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bakpao

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Posts posted by bakpao

  1. What is expensive for one person, may be cheap to another. 

    Though, I would be wary of buying a package like this, the reason being is usually you don't choose what food you can eat, so if you wanna eat fried rice, they might give you noodles. Depending where you are living a meal can be from 20-50b so if you're going higher 150/day.

    Room, you can get a condo (nice big space) for about 7000b a month, again depends on where you are living. 233/day

    Usually Muay Thai training is around 10000 a month for 2x/day. 333/day

    So for the package you wanted you could spend 716/day if you did it yourself. There are also a lot of other costs that I didn't add on, simply because your question was about room/training/food.

     

    Hope it helped.

  2. Aitor´s fight (poor quality):

     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WKE-gZJ-hNU

    He said that he faced a very strong guy (a "buffalo"  he called him) and that his head was rock solid like ground. As you said Bakpao he felt the lack of gloves and that was surprised by the uppercuts to the body in clinch. He will adapted to that beacuse he want to repeat :-) Overall, to him was a great experience and said that his opponent was a really nice guy, you can see that after the fight. Sorry but I got the video yesterday!

    Your friend is good and he fought well, it just looked like he had a hard time with how relentless the Burmese boxer was. And in fairness to your friend Soe Lin Oo is very famous.

    Yeah, I think if he trained maybe in a lethwei gym or trained lethwei style for a short period of time he'd adapt very well. 

    Seems like a huge adrenaline rush to go fight in front of a massive audience against a local without gloves and headbutts, lol. :ohmy:

    • Like 1
  3. following similar  muaythai martial arts, a friend of mine, Aitor Alonso, will fight in Lethwei. I will let you know what he thinks about it (and the headbuts :-) )

    Not only the headbutts, but the lack of gloves! I just finished watching fists of pride which was about the Burmese in the Thai camps of Mae Sot, and also showcasing the annual Thai VS Burmese.

    Is your friend going to Myanmar to fight? I think the Burmese are really nice people.

     

    That just reminded me, I need to finish this thread, I shall do it tomorrow.

    • Like 2
  4. One aspect of Muay Thai that interests me is that winning titles doesn't always directly correlate to supreme glory. For example, Somrak Khamsing never won a stadium title but is considered among the greatest nakmuays of all time.

    He didn't win a stadium title but he was the first Thai to win a gold medal at the Olympics, which could be perceived as a greater achievement than a stadium title(?). Not to mention the time period he won it in, which just propelled his fame. 

    Though, Sudsakorn is quite famous and he was never a major stadium champion, so it doesn't directly correlate I agree.

     

    Sorry for going off-topic OP.

  5.  

    So I guess my question is: if you were in my situation, would you go with a different gym (if so, do you have any suggestions?) or go back to a gym where you already know the trainers?

    What is the reason for looking for a new gym? Were the gyms training lacking in a certain area? Do you want to try something new? 

    Personally, if it was for a fight and that's what I wanted to focus on and I knew one of the gyms I've already been to would be able to provide everything I want/need then I'd return to what I'm familiar with. At the same time, I'm a curious cat. What I'm thinking is that maybe you can go back to the same (or near) area of one of the gyms you previously went to and visit other gyms in that area, and if it goes badly you can always fall back on that gym you know.

    It doesn't have to be the same area though, I'm just thinking in terms of time efficiency, you could always go to Burklerk's gym and if it doesn't suit you can go to another gym in the north or wherever. 

     

    Just as a side note though, I've noticed a lot of the Pinsinchai fighters are really great instructors. :sorcerer:

    • Like 1
  6. I'm too lazy to read it.

    Going off your topic question alone though, there's many reasons, but I will briefly write my personal opinion.

    I think if you spend a lot of time training for something whether its running, swimming, eating, boxing, muay thai, then you want to test yourself to see how good you actually are. A competition really shows you which areas you need to improve, though I don't think this is the only reason I also believe the rush of fighting is something many people love.

    I'm not rich, but I want to compete so that I can improve and also because its something I enjoy and I don't want to live life doing things I don't enjoy. Hey they do say you only regret the things you didn't do! 

     

    I'm sure someone can tell you a proper explanation with loads of theories etc etc etc.  :sorcerer:

  7. bakpao, I feel you're not too happy about choosing the MMA option, but it's still a place where you will get some exercise, so it will keep you in shape.

    And who knows, maybe you'll catch the MMA bug? :D

    I can relate to your situation, as I will have to let go of my really great MT trainer in just a month, coz he's going abroad for half a year. So my option is to go back to a trainer I previously trained with, who is really into teaching MMA-style Muay Thai. There are differences in style. He corrects my cool low kick or totally effective leg block. Because it's not effective in MMA. So it's a difficult situation for me AND the trainer, coz I'm there only for Muay Thai and he's aware of it and partly okay with it, but he's so fascinated with MMA, that at the same time he seems a bit pissed off at me doing it the "traditional" way and tends to neglect me in training. Oh and he doesn't like my super great trainer that I love for his Muay Thai! XD I don't know if this works out in the long run, but I have to give it a try. Which I would advise you to do, too.

    So, all in all. Depending how the trainer at your new place will put emphasis on the "usefulness" of Muay Thai in MMA, you'll either learn Muay Thai or MMA-style stand-up ;) But in the end, you still learn combinations and work out. So it's better than doing nothing. 

    And in Thailand they will change your technique anyway, regardless of what you've trained back home ;) ;) XD

    I actually like MMA, but I don't like the trash talk and the lack of history behind it. I used to do kickboxing a while ago, that got boring too because there's nothing behind it, its just boxing mixed with karate... you know what I mean? No substance, if that's the right thing to say.

     

    Yeah that's the issue, because he's so used to thinking of training for MMA, even if he is teaching Muay Thai he's still fitting into scenarios for MMA in his head. So its like, he's teaching Muay Thai but his agenda is for it to suit MMA, lol I don't know how to explain. It's like if you ask a Thai to teach you boxing, it will be suited to their Muay Thai mindset.

    So there's the problem of him teaching me MMA style Muay Thai, which isn't too much of a problem I guess cause its only for a few months, I just hope he doesn't try to completely change my style to what he wants, or else that would be a problem. If its just minor things that I can easily solve then I can put up with it.  :sleep:

     

    Yeah, that's all I think is, its better than nothing. Just to get fit rather than learn. :ohmy:

  8. I would be interested to know what gym it is that has moved.

    I always think its hard moving gyms when you don't want to, I am going through this same thing for other reasons right now and I have to be quite positive at the new gym and try not to compare.  I did a lot of research and in factr a top Thai coach is teaching in an mma gym in london so this is my back up option.  I think trying it out would be a good idea, see what the people are like when you do a group class, see what a private is like. 

     

    A friend sent me a link to a gym that is closer than the one I am travelling to and I was put off by the videos so I know how that feels.  I think there is a difference between putting up relatively inexperienced people doing their best in class compared to videos of the head instructor doing the weirdest pads I have ever seen or letting someone doing a private and not correcting their technique at all. 

     

    Are you in an area where there are a lot of choices of gyms or is this MMA one your only option?

    I'll send the gyms name in a pm.

    I know that any gym I go to wont have the same quality as the gym before as they tried to replicate Thai style as much as possible 1 on 1 padwork with trainer, sparring, clinching for long time, etc etc. So I know I'm going to lose quality when changing to another gym, its like you said, when I saw videos of the class it was really low level... 

    I'm in an area with a decent amount of gyms within a 1 hour drive, the problem is that most of them are on industrial parks or something similar, so they're inaccessible via bus - and I don't have a car. Whereas the MMA gym is accessible by bus.

    The problem isn't that its an MMA gym its that, an MMA coach is teaching Muay Thai.  :ohmy:

  9. So...update. I have been doing teeps to the side of the house instead of the tree because there's more space to hit (versus the width of the tree trunk) and because bark doesn't go flying everywhere. I also do this so I can practice hard without breaking something.

     

    I also have put the kicking shield on the tree (tied to it with a handwrap), and "shadow clinched"--is that a thing? I would grasp the hand wrap holding the kicking shield and pretend like it was the "neck" of the opponent. I kind of try yanking the tree to the left or right while throwing knees at the kicking shield and resettling my position. 

     

    Any other ideas? If I have any, I'll reply again. :)

     

    Put a mattress up against a wall, good for teeps, knees and body punches. POW 

    • Like 1
  10. I'm impressed that now even tiny villages have MMA gyms! Go to the MMA gym and ask if you can pay a reduced fee to only go to Muay Thai sessions. If so that's what I would choose. The training won't be as good as a pure Muay Thai gym but I don't think it will hinder your progress by any means.

    Its actually in a nearby town, easily accessible via bus. We have many gyms around here boxing/kickboxing/karate/tkd/judo just not Muay Thai anymore.

    I mean the training is of course going to be worse, I hate the idea of MMA gyms teaching Muay Thai though I don't have many options.  :sad:

    Regarding the price, I think they have different memberships depending on which classes or how many times a week you want to go. Not sure, will be pretty cheap though. 

  11. It sounds like either choice will require some level of sacrifice on your part. Either you're trying to make a commute part of your schedule, or you're possibly giving up quality of training. Do they offer a free trial? If so I'd say give it the week/10 days they offer and see how well their training fits your needs. You could get lucky and it might work oht well enough.

     

    Also, obligatory American giggle about a 45 minute commute. :P

    hahaha actually, its kinda my fault, I put 45 minute commute which is relevant to how long it'd take in a car, but as I don't have a car that length is irrelevant. I live in a tiny village and the bus's wouldn't be able to make it to that gyms location, so is kinda not an option... 45 min commute is bearable living in a city, so many options for travel. 

     

    My option is to get a personal trainer to my home as often as I can afford, which at the moment would be like two times maximum a month, or go to an MMA gym.

    I just don't want it to have a negative impact on my training and pick up things that will hinder my improvement, but at the same time I want to get fit.

    I have a trial booked in on Monday with the MMA gym, so hopefully it goes well. :pinch:

  12. HI,

    I'm in a situation where a gym I was training at has merged with another gym (old time student), this is really disappointing as I think it was probably the best gym in England.  :ohmy:

    Anyway, it moved about a 45 minute drive away which is really inconvenient for me as I have no car. My only other options is either get a personal Muay Thai trainer who I know is good and I can learn a lot from, but is expensive and I won't be regularly or go to a local MMA gym which offers Muay Thai.

    This is not an MMA gym that has a specialist Muay Thai trainer or anything like that, its just an MMA coach. I can post a video of their gym session they uploaded to Facebook to show the level of training, but I'm unsure whether that's appropriate. :mellow:

    I'm planning to go to Thailand in 3-4 months for training. I want to be fit (as possible) before going to get the most out of training there, but of course improving technique is very important and I'm unsure how much I'll be able to improve going to the MMA gym...

    :thanks:

    • Like 1
  13. I also heard stories of girls coming to the camp and sleeping with most of the trainers during their stay. I can't wrap my mind around it - like, how is it even possible?! 

    I have no clue how this is possible, but this really annoys me. When I was in Indonesia my friends friend (what do you call them?) took me back to my dorm so their was me and 2 females, and a local said 'oh bule is taking two prostitutes into his room'. 

    But at the same time, people can have sex with whoever they choose - as long as its consensual, what annoys me is the negative reaction two innocent females got just for being with a foreigner... I guess negative stereotypes happen to every race though and I'm just being a baby, lol.

    bule = farang

     

    Edit: Just thinking about this, I think this would have more of a negative impact for women as I know other females have talked about really flirty Thai trainers, is this a result of the sex with foreigners at the camp? Or is this how (generally) Thai trainers are? :mellow:

    I don't know; I'm just wondering what you all think, knowledge is power. :thanks:

  14. I'm so happy to hear people are enjoying the first podcast! If anyone has time, we'd really appreciate a quick review/rating over at the iTunes store, as reviews and ratings can really help establish a podcast. And since we're a bit of an odd one (women talking about Muay Thai, who both happen to also be fighters), it's important for us to get a little bit of ground.

    You can review and/or rate here: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/two-ladies-in-kingdom-woman/id1083107907

     

    I submitted a review but it didn't go through, unless they have to be confirmed? I'll try again tomorrow.

    • Like 1
  15. For me, its just 1 of my eyes that is bad, I can barely see with my left eye - maybe like 144p on YouTube. The thing is that my right eye does a lot of work, as it will look as far left as it can and basically allows my left eye to be lazy, which puts strain on my right eye which over time will weaken it to be as bad as my left eye. 

    In order for me to keep my right eye strong I will need to get laser eye surgery on just my left eye, to fix it and so it can stop straining my right eye. 

    I wonder how this affects my Muay Thai though... I've never really noticed anything, I guess because I never knew any difference. It will be interesting to see if my reaction time and stuff improves afterwards though.

     

    The only thing I hate about laser eye surgery is how fricken expensive it is... my optician told me that in order to keep the machine working and to be able to pay off the bills (they rent the machine) they need to keep it active every single day of the year, so if you want cheap surgery go at Christmas or any other time where people don't want to get it done. 

    • Like 1
  16. (sorry for my english)

    I had a laser eye surgery in january for this reason :) 

    I couldn't train without lenses, I just couldn't see anything... And my self-confidence was totally off... So in trainings I always worn them.

    In my first fight I've worn my lenses, the doctor didn't notice it  :D I know, it's forbidden and dangerous, but I didn't care. 

    But in trainings my lenses often fell out when my partner hit me, and if it happens in a real fight, you will be disqualified.. 

    So I save up, and had a PRK. 

    3 months after the surgery I had a fight, and it was so much better.

    I think I'm gonna have surgery soon, how long after the surgery until you can spar?

    Thanks

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