| The
Student Experience |
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Ji Do Kwan
training is designed to challenge students from
the very first class, regardless of their
abilities upon entering the school. Anyone with
the determination and desire to learn can gain
the necessary physical abilities through the
practice of the art alone. Athletes or movement
artists in excellent physical condition will have
an easier introduction than those without a
well-rounded fitness base, but they too will find
challenges before long. Physical challenges are
the first that most students struggle with, and
although the art continues to develop the body
for many years, the training moves deeper into a
mental and spiritual experience as time passes. |
Physical
Training
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Tae Kwon Do
makes unusual demands on the body, and at the
beginning of their training, almost all students
experience muscle soreness as they discover
muscles they never knew they had. Some develop
blisters or temporary soreness in various joints.
As in running, ballet, weightlifting, or any
intensive physical endeavor, the techniques soon
become familiar to the bodyand grow more
comfortable. As students become fit, their
challenge shifts to finding ways to maintain the
difficulty, to continue to push themselves and
grow as they become stronger. Those willing to
endure a brief period of adjustment to the
unfamiliar motions of Tae Kwon Do reach a
well-rounded and high level of strength,
flexibility, and cardiovascular fitness. They
also reach a deep understanding of how different
parts of their bodies work together, so their
fitness is practical--they are not only in shape
but know how best to use their body's potential. |
Mental
Conditioning
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As students
continue to struggle with the physical challenges
of Tae Kwon Do, they also begin to explore and
train their minds. As a student enters the dojang,
(training hall), he or she enters a special place
where the only task of any importance is the next
technique. One goal of training is to reach the
state of "no mind," a term that is hard to translate
but describes a state of being intensely alert and
alive but detached from the outcome of the actions
of the moment. When an athlete speaks of being in
"the zone"--the basketball player sinking a perfect
foul shot at the buzzer, the runner who covers mile
after effortless mile, the baseball player on a
hitting streak--all are in a simple version of this
state. The athlete becomes pure action, and feels
that he or she can do no wrong. For all but world-
class athletes, this is an elusive state, one that
may happen only a few times a year, if ever. The
martial artist learns to assume this state at will.
Advanced students strive to make this attitude part
of their everyday lives. It is an ability that can
improve everything a person does, like breathing
clear mountain air after a lifetime of smog. |
Spiritual Growth
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A mental
transformation of this magnitude often leads to
profound changes in a person's spiritual life.
They may find themselves understanding more
clearly what is truly important in their lives.
As they become physically and mentally strong,
conflicts between people often seem less significant
and can be resolved constructively. Most students
of Ji Do Kwan become more at peace, both with others
and in their interior lives, through their training.
It is as hard to explain how this transformation
occurs as it is to explain Zen, but the effect is
unmistakable in the experienced martial artist, as
anyone who has been in the presence of a great
master can attest. |
Following The
Way
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The most
important quality that any martial artist can
have at any level is dedication. Many people of
average physical talents surpass their more
athletic peers through years of sustained
training, workout after workout. Again, the most
important part of the term Tae Kwon Do is
"Do"--the Way. Only by making martial
arts training a part of one's daily life can one
learn the deepest truths. |
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