Funny Videos: Always Good For A Giggle
The effects of implementing funny videos have brought unexpectedly huge fortunes of many webmasters in the last few years. The popularity of funny videos could be measure looking at online giants like Google who is having its share by acquiring one of the most profitable business ever - "YouTube.com. It is assumed that in the coming years Funny Videos would shape the world of the internet beyond anyone's expectation.
The Main Focus And Benefits Of Thai Massage Schools
Everybody is aware that massaging techniques and therapies are taught in massage schools. However, what is the primary focus or goal of the Thai massage schools? This article address this issue as well as examining some of the benefits of these schools.
New Thai Massage DVD Shows Therapeutic Approach for Pain Conditions
Billions are spent annually on the treatment of pain but often with unsatisfactory results. In his latest instructional DVD, internationally recognized Thai massage teacher Chuck Duff emphasizes the fact that many pain issues are a result of physical and energetic imbalances within the body and that traditional Thai Massage remains one of our most powerful tools in the treatment of pain and dysfunction. A complete, 2.5 hour therapeutic Thai massage sequence is taught in this beautifully produced title, Therapeutic Thai Fundamentals with Chuck Duff (138 minutes, $49.95 SRP).
New Thai Massage DVD Shows Massage Therapists How to Save Their Hands and Enhance Their Careers
The latest DVD release from Thai Bodywork, Inc., Thai Massage: An Introduction for the Mat and Table demonstrates techniques that for over 2,000 years have provided profound benefits to the receiver while also being beneficial for the giver. This 100-minute DVD teaches a wonderful 1.5 hour Thai massage sequence, and is useful for beginners as well as experienced massage therapists. It also introduces additional topics, including Clinical Thai Bodywork, HandsFree Thai, and Luk Pra Kob herbal compresses.
A Growing Phenomenon: Funny Online Videos
If you surf the Internet at all these days, you are guaranteed to run across a web site that has a gallery of funny videos. They are everywhere now. The day after the State of the Union address, I found about forty web sites that had spoofs of President Bush's speech on them. They were hilarious. My friends and I rolled for days about some of the things on these videos. Many of the funny videos that appear on the web are spoofs on someone, or something famous, but some of these videos are just everyday situations with a funny twist.
Thai Massage in New York City
Thai massage (sometimes called Thai yoga massage) is generally more rigorous than classical forms of massage. New York City is a hub of holistic centers, spas, and physical therapy clinics offering all manner of massages, including the increasingly popular Thai massage. Should you choose to try Thai massage, you might think of it as having yoga done to you. The therapist slowly moves your body into a series of yoga-like stretches using his or her hands, feet, legs and knees. Acupressure, rhythmic muscle compression and joint mobilization can all be applied during this type of treatment. Many people say that receiving Thai message is like doing yoga without having to work.
Career In Thai Massage
When it is about revitalization and sootheness? none can beat "nuat phaen boran" or Thai massage. For years, this massage was performed by monks as an integral part of Thai medication. More rigorous than any archetypal forms of massage, in this procedure the masseuse makes use of his or her hands, knees, legs, and feet to move the client into a chain of yoga-like stretches. It involves joint mobilization, muscle compression, and acupressure. Therefore, it is also known as Thai yoga massage, because it is like doing yoga without any stressful workout. No wonder, people across the globe are becoming enthusiastic about it and more and more people are showing keen interest in learning Thai Massage course.
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Southeast Asian Martial Arts - Muay Thai (Thai Boxing)
Muay Thai is a hard fighting martial art that resembles pradel serey, tomoi, and muay Lao from Laos. It is probably derived from muay boran and krabi krabong. Also known as Thai boxing or Thai kickboxing, it is the national sport of Thailand and enjoys worldwide popularity, thanks in part to a daily televised bout in Thailand and the movie Ong Bak, starring Tony Jaa in a feature that seamlessly blended acrobatic stunts and Thai boxing.
Muay Thai is often known as the art (or science) of eight limbs, because practitioners use eight points of attack: feet, hands, elbows, and knees. Western boxers by comparison use two points of attack (fists).
The first muay Thai fights
Exact information on muay Thai's origins is sketchy, purportedly because the Burmese destroyed Siamese historical records in 1767. According to popular legend, "Black Prince" Naresuen of Siam defeated the Burmese crown prince in a single bout of muay Thai in 1560, which caused King Bayinnaung of Burma to abandon his attack on Thailand. In 1774, the first recorded muay Thai contest was held in Rangoon at a festival organized by Lord Mangra, king of Burma, to honor the Buddhist faith. A Thai boxer called Nai Khanom Tom defeated nine Burmese boxers in a row, impressing the king with his strength and agility.
Modern fights
Muay Thai fights are generally of five three-minute rounds, with a two-minute rest between each round. Ringcraft (fighting tactics and strategies), conditioning, and fitness are key. As in Western boxing, the referee can end a bout by giving a ten-second count to a knock-down, if he thinks a boxer is in particular danger, or if there have been three knock-downs during a single round.
Traditionally, fighters bound their hands in cloth, dipped them in glue, then sprinkled their fists with broken glass, bringing a frightening and bloody element to matches. This practice was stopped in 1929 and now most fighters wear European standard boxing gloves. Their hands are wrapped in boxing wraps to protect their fists and to harden them by compressing the bones. They also wear groin protection, shorts elasticated at the waist, and optional elasticated ankle supports.
Bouts are accompanied by music "si muay," which is played by a four-piece orchestra consisting of "shing" (cymbals), "klong kaek" and "kon" (drums), and "pi Java" (a clarinet).
Ritual dance and fighting stance
In a prefight ritual dance ("ram muay wai kruh," or "kruh," for short). Boxers pay homage to their instructors and hex their opponents with black magic. They often make a loud hissing sound as they exhale air through their teeth, which helps to control breath, oxygenate muscles, and inspire confidence.
Their fighting stance resembles a Western boxer's, except they hold their guard higher and slightly more extended away from their face to protect against elbow and foot strikes. Fighters tend to shuffle forward and back, leading with one foot. They turn their elbows inward to protect the body and to allow for guarding movements that protect the ribs during an onslaught.
Kicking and punching
The signature kick is the low-level roundhouse, or hook, kick at an opponent's thigh. Designed to demoralize an opponent and restrict his mobility, it is often delivered with the shin and the toe hooked inward as opposed to a normal roundhouse in which the toe is pointed back. Boxers precondition the shin over many years by striking it against bamboo trees. Punching resembles the Western boxing techniques of jabs, crosses, hooks, upper cuts, and overhand head punches. Thai boxers use long-range hooks that close the distance after kicking and are often followed by a combination of close-quarter upper cuts, hooks, and jabs.
Troy Macraft, Chief Editor The MMA Zone - Your Taekwondo Uniforms Supplier. site: www.themmazone.net phone: 1-866=447-9221 email:corporate@themmazone.net
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