Kune Do is based on Wing Chun Boxing, which combines more than 20 world mainstream martial arts such as Tai Ji Chuan, Hongquan, Karate, Taekwondo, Muay Thai, fencing, Aikido and boxing. From the purpose of Jeet Kune Do, you can use any martial arts as long as you can use it for yourself. We should break through the restrictions of sects, pursue spiritual liberation and freedom, and express ourselves faithfully. There are no fixed moves in Jeet Kune Do. His so-called moves are the basic skills that JKD people can instinctively master (namely Jeet Kune Do, the technology here is for beginners to enter the room quickly, not the core and focus of Jeet Kune Do, which is not contradictory to the purpose). They created it by themselves, and it has a strong personal color and exclusive symbols (the howling in Bruce Lee's movies and his iconic movements are the symbols of Jeet Kune Do, Bruce Lee). Bruce Lee once fiercely criticized almost all China traditional martial arts and Japanese karate, including Wing Chun. He believes that these martial arts have been limited to "type" for thousands of years, and his Jeet Kune Do should completely break the shackles of "type". Traditional Wushu masters are the inheritors of "truth" from generation to generation. They have passed down the fixed routines and moves from generation to generation, and disciples are not allowed to change them without authorization. Jeet Kune do is people-oriented, guiding disciples to pursue spiritual liberation and freedom, and faithfully expressing themselves.