WingChun - GB

WingChun - GB

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S.A.T WingChun is a self-defence martial art that will give you the skills and knowledge to defend yourself in any situation. Classes in S.E.

England.http://www.iaw-gb.com/links

21/03/2026

WingChun But Not As You Know It...🤯

WingChun - The Warriors Mindset | Podcast Episode on RSS.com 15/03/2026

WingChun is not the stereotypical soft style that everyone mocks as weak and ineffective. It is a brutal, uncompromising combat art designed for war. Listen to this AI generated conversation based on source material for Dai Sifu Klaus Brand...enjoy

WingChun - The Warriors Mindset | Podcast Episode on RSS.com Forget what you think you know about martial arts—WingChun isn’t a sport or a "cuddly" hobby; it’s a high-stakes tool for survival in the art of war. Grandmaster Klaus Brand draws a hard line between generic "wing chun" and his revolutionary system, stripping away the "dreamy" fairytales of co...

01/03/2026

SAT weapons seminar March 2026 with Master Ralph Dahl

27/02/2026

"Choose your habits well"

Knowledge of the Basal Ganglia will help all marital artists improve automation with the brain + body connection. This is a necessity in the art of war, in high stress environments (conflicts) where your health is at risk.

Habit is probably the most powerful tool in your brain’s toolbox. It is driven by a golf-ball-sized lump of tissue called the basal ganglia at the base of the cerebrum. It is so deep-seated and instinctual that we are not conscious of it, though it controls our actions.

If you do just about anything frequently enough over time, you will form a habit that will control you. Good habits are those that get you to do what your “upper-level you” wants, and bad habits are those that are controlled by your “lower-level you” and stand in the way of your getting what your “upper-level you” wants. You can create a better set of habits if you understand how this part of your brain works. For example, you can develop a habit that will make you “need” to work out at the gym.

Developing this skill takes some work. The first step is recognizing how habits develop in the first place. Habit is essentially inertia, the strong tendency to keep doing what you have been doing (or not doing what you have not been doing). Research suggests that if you stick with a behavior for approximately eighteen months, you will build a strong tendency to stick to it nearly forever.

For a long time, I didn’t appreciate the extent to which habits control people’s behavior. I experienced this at Bridgewater in the form of people who agreed with our work principles in the abstract but had trouble living by them; I also observed it with friends and family members who wanted to achieve something but constantly found themselves working against their own best interests.

Then I read Charles Duhigg’s best-selling book The Power of Habit, which really opened my eyes. I recommend that you read it yourself if your interest in this subject goes deeper than what I’m able to cover here. Duhigg’s core idea is the role of the three-step “habit loop.” The first step is a cue—some “trigger that tells your brain to go into automatic mode and which habit to use,” according to Duhigg. Step two is the routine, “which can be physical or mental or emotional.” Finally, there is a reward, which helps your brain figure out if this particular loop is “worth remembering for the future.” Repetition reinforces this loop until over time it becomes automatic. This anticipation and craving is the key to what animal trainers call operant conditioning, which is a method of training that uses positive reinforcement. For example, dog trainers use a sound (typically a clicker) to reinforce behavior by pairing that sound with a more desirable reward (typically food) until the dog will perform the desired behavior when it merely hears the click. In humans, Duhigg says, rewards can be just about anything, ranging “from food or drugs that cause physical sensations, to emotional payoffs, such as the feelings of pride that accompany praise or self-congratulation.”

Habits put your brain on “automatic pilot.” In neuroscientific terms, the basal ganglia takes over from your cortex, so that you can execute activities without even thinking about them.

Reading Duhigg’s book taught me that if you really want to change, the best thing you can do is choose which habits to acquire and which to get rid of and then go about doing that. To help you, I recommend that you write down your three most harmful habits. Do that right now. Now pick one of those habits and be committed to breaking it. Can you do that? That would be extraordinarily impactful. If you break all three, you will radically improve the trajectory of your life. Or you can pick habits that you want to acquire and then acquire them.

The most valuable habit I’ve acquired is using pain to trigger quality reflections. If you can acquire this habit yourself, you will learn what causes your pain and what you can do about it, and it will have an enormous impact on your effectiveness.

Photos from WingChun - GB's post 25/02/2026

90% train for the thrill of fighting.
10% train for survival.
Which one are you?

At the International Academy of WingChun we don’t train for points. We train for:
• Survival
• Technique, Speed, Power
• Logic
• Immediate Resolution

As Grandmaster Klaus Brand teaches —
A warrior does not seek combat.
He prepares so thoroughly that combat becomes unnecessary.

If you’re ready to stop playing martial arts and start understanding it —
Message us.

Photos from WingChun - GB's post 25/02/2026

Grading week at IAW-Caterham and IAW-Chertsey
đź’Ą
Well done to those students who graded, amazing effort shown 👊💯
🫡
Onwards and upwards
🫸🤛

Photos from WingChun - GB's post 22/02/2026

These 8 WingChun principles are not only the essential guide for all WingChun practioners, but they are applicable to any armed or unarmed combat art, and so must be studied and trained in everything.

Intro / Articles 17/02/2026

New article from Sifu Klaus Brand, read here!

Intro / Articles Depending on whether you want to train or teach traditional WingChun or innovative S.A.T. The following pages will provide you with all the information needed to assist you in the decision-making process. Whether WingChun or the S.A.T is the right Self-Defence Art for your needs depends very much on...

31/01/2026

Setting the record straight on using Tan Sao in self-defense.

Read, comprehend, train, and repetition are key to mastering a functional Tan Sao, giving you the confidence to defend powerful attacks to your head.

Train your Tan Sao to meet the incoming punch with colliding force, utilising proper movement, tension, speed, power, and timing to neutralise threats from larger opponents with an unbreakable Tan Sao.

Regular training will have you feeling secure in self-defense situations.

Photos from WingChun - GB's post 24/01/2026

with

Photos from WingChun - GB's post 23/01/2026

Photos from WingChun - GB's post 18/01/2026

One of the most highly anticipated WingChun seminars ever held and it truly delivered in every way.

The shear number of participants was a testament to scale of the International Academy of WingChun.

The quality of WingChun shown was exceptional from not only from Dai Sifu Klaus Brand (GM of the IAW) leading with his expert professionalism and truly amazing skill, but all of the Technicians and students alike.

The IAW remains the absolute pinnacle of

We will always push hard every day and expand the knowledge of the IAW to anyone willing.

Any interested parties, both new students and existing martial artists are compelled not to waste any time...get in contact.

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Location

Telephone

Address


De Stafford Sports Centre
Caterham
CR35YX