FEATURED AUTHOR
CHAD BOYKIN
As
unfashionable as it may be, I came from a great family.
I am the son of loving, hardworking parents who both grew
up humbly and worked their way up. I was raised in a growing
town, and there were a lot of rich kids where I went to
school. Even at a young age, I realized that these kids
really had a curse because they didn't learn to appreciate
anything. I was in lucky that my folks demonstrated a strong
work ethic, which made me appreciate what we had.
This served me well when I nearly died from diabetes at
the age of 15. The perseverance and guts I'd seen in my
parents showed me that I should be thankful the disease
I had was treatable with daily blood tests, shots, carbohydrate
counting, and exercise. (I knew many people in that hospital
had it much worse than I did.) I had to work to keep reasonably
healthy and thus gained a renewed appreciation for life.
As
a teen, I was far from athletic; if you'd put a dime on
my head, I'd have been a nail. Hence, I got addicted to
weight training and devoured all the information I could
about it. Later, while I was working to put myself through
school to earn a two-year business management degree, a
friend introduced me to kickboxing – a mix of Muay
Thai and boxing, similar to European-style kickboxing. I
was sold on its practicality and physicality. Now, to say
I sucked at first is putting it mildly. But I loved it and
kept trying hard to improve.
Looking back, I see that there were so many people where
I trained who were just gifted at kickboxing; they could
have been great, but they just didn't stick with it. (This
was another early lesson for me: "stick with it!")
Then there were the tough guys . . . the ones who had the
biggest mouths usually had the smallest testicles, wanting
only to show off rather than push themselves to their limits.
They couldn't stand to look bad in the gym, wouldn't dare
to help anyone, and would never put their "bar fight"
reputations on the line in the ring. There were some good
people around too, of course – people who just liked
to train and had nothing to brag about anyway. I found years
later that the most quiet and humble folks are not only
the best ones to be around but also the most skilled. I
learned a lot from a retired boxer who was always around
the gym. When I decided that I wanted to fight in the ring,
he was the only one to take me seriously. To most, my diabetes
and lack of athletic prowess meant that I was destined to
fail. So I was determined not to. Over a few years I had
15 fights in kickboxing, Thai boxing, and boxing. I won
plenty, and I lost plenty too. I worked as a personal trainer
and taught Thai boxing while finishing school. Through it
all I learned a lot about life, met some great people (and
some not so great), and had a ball. I don't subscribe to
popular martial arts philosophies, but I enjoy what I do
a great deal. To this day I feel that there is nothing like
helping someone who was out of shape and full of self-doubt
become good at the art, get in shape, and feel better about
life. That is what it's all about for me.
Q & A
Paladin: So you got a start in weight
training before martial arts. Would you recommend this approach
to others?
Boykin: It all depends on what you want.
It is great to have as many different ways to train as possible.
If you get stuck in a rut with boxing, you can go back to
more weight training or cardio (running, etc.) to mix it
up. As long as you enjoy what you're doing, it is all the
better to cross-train. Weight training is a great base for
all athletics because stronger muscles and tendons are always
a plus. I deal with this in the book, because as a fighter
or martial artist it always pays to be in condition; you
want to be healthy long term. For me, power lifting early
on taught me what you learn in all athletic endeavors –
that you are always your own toughest opponent. I never
thought I could hit the goal of 1,000 pounds in 4 lifts
(bench press, power clean, squat, and incline press) but
that was what I worked for 3 years to do when I was into
the power lifting. Overcoming my own doubts was hard, but
it helped my out later when I decided to get into amateur
fighting.
Paladin:
What types of fights did you do?
Boykin: I had all types of fights a lot
of basic boxing and kickboxing. In boxing my record is 6-4,
kickboxing 2-1, and Thai rules kickboxing 1-1. I'm an ugly
fighter to watch it seems, because every loss except one
was a decision. Of my wins, only one was a decision victory;
every other win was by knockout, TKO, or even forfeit (had
a guy back out last minute once).
Paladin: What type of martial art style
do you think is the best?
Boykin: I am partial to Muay Thai and Brazilian
jiu-jitsu, the stuff used in most of the no-rules fighting.
But everyone is different, and these styles aren't for everyone.
Your chosen style should be fun, be it judo, kickboxing,
or another similar martial art. Watch the participants.
Walk right past all of the degrees on the wall, the WWF-style
belts in their cases, and the trophies lined in the window.
Forget them; they mean nothing to you. Instead, focus on
the smallest person in the class, the woman, the child,
the person who looks the most unlikely to escape being squished
or eaten alive. How would it look to you if you were that
person? If these weaker, smaller, or newer students appear
to be having fun, learning, and actually performing material,
chances are good that it's a great school. This litmus test
is the best tried-and-true method for finding what you're
looking for in a martial art. Real martial arts instructors
are happy to share their art with you; they love it, and
it means the world to them that you care to check it out.
Posers fear you, fear their own lack of skills, and worry
that they can't perform in a way that measures up to the
hype they create.
Paladin: What kinds of things should one
avoid in a martial art?
Boykin: There is no sense at all in seeking
out some obscure ninja school in someone's basement, open
only at midnight to those acolytes who were so fortunate
to have passed the instructor's guarded gates by use of
expensive handmade swords and poison-tipped throwing stars.
Chances are good the instructor is not offering you much
anyway. Worse still are the many commercial "Cobra-Kai"
schools masquerading as practical self-defense schools –
steeped in the tradition of abuse and rich with the custom
of humorless humiliation of participants. Don't be fooled
by extra bowing, screams of "sensei," creeds,
or copious amounts of punishment push-ups. You don't have
time for this. Move on. It is not tradition to have a bad
time with what precious free time you have. There are enough
horror stories about this to fill a book. An instructor
I once knew was teaching a chokehold to the class. The student
he chose to demonstrate on was a new female student who
had chosen to train because she had been physically abused
in relationships for years. The choke was applied in front
of the class to this woman, who had never been taught how
to "tap out"; the choke began to cut off her airflow.
Naturally, this woman panicked and her muscles tensed up;
she couldn't scream because the air was cut off. The instructor
felt her tighten up and assumed that she was trying to show
him up and make the technique look bad. He tightened the
choke even more. She blacked out for a second, and upon
coming to, rightfully stormed out of the gym, never to return.
So, it's important to choose your instructors carefully.
Paladin: What is your philosophy on training?
Boykin: My philosophy is a simple but somewhat
unpopular one. A training partner of mine once sent me e-mail
that sums up our mutual feelings on martial arts training
very eloquently. With his permission I am going to share
it here: "NO matter what anyone tells you about MA,
no matter how many books you read or videos you watch, the
fact of the matter is you are going to have to get on the
mat, or in front of the bag, and get sweaty. Don't let anyone
fool you, sitting behind the desk and visualizing your opponents
or daydreaming in the car about your favorite technique
is NOT training. The time you put in is directly proportional
to what you get out of the practice. Most of us don't have
all day long to train in anything – be it soccer,
weight-lifting, or MA, so you have to choose how best to
apply your time. Here's the reality of the situation: if
you are like me, you work for a living, and you have about
six hours or so a week you can devote to your physical practice
(whatever it is). If that practice is not convenient or
enjoyable, it's not going to get done. That's a bottom line.
If you want martial arts, you must find yourself an instructor
who can provide you with skills to build while you have
a good time."
Paladin: How did this book come to be?
Boykin: Actually, I thought to put down
on paper some basic techniques for the new folks at the
gym I was running at that time. I have always enjoyed writing
(and reading), and the project was a lot of fun for me.
It was hard, but it was fun too. I poured out everything
I knew (and it's pretty sad that that only fills a couple
hundred pages!) and included training routines, conditioning,
equipment, technique, history, and tips on fighting strategies.
A friend convinced me to try to publish the manuscript,
and with some research I eventually hooked up with Paladin
Press.
Paladin: Any parting words of advice?
Boykin: No matter what you practice, it
is most important to enjoy it. Furthermore, as it relates
to the self-defense aspects of any martial art, it is not
important to know 1,000,001 techniques. What is important
is how well you can apply a few basic things. And no matter
what any martial arts pitchman tells you, remember that
1) You will never be invincible
2) Be aware, choose your friends carefully, and think for
yourself
3) The bigger they are, the harder they hit!
MUAY
THAI KICKBOXING
The Ultimate Guide to Conditioning, Training, and Fighting

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