Tuesday 23 August 2011

Do Street Boxing Men Need Recognition


Most people live on men’s recognition. They do not do anything that
society will not approve of. Nevertheless, remember that many well-approved things
today used to be taboos before. Lifting the ball when dribbling used to be a no-no in
most basketball tournaments. Using barbells was believed to hinder your performance
in other sports like weightlifting because the extra muscles were said to restrict the
free movement of your limbs. Cross training in other sports activities was never heard
of until kinetics experts discovered the value of the benefits some sports have to other
sports. And a long time ago, science had no place in street boxing. Sportsmen in ancient
Greco-Roman fighting just did anything to have a semblance of training—they even
lifted and punched cows—and they ate anything that gave them bulk. But once in a
while, top fighters would show up in the scene and introduce new and better ways
that most people would mock or reject. There is a record (in Nebuchadnezzar’s reign)
of Jewish young men who bested all of Babylon’s best scholars and fighters by
having a diet different from what the rest were having; they only had vegetables and
water, while the rest had the king’s food and wine. No matter how the Babylonian
diet officials opposed their food preference, they persisted and proved them all
wrong. Boxing for the street champions do not care if the majorities do not see things as they do. They
will always try new ways of doing things.

A lot more incorrect motivations in life may hinder boxers from being top fighters. Right
life motivations governing a fighters (in training and in life) are vital to sustain a boxerss ace
skills. Motivations that are part of your life principles (practiced everyday) become
automatically applied in every situation. This enables you to do things smoothly without
stopping to think whether this or that is right. Often, that minute delay spells win or lose.

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