| Choosing
a School |
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There are
hundreds of different martial arts, and it is
possible to find a wide variety of styles in most
communities. People study the martial arts for
many different reasons, and they should consider
their motivations honestly and carefully before
joining a school. Although most combine some
mixture of self-defense training, physical
conditioning, and spiritual and mental growth,
most emphasize one or more of these components
more than the others. At advanced levels, many
martial arts begin to overlap and resemble one
another, but for the first few years of study, Ji
Do Kwan looks and feels very different from, say,
Aikido, which seems different from T'ai Chi
Chuan, Wing Chun, Judo, and the rest of the
spectrum of martial arts. |
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Since
reaching a level of competence in any martial art
requires a significant commitment of time and
effort, it is wise for novices to learn about the
schools in their area before throwing themselves
into their study. A little research will give
them the confidence to give their chosen art the
dedication it deserves, which will in turn give
them the best chance of achieving their
individual goals. Most martial arts instructors
let potential students observe classes and/or
participate in a trial class, and this should be
an essential part of everyone's selection
process. When watching a class, newcomers should
pay attention to the three main factors which
will affect their study: |
Kinds of Motion
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Martial arts can
be roughly divided into two groups: hard and soft styles.
The names are somewhat misleading--both can be
rugged or gentle, or both at once. In general, hard styles
use a system of kicks, blocks, and strikes, while soft styles
use throws, trips, and joint manipulation as the basis of
their techniques. Within both hard and soft styles, individual
techniques may be fluid and graceful or sharp and
percussive. Some styles are very fast and physical, while
others are slower and more contemplative. Beginners
often have very different ideas about what a martial art
looks like--watch a few different classes and see what
kind of movement appeals to you. |
Goals of the Style
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Some people
begin studying a martial art to learn to defend themselves, to get in shape or be more at home in their
bodies, to gain self-confidence, self-awareness, or
self-control, to reduce stress, to learn to resolve conflicts
productively, or even to better understand the world and
their place in it. Again, most schools teach a combination of all these skills and more, but most also
emphasize one or more over the rest. While a school
with a window full of trophies may prepare its students well for tournament competition, it may
not be the best at teaching the other values and skills
people may expect from a martial art. Other schools
may give their students excellent technical skills but
fail to instruct them on how to use them, either for
self-defense or to create the strength of spirit to resolve
conflicts without force. None of these approaches are
necessarily better or worse than any of the others, but it
helps to know why you're studying and choose a school
that will prepare you for whatever you want to achieve.
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The Master
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This is
probably the most important of the three factors
that determine a student's experience of a
martial art. Since the goal of all martial arts
is more or less the same, the benefits of
choosing a good teacher outweigh by far the
superficial distinctions between techniques and
styles. It is not necessary that a student
"like" his or her teacher, but if the
teacher does not inspire and motivate the
student, it is not likely that either will gain
much from the relationship. The student must
trust and respect the teacher absolutely, because
it is essential that a student surrender to the
teacher's vision of the proper training goals and
methods. The martial arts can liberate the body
and spirit, but there is no "freedom"
in the training hall--since a student will be
immersed in the teacher's ways and knowledge, it
is wise to choose a teacher with a vision that
matches what a student is like, or perhaps what he or
she would like to become. |
Teacher/Student
Relationship
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The bond
between a teacher and student of the martial arts
is unlike any other relationship. It can seem,
especially for new students, to be among the most
distant of relationships. Although they are often
friendly, the teacher is not exactly a student's friend,
and many students travel a long way along their path
before learning anything about a teacher's life
outside the practice hall. In larger schools, a
teacher may work with a student for years and
know everything about his or her abilities and
progress as a martial artist before even learning
that student's name. |
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In other ways, though,
it can be among the closest of human
relationships, as student and teacher work out
side by side through thousands of hours of sweat,
fatigue, and growth. After a while, they learn to
read and anticipate each others' intentions, to
transcend speech and reach a state of pure mind
and motion. This is only possible through a deep
bond of mutual trust and respect. The student respects
the teacher's experience and knowledge and trusts
that following a master's instruction is the only way
to make progress along the Way, even if the reasons
for any particular instruction are not apparent
at the time. The teacher trusts in the student's
willingness to learn and respects the
difficulty of the journey ahead (having been there
not so long ago). A good teacher realizes that the
student is the next link in a chain hundreds of
generations long, and will find a balance between
being attentive to an individual student's abilities
and maintaining the rigorous methods of an ancient
tradition. |
The
Beginning
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Ji Do Kwan
translates as "The Right Way" or
"The Way of Wisdom," but this refers to
the high standards it applies to students
following its Way. Its practitioners do not claim
that their art is the "best" martial
art or that it is the "one true path."
Many masters believe that if one style were
superior to all others, it would have gradually
eliminated the rest in the same way that a
dominant species of animal, through evolution,
replaces all those that are weaker. By now, at
the end of the second milennium, after thousands
of years of development in a fairly small
geographical region, everyone would be studying
the same style. The range of different forms that
exist today is proof that there are as many
"right" or "best" paths as
there are different kinds of people who follow
them. Beginning a martial art is like setting off
on a physical journey with no end in sight:
consult a map, learn what the world looks like,
then point yourself in one direction and start
walking. |
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