How do you feel when you watch someone take a roundhouse to the head? Does it thrill you or disgust you? Do you support or protest Mixed Martial Arts (MMA)? MMA is still reasonably new in the sporting world, now considered the best combat sport, as it combines strikes, takedowns, elbows, knees, grappling, and submissions. The sport lacks safety equipment such as headgear and gloves (Helms and Patterson, 2014).
Oebesta, et al. (2019) show how the
history of man has used fighting to solve conflict, establish dominion, and
take control. MMA has united demographics, and champions countries against each
other (Flávio Py Mariante Neto, et al., 2019).
More people join the MMA movement
every year by participating or watching it. As MMA grows in popularity, more
children join the sport. There are mixed feelings about children in the art.
Many practitioners believe that MMA gives youth the ability to defend
themselves. Children are taught ways of manipulation and protection without
throwing a single punch. Others see that MMA sets children up to be bullies.
However, if done in the discipline of self-growth, development, and defense,
MMA gives power back to those who practice it. It gives women and children the
skills and confidence they need to defend themselves (Neyra, 2013).
Many women used to see fighting as
brutal but now appreciate the intricate art behind it. You can have total
control over your component with a shift in stance or a little twerk of the
wrist. MMA has also brought freedom to its participants as they learn to defend
themselves. As you contemplate MMA, what meaning does it have to you?
References:
·
Flávio
Py Mariante Neto, Daniel Giordani Vasques, & Stigger, M. P. (2021). “If you
lose and fight hard, you’ll fight again!” – MMA and the concept of sport. Movimento
(Porto Alegre, Brazil), 27, e27030–.
https://doi.org/10.22456/1982-8918.108259
·
Helms,
W.S., & Patterson, K. D. W. (2014). Eliciting acceptance for “illicit”
organizations: the positive implications of stigma for mma organizations. Academy
of Management Journal, 57(5), 1453–1484.
https://doi.org/10.5465/amj.2012.0088
·
Neyra,
D. (2013). Fight Kids: The future of mixed martial arts or a detriment to
America’s youth? A call to regulate children’s MMA. Family Court Review, 51(4),
727–741. https://doi.org/10.1111/fcre.12063
·
Oebesta,
P., Toebicka1, Fialova , J., & Havla-Aek, J. (2019). Roar of a champion:
Loudness and voice pitch predict perceived fighting ability but not success in
MMA fighters. Frontiers in Psychology, 10, 859–859.
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00859
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