Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Dojo. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Dojo Quotes And Sayings by 71 Authors including James Brown,Heather Graham,Chris Matakas,Joel Edgerton,Yves Klein for you to enjoy and share.
I don't know karate, but I know crazy.
I took karate classes for a few years. Taekwondo. I'd love to do a movie role where I could do some karate.
It is fellowship, this most fundamental need on our way toward achieving our highest expression of the human experience, which Jiu Jitsu provides.
The best jujitsu practitioners are really serene and grounded.
Judo has helped me to understand that pictorial space is above all the product of spiritual exercises. Judo is, in fact, the discovery by the human body of a spiritual space.
You may train for a long time, but if you merely move your hands and feet and jump up and down like a puppet, learning karate is not very different from learning a dance. You will never have reached the heart of the matter; you will have failed to grasp the quintessence of karate-do.
I'm a martial arts buff, so anything martial arts.
I've done all kinds of martial arts. I have my blackbelt in Shorei Ru. I'm doing Wu Shu. I do all kinds of different martial arts.
Those who can't do, teach. And those who can't teach, teach gym.
I've always been interested in martial arts.
I do mixed martial arts, mainly kickboxing.
Students of any art, including Karate-do must never forget the cultivation of the mind and the body.
I was raised doing martial arts.
Learn Gracie Jiu-Jitsu so that when a giant walks by, you don't think to yourself 'oh no,' you think to yourself 'how interesting!
Karate is a form of martial arts in which people who have had years and years of training can using only their hands and feet make some of the worst movies in the history of the world.
When I was young I used to practice a martial art that was a mixture of karate, kung fu, Jujitsu, Yawara Kubotan, Aikido, Okinawan kobudo, Newaza, etc.; now I am just a theoretical samurai or a bushido scholar if you prefer.
I have a Brazilian trainer here in New York and we do a Brazilian Butt Lift workout.
Jiu Jitsu has given me an education in education, which I now see is the most valuable education there is.
We call it training. Not because we are training for Jiu Jitsu. We are training for life.
My karate skills are very limited. I'm a green belt.
A Black Belt under the Nogueira Brothers is like saying I got a free toy in my happy meal
The ultimate aim of Karate lies not in victory or defeat, but in the perfection of the character of its participants.
I went to karate classes where it was basically a line-up of hulking man, hulking man, small nine-year-old girl, hulking man, hulking man.
Jiu Jitsu is about waiting for the right time to do the right move.
One of the most striking features of karate is that it may be engaged in by anybody, young or old, strong or weak, male or female.
Karate's a very boring sport, but when you know the technique you can go further and further.
I'm a 3rd degree black belt in Tae Kwon Do and 2nd degree in karate, and I'm a licensed bodyguard.
Through my willingness to train every day and to dig deep in the after-class ukemi sessions, over time I earned the respect and friendship of my training partners, who were mostly Japanese men sincerely surprised to find themselves training with an American woman.
Judo is a study of techniques with which you may kill if you wish to kill, injure if you wish to injure, subdue if you wish to subdue, and, when attacked, defend yourself
Jiu-Jitsu has been one of the most valuable tools I've ever had in my life.
Karate aims to build character, improve human behavior, and cultivate modesty; it does not, however, guarantee it.
Karate is not about techniques and their execution, but about boldness, integrity and fight for justice and common good
Martial arts is something you can learn or pick up and think you could do really well.
I don't know karate, but I know ka-razy!
I'm a huge boxing and mixed martial arts fan.
Jiu Jitsu provides a place of fellowship that, unfortunately, our society has largely failed to create.
Jiu Jitsu at the end of the day, is the art of expressing yourself honestly. Everytime you put on a Gi, you can't lie.
Jiu Jitsu has shown me that we are not confined to the lot which we inherit. We are not bound to these fetters eternally. They are temporal. We can transcend them should we sincerely choose to. Sincere effort is in fact the rarest virtue among man.
The Jiu Jitsu I created was designed to give the weak ones a chance to face the heavy and strong.
Most sports require you to master the movements of only your own body to be successful. The combat grappling arts, such as jujitsu, require you to become the master not only of your own movement but also that of your opponent - a far more difficult and complex task.
I don't know Jiu-Jitsu, I don't know wrestling, all I know is how to fight. Period.
Rather than go to the gym, I would prefer to do martial arts because the time goes by quicker.
The infinitude of Jiu Jitsu allows for the infinitude of the types of practitioners. There exists a game for each and every one of us which is specifically possible within the confines of our particular skill set.
I've done a lot of Samurai film in Japan, and sometimes done the choreography by myself.
We can either approach Jiu Jitsu through the lens of the "real world" or we can approach the real world through the lens of Jiu Jitsu. I have found the latter to be far more rewarding.
Karate begins and ends with courtesy.
I was doing judo before anybody knew it existed in this country.
Jiu Jitsu gives me an ideal to strive toward. Technical mastery lies on an infinite continuum and completion of this skill is impossible. Every time I train I have something that I can improve upon, and this will hold true for each and every training session that lies between me and my grave.
You know, it's such an insult to actual martial artists that I say that I do martial arts.
(Note to anyone considering joining a class: there is no need to turn up in full Strictly Come Dancing salsa outfit including fake tan. Everyone just wears jeans. Briefly awkward.)
Jiu-jitsu is personal efficiency to protect the weaker, which anyone can do. It is the force of leverage against brute force.
I love karate, it's like a bible to me. But deep inside I'm so I mean, I'm so sensitive.
Since my teen years I was interested in martial arts.
Real Martial Arts is Mathematics, Physics, Poetry; Meditation in Action
I really love the karate thing I did on CHIPs. I studied with a trainer because I knew we'd do episodes that had karate.
Jiujitsu is simple, you just gotta do it right.
Jeet Kune Do: it's just a name; don't fuss over it. There's no such thing as a style if you understand the roots of combat.
All of Jiu Jitsu is finding a way to get your partner to willingly go where you want him to go in the first place.
In the early 2000s, I was introduced to the noble art of kickboxing, it thrilled me, and I loved it. I loved the honour and the discipline, and I also loved the punching.
Jiu Jitsu is the vehicle. Not the road.
I had a black belt in Shotokan as a kid.
Tae kwon do required focus, strength, and endurance, but mostly it required the ability to deal with looking like an ass in public.
One thing that I learned from judo ... Maximum efficiency and minimum effort.
Judo helps us to understand that worry is a waste of energy.
There are no styles of karate-do, just varying interpretations of its principles.
I didn't know anything about martial arts. I'm a big fan, but I never practiced martial arts.
I don't think I'm in any position to call myself a martial artist. I'm a student of the martial arts.
I will remain active in judo.
I tried martial arts classes for three weeks, but I quit because you actually get hit. I just want to do the movie kind of martial arts.
Jiu Jitsu is basic training for life. We are training not to learn how to fight, but how to live.
I learned Tae Kwon Do and gymnastics and I have a trainer.
Once I win, everyone will know who my instructor is in mixed martial arts.
Martial arts have been a part of my life for as long as I can remember.
I have never been as alive or awake as I have been through Jiu Jitsu.
Around 2am as I was performing misogi, I suddenly forgot all the martial techniques I had ever learned. The techniques of my teachers appeared completely new. Now they were vehicles for the cultivation of life, knowledge, and virtue, not devices to throw people with.
Mrs Edith Garrud famously opened a school of jiu-jitsu and trained 'The Bodyguard', a group of suffragette sympathisers who protected the leaders of the Suffragette Movement from attack during their public appearances.
I work out at Will Space four times a week. It's a private training gym. It's owned by my trainer, Will Torres. I just came from there, actually. I turned Mark Consuelos onto Will, so he goes there too. Today we boxed. It's every kind of cross-training you can do.
Through Jiu Jitsu I have developed many of the most meaningful relationships in my life, and if that were the only benefit of my practice, Jiu Jitsu would still be the best endeavor I have ever undertaken.
I got into Taekwondo when I was nine, and I started training Muay Thai and Brazilian Jujitsu later in life.
You gotta fight all the karate guys, and once you kill them off, now you gotta get to the ninjas. Once you get through the ninjas, now you gotta get to the showmen. Now me, I'm the showman of big men.
It's not what you're going to take from martial arts, it's what you have to give to martial arts
I've been learning martial arts since I was 8 years old.
I don't know if there's anything intrinsically funny about Tae Kwon Do.
But once you've learned the nasty, street-fighting, no-holds-barred art of Max Kwon Do, you never really forget
I do a lot of mixed martial arts - it's like unlimited fighting. I do Brazilian jujutsu, beach volleyball. I don't like my routine to get stale, so I also lift kettle bells and push cars.
The purpose of the study of judo is to perfect yourself and to contribute to society.
Self-knowledge is the basis of jeet kune do because it is effective not only for the individual's martial art but also for his life as a human being.
Karate has helped me lots, otherwise I might have got lost in substance abuse or something like the things a lot of other people do.
When I was in my early 20s, I studied tae kwon do and hapkido. I earned brown belts in both of them.
There is no losing in Jiu-Jitsu. You either win or you learn.
I studied martial arts before I studied dance.
I do Taekwondo and sometimes I paint.
Sanzo to Gojyo, who is lifting weights: What are you doing?
Gojyo: I've gotta keep my temple sculpted or the ladies of the world will cry.
Training in taekwondo for eight years and then being able to do it in a film was pretty amazing.
When I was 8 years old, I knew nothing about martial arts. The coach told me I was talented with learning martial arts, and put me in a school.
Aikido is not ultimately Japanese: It is an art of universal truth and international significance.
My martial arts came a lot from my uncle, who actually taught martial arts through the military. He was a black belt in tae kwon do, but also, he used a lot of military-style fighting where it's not the high kicks or anything like that. It's basically defeat your opponent as fast as possible.
Don't mess with me! I'm a black-belt!
I grew up in Westlake Villiage, a suburb of L.A. There was a guy there who was a fighter and was like, 'I'll teach you to box.' I started a little bit of boxing, then it crossed over into jiu-jitsu. I was into it for a little while, but then I started doing basketball, baseball, team sports.
I knew nothing about martial arts. The coach told me I was talented with learning martial arts, and put me in a school. Three years later I got my first championship in China.