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Oliver

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Posts posted by Oliver

  1. Dude, am a big guy myself, and didn't experience anything like that from the Thais. The owner and trainers were super nice to me.

    Actually found it the other way. Like the other westerners were friendly, but didn't want to partner up for clinching - probably in their view it wouldn't be fair to them. 

    Fair enough really.

    It was that Thai trainer who held great pads that took pity and came over to give me 10 min clinch sparring with him. Young one with all the tatts. That was cool of him, he didn't have to do that.

  2. Tried this gym for couple of days last week. Owner is a good dude, and trainer held pads amazingly. Especially for lefties that's a big deal.

    But... no Thai fighters training in there - the place is a Farang Farm. So for sparring and clinch you don't get a Thai partner. (And half of them spar with you like they just saw you run over their dog.)

    Just saying as this 2nd point is something that never gets mentioned by ppl online. 

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  3. 10 hours ago, LengLeng said:

    There are two main reasons you want to run. 1. Show dedication so the gym invests in you. 2. Build stamina for a fight. 

    Yep. 

    Also might be a number 3. Makes your body kick stronger. Way stronger, like a night and day difference.

    Perhaps just a personal experience, but it feels like there's something that happens to the leg muscles from running that doesn't happen from weight training. It's freaky.

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  4. On 12/9/2019 at 8:32 AM, MadelineGrace said:

     

    i want to feel my best. Sometimes I geti 'tired’ during the work outs or class but don’t give up. ( plus there is no option to give up during my Muay Thai class. You do what he says. Period. Only exception is an injury 🤣🤷🏻‍♀️)  If I drank I’d think i’d just suck wind and not be at my best. Not worth it to me. 

    Agreed, 💯.

    Since first posting this question on the forum, have given up all booze for good now. Feel way way better, and don't even miss it.

    But maybe wasn't much of a sacrifice, never was a big drinker anyway. Seems like it's one of those things that's just socially expected of you.

    • Like 3
  5. On 1/12/2020 at 5:36 PM, nordeastnakmuay said:

    Looking for help with extending my stay. I've been in Thailand on a 6 month tourist visa. I tried for an ED Visa for Thai language school, but everyone applying for that visa on the day I tried at the Penang office was verbally denied. 

    I'm trying to understand how I see so many foreign fighters who seem to figure out how to stay here indefinitely. 

    Anyway, as many understand, you need more than 6 months to really develop here so I'm hoping to discover a way to make it work for myself and get a longer stay. 

    Dude, personally having the exact same issue, if you learn any new info please post it, I'd love to know too.

    I heard some ppl are allowed to stay if they invest in a business or buy a house... But if we can't afford to do that, then what? 

    Thinking of paying some chick to do a fake marriage. Going home to a bullshit dead end job and -15° temperature doesn't seem that appealing now that I'm here..

  6. Cheers man, yeah have seen older trainers who day drink and smoke a pack a day, and been shocked when they offer me a can or a smoke. So have you found good active fighters still maintain a no booze at all approach?

    Have trained with some Thais like this, who probably wouldn't touch a drop on their birthdays, and some who stack up on Leo after a win and get together to get fucked up. But then back to being sober and training right after.

    Wondered which was more common. And to anybody reading, how you find drinking affects your body's ability to recover.

  7. Hey everyone 😊

    Wondered what people thought about an issue that doesn't get raised much if ever in the open - but noticed fighters have strong opinions either way in private. You guys all sound fairly well schooled in Thai in your countries, so be interested to hear ideas 

    On the subject of drinking, do you guys follow the traditional old school view of no alcohol at all, or the more modern everything in moderation view. 

    Personally, never drank in training for  fights, but still loved to kick back and party afterwards. But even this is having a horrible effect on my body and ability to feel right and in tune afterwards. 

    Oh yeah, also tend to be living in disturbingly alcohol cultures the last few years, where it's a huge part of every day life and everyone expects you to be part of it. Even ppl in the gym

    Thanks a lot 😀👊🏼

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  8. Practice landing safely, sounds like a disappointing answer but Jesus does it help. Grapplers, bjj judo MMA guys etc actually understand this fairly well and practice falling drills to land totally clean without breaking anything or feeling much hurt at all. It's possible, and then you aren't scared to go down if youre unlucky enough to wind up in that situation. If there's a bjj teacher at your gym ask to show you a Break Fall.

    Obviously, perfect world, don't get taken down, but if it has to happen then being confident in falling safe will prevent you from getting injured. It's like skating or snowboarding - the fear of going down during a fast and sharp major turn is exactly what will make you go down and hurt yourself.

  9. How much does your partner weigh?

    Having someone the same weight or no more than 20lb heavier might help. Maybe partner with a smaller guy who is like 135 or something, or even a teenager. Might feel better than another girl who's upwards of 160.

    My old training partner had 45lb on me so this brings back memories, you're def right that it's a weight issue. Forearms and ribs always killed when taking kicks on pads, and you're always worried that you're holding wrong and your partner isn't able to go as strong as they could.

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  10. 9 hours ago, LengLeng said:

    It feels like they're cheating or using short-cuts.

    Yeah true. Maybe though, karma will reward you and others more in the long run for not using that short cut. Different, but slightly similar issue - at least 3 current champions come to mind who have also talked about being more motivated to improve early on because a minority or even one person got all trainer attention and time.

    Sucks though.

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