User:BlancaHSQH

I will introduce myself as Ericka and I grew up in Utah in the USA - I am a fresher getting education in Sport Science as well as Dutch and I also look after a top quality site about self defense instruction.From the time of Bruce Lee in the early 1960’s, to the Ninja Turtles and Power Rangers, all the way to today and the explosion of mixed martial arts, the perception of martial arts training has changed over the years.Back in the 1960’s and 1970’s, Bruce Lee’s movies and the Kung Fu television series inspired and mystified people of all ages.We were all captured by the seemingly super-human abilities we saw on the big screen and our televisions. Watching Bruce Lee explode into action, taking out multiple attackers or Kwai Chang Caine performing mystical feats of strength and skill drove adults and children alike to learn more about martial arts training.Back then, martial arts training was still viewed as mysterious; people that were trained as black belts in the martial arts were rumored to need to register themselves as lethal weapons. Martial arts training was rough and tumble; dojos (training halls) were likely to be dingy, one-room spaces with no floor padding and a single light bulb suspended on a cord from the ceiling.