You don’t need fancy gear — just a little creativity.
In Filipino Martial Arts, the rattan stick is a stand-in for a blade. It’s humble, simple, and brutally effective. But that doesn’t mean you can’t tweak it to suit your training needs.
Here are some easy and affordable ways to mod your sticks for better grip, durability, and personality.
🔹 1. Grip Tape Wraps
Add a layer of control to your strikes.
What to Use:
Athletic tape
Friction tape
Hockey grip tape
Tennis handle wrap
Why:
Reduces slippage
Adds slight cushioning
Makes identification easier (especially in group classes)
💡 Pro Tip: Use white underwrap and colored overwrap to make your sticks stand out.
🔸 2. End Reinforcement
Protect the most abused part of your weapon — the tips.
What to Use:
Athletic or duct tape
Rubber caps or trimmed chair feet
Paracord or jute string
Why:
Prevent fraying and splitting
Extend stick life (especially on hard surfaces)
🔹 3. Custom Burn Patterns
Add both style and grip texture.
What to Use:
Torch or soldering iron
Ruler and pencil for layout
Why:
Adds visual personality
Increases friction for grip
Honors traditional designs in FMA
🔥 Go slow. Work in a well-ventilated area.
🔸 4. Weighted Inserts (Advanced)
Want to simulate a heavier weapon like a bolo or barong?
What to Use:
Drill out the butt end slightly
Add small metal weights or BBs
Seal with wood glue or epoxy
Why:
Increases hand strength
Trains blade momentum for transitions
Not for sparring — strictly flow drills or shadow work
🔹 5. Color Coding & Pair Matching
Mark pairs for double-stick work or differentiate left/right.
What to Use:
Colored tape bands
Paint pens
Burned initials or symbols
Why:
Faster pairing in class
Easier to distinguish your sticks
Fun personalization
🧠 Final Thought: Your Stick, Your Tool
Modding your stick doesn’t make it “better” — it makes it yours. Just like your movement evolves, so should the tools you train with.
So don’t be afraid to:
Burn it
Wrap it
Tape it
Balance it
Make it an extension of your training mindset.
🥋 Want Help In-Person?
We do stick mod nights and hands-on training at Eye Square Martial Arts. Bring your gear — or start fresh with one of our field-ready sticks.
It still amazes me that in some corners of the martial arts world, people are still saying that lifting weights will make you bulky—and therefore slow.
Even more bizarre? These same folks will also claim:
“Weight training takes too long to work.”
But also, “Just looking at a barbell will make you blow up like Arnold.”
Let’s be clear: that’s nonsense. Unless you’re eating and training like a competitive bodybuilder, you’re not going to “accidentally” get huge.
And even if you could? Being stronger makes you better at martial arts. Period.
You Don’t Need to Train for Hours
If you’re spending more than 60 minutes, three times a week on resistance training, it’s probably more than you need. Efficient programming and consistency beat volume every time—especially if you’re cross-training with martial arts.
Injury Prevention Starts With Strength
I used to think that flexibility alone would protect me from injury.
So, I stretched all the time.
But I also avoided strength training because I believed it would make me stiff and slow.
And yet… I kept getting injured. Weird injuries. Like the time I threw my back out catching a 4-pound medicine ball. Why? Because I had no muscular support for my range of motion.
Flexibility without strength is a liability.
– Author
Real, functional mobility comes from strong, supported joints. Resistance training teaches your muscles how to engage, not just stretch. That improves:
Energy efficiency
Coordination
Joint stability
Injury resistance
Stronger = More Useful
Let’s keep it simple: strong people are more useful—to themselves, their families, their training partners.
If you’re stronger, you’re probably:
Healthier
More mobile
More durable
Less stressed
And when it comes to martial arts? Strength amplifies everything:
You hit harder
You move faster
You absorb impact better
“Strong people are just more useful—to themselves and to others.”
– Author
Where’s the downside?
How Strength Is Built (and Why Reps Aren’t Enough)
All strength gains follow the same basic formula:
Stress → Recovery → Adaptation
If you’re detrained, anything makes you stronger—even walking or doing bodyweight exercises. That’s why beginners make fast progress.
But once your body adapts to those inputs, progress stalls. You’ll hear people say:
“You just need to do more reps.”
That works—for a while. But if you want to go further, you need to be specific. You need real resistance.
The Big Four: The Foundation of Strength
“If you want to get better at martial arts, you need more than just reps. You need resistance.”
– Author
Once you’ve moved past basic calisthenics, it’s time to add compound lifts. Start with:
Low-Bar Back Squat
Deadlift
Bench Press
Overhead Press
These lifts train your body as a system. They engage multiple muscle groups, force full-body coordination, and build resilience like nothing else.
The Art of Manliness – YouTube playlist covering the Big 4 lifts and a couple extra.
A Simple Plan:
Learn correct form (get a coach or reputable guide)
Warm up properly
Lift progressively heavier weights over time
Rest at least 48 hours between lifting sessions
Yes, you’ll be sore at first. Stick with it—your body adapts quickly.
Training for Your Art
Once you’ve got a base of strength, shift your focus to specificity.
That means:
Keep lifting 2–3x per week
Add mobility work on off days
Drill footwork under light resistance
Use isometrics to strengthen martial movement patterns
Strong muscles only help if they support strong technique. Build both.
Voluntary Hardship is a Superpower
Strength training is uncomfortable. So is martial arts. So is growth.
But leaning into discomfort builds mental calluses. It trains you to:
Push past resistance
Delay gratification
Stay calm under pressure
That’s not just good for fighting. That’s good for life.
This is the same discomfort that helped humans build civilizations. It’s a superpower most people never develop.
Don’t run from discomfort—train it.
“Voluntary hardship is a superpower—and strength training is how you train it.”
– Author
Final Thoughts
Lifting weights won’t make you bulky. It won’t make you slow. It won’t hurt your martial arts—it will enhance them.
With strength comes:
Resilience
Speed
Power
Confidence
That’s not a distraction from martial training. That’s the foundation of it.