I was bullied as a young teenager—dragged into toilets, splashed with water, punched. That pain pushed me to learn martial arts, hoping to get stronger and protect myself.
That experience pushed me to start learning martial arts, hoping it would make me stronger and help me protect myself. But after years of training, I faced a hard truth: most techniques I learned didn’t work in real situations.
Since I was 15, I trained in various styles, mainly traditional martial arts. While they taught discipline, culture, and focus, they also came with rules—no eye pokes, no groin strikes, no throat attacks. These rules work in competitions, but real life has no rules.
If you want culture and discipline, traditional martial arts are great. But for real self-defense, you need practical, direct, and efficient techniques—no wasted movements.
Because of my experience, I now teach realistic self-defense focused on effective shortcuts—not skipping learning, but going straight to what works. Understanding how real assaults happen is key, so students avoid false confidence and stay safe.
I know some traditional schools resist this approach. It challenges their system, but I’m not disrespecting tradition—I’m prioritizing your safety.
I don’t want any teenager to suffer like I did. Mastery isn’t about training time or perfect form—it’s about what really works when you’re alone, with no rules and no second chances.