I’m not sure if I should put this here or the boring advice repository...
Even if you’re not interested in martial arts, if you have the opportunity try to go to the first class of a session of judo or aikido and see if they’ll let you take one class for free. Even if you only come the first time, the first lesson is the most instrumentally useful one—how to fall down. Most people will never need to defend themselves in a street fight, but they’re not at all unlikely to slip on a patch of ice, or misjudge a step on the stairs, or fall off a ladder, and our instincts for dealing with a fall are really counterproductive. Learning ukemi-waza may keep you out of the emergency room (one of my teachers did, in fact, fall off a ladder while cleaning his gutters, and walked away from it).
Even if you only come the first time, the first lesson is the most instrumentally useful one—how to fall down. Most people will never need to defend themselves in a street fight, but they’re not at all unlikely to slip on a patch of ice, or misjudge a step on the stairs, or fall off a ladder, and our instincts for dealing with a fall are really counterproductive.
Is one lesson enough to make that movement sufficiently instinctive that it will work when having an unexpected fall?
A related question: is one lesson enough to enable safe subsequent practice on one’s own which, in turn, can make that movement sufficiently instinctive?
One lesson might well be enough to practice on your own. As I replied to wedrifid’s parallel comment, once you’ve been taught it once, you can also probably rely on YouTube for reinforcement.
No, but once you’ve seen what you need to practice, it can be done safely on your own on a carpet or grass (I would not recommend practicing on a hard surface; not that it won’t work, but you’d get very sore doing it repeatedly).
Additionally, once you’ve had it shown to you in person, you can probably rely on YouTube if you need a refresher. I would not recommend skipping the actual lesson in favor of YouTube, however. It’s best to have someone watching to see if you’re doing the exercises correctly at least once.
No. Ive had fall technique trigger in accidents I did not see coming—including literally having a ladder yanked out from under me, but that was after over 3 years of 2-3 times week judo and jujitsu. Martial arts, however do have one major selling point. As exercise goes, a good dojo is simply a lot of fun. This makes it much, much easier to keep up than a gym subscription. Milage may vary for people who do not enjoy being tossed around as much as I do. I do emphasize “good”. Quality of teaching and social atmosphere vary very widely. If you want to do this, make sure whereever you go has a tone you are comfortable with, and that their teachings has some sort of reality benchmark related to why you go. If you want to do it as a sport, try to find a dojo that has people in it that win contests. If you want selfdefence, the one the police use for qualifying training ought to be good (.. if your local police force is at all competent) but taking up parkour is probably more useful.
(For street fights, if you think you might get in one, it seems like buying pepper spray and carrying it everywhere would be cheaper, take less time, and be more effective in a fight (in terms of disabling someone easily while also not going too far and actually hurting them).)
That and sprints, since they’re good for lots of other health reasons anyway. The lowered status and accompanying stress from running away is more than made up for in not-dying.
I’ve been meaning to do this for a while. Feldenkrais was big on the importance of your relationship to gravity. Poor balance and fear of falling make for near continuous anxiety.
I’m not sure if I should put this here or the boring advice repository...
Even if you’re not interested in martial arts, if you have the opportunity try to go to the first class of a session of judo or aikido and see if they’ll let you take one class for free. Even if you only come the first time, the first lesson is the most instrumentally useful one—how to fall down. Most people will never need to defend themselves in a street fight, but they’re not at all unlikely to slip on a patch of ice, or misjudge a step on the stairs, or fall off a ladder, and our instincts for dealing with a fall are really counterproductive. Learning ukemi-waza may keep you out of the emergency room (one of my teachers did, in fact, fall off a ladder while cleaning his gutters, and walked away from it).
Is one lesson enough to make that movement sufficiently instinctive that it will work when having an unexpected fall?
A related question: is one lesson enough to enable safe subsequent practice on one’s own which, in turn, can make that movement sufficiently instinctive?
One lesson might well be enough to practice on your own. As I replied to wedrifid’s parallel comment, once you’ve been taught it once, you can also probably rely on YouTube for reinforcement.
No, but once you’ve seen what you need to practice, it can be done safely on your own on a carpet or grass (I would not recommend practicing on a hard surface; not that it won’t work, but you’d get very sore doing it repeatedly).
Additionally, once you’ve had it shown to you in person, you can probably rely on YouTube if you need a refresher. I would not recommend skipping the actual lesson in favor of YouTube, however. It’s best to have someone watching to see if you’re doing the exercises correctly at least once.
No. Ive had fall technique trigger in accidents I did not see coming—including literally having a ladder yanked out from under me, but that was after over 3 years of 2-3 times week judo and jujitsu. Martial arts, however do have one major selling point. As exercise goes, a good dojo is simply a lot of fun. This makes it much, much easier to keep up than a gym subscription. Milage may vary for people who do not enjoy being tossed around as much as I do. I do emphasize “good”. Quality of teaching and social atmosphere vary very widely. If you want to do this, make sure whereever you go has a tone you are comfortable with, and that their teachings has some sort of reality benchmark related to why you go. If you want to do it as a sport, try to find a dojo that has people in it that win contests. If you want selfdefence, the one the police use for qualifying training ought to be good (.. if your local police force is at all competent) but taking up parkour is probably more useful.
(For street fights, if you think you might get in one, it seems like buying pepper spray and carrying it everywhere would be cheaper, take less time, and be more effective in a fight (in terms of disabling someone easily while also not going too far and actually hurting them).)
That and sprints, since they’re good for lots of other health reasons anyway. The lowered status and accompanying stress from running away is more than made up for in not-dying.
I’ve been meaning to do this for a while. Feldenkrais was big on the importance of your relationship to gravity. Poor balance and fear of falling make for near continuous anxiety.