Hellbound
Merchant of Doom
gnome said:Later I wound up in a group of students studying Nin-Po (something like Ninjitsu that was not quite the same in a subtle way that eludes my memory)... the instructor's name was David Held, taught a small group out of his home, and I would love to find him again for my kids. He taught simple, practical techniques with moves and countermoves as elegant as a chess game. He promised nothing supernatural, gave sound advice about handling opponents with guns, and was very good with kids.
As I understand it, Ninjutsu is the name for the whole range of things that went intop a Ninja's training; Taijutsu is the name for the hand-to-hand combat that is part of ninjutsu. I could be wrong, though
My brother took a martial arts course that sounds a lot like what you described, though. They focused on real-world situations, like defending against baseball bats, two by fours, knives, guns, and other things you're likely to run into. Seriously, how many times are you going to defend against a sword, kama, tonfa, or bo? Or have one available to defend yourself? He thought it was a good course, and it apparantly taught him something (he's had to defend himself several times, and been very successful so far).
On the other side, he joined an ATA TWD place in Florida, just so he could get into competitions. He didn't mention his other martial arts training (he had a black belt in Kung Fu, in addition to his earlier training), and just went along with the course. He used to laugh about having an orange belt try to correct him on his style. He also mentioned how ATA created a lot of extra belts, to get more money from students. Your next belt is based as much on time as ability, so by creating more belts they get students to stay longer. They had a "camo" belt, for Ed's sake!
He's now in a Special Forces unit in Florida, and was recently offered a position as an instructor for SF courses. He's Guard, though, and the instructor position would've been full-time, so he turned it down.