Why
should you give martial arts a try? Read this original article written
by a Matthews Martial Arts student:
Four years
ago I started to wonder if martial arts would be something I could do
and benefit from. I knew next to nothing about it except maybe some fragmented
memories of scenes from the movie The Karate Kid. But I knew I wanted
to be able to defend myself in case anything ever happened. I didn't really
even know what "anything" was; I just knew I wanted to have
more confidence. I also thought that maybe karate would instill some much-needed
discipline in me. Finally, I figured it would be a better and more interesting
way to exercise than moving weights up and down at the gym and running
on a treadmill like a hamster.
So I took
the plunge. I signed up for Kenpo
Karate at Matthews Martial Arts. I had no idea how many other benefits
karate offered.
I started
to learn how to defend myself indeed, but I also learned that taking on
something like karate is less a project and more a journey. I also learned
I needed some serious patience. If I thought I was going to be able to
fend off a would-be mugger with a knife after a few karate sessions, I
was sorely mistaken. I soon realized that if I was to expect tangible
results, I was going to need to dedicate myself for a while and develop
infinite patience.
But it dawned
on me that anything worthwhile takes hard work and time, so I hunkered
down and started training regularly. I soon realized that what I thought
was going to take months was really going to take years. So my patience
developed.
My muscles
developed too. In fact, I was sore in places that I didn't even know existed.
From my thumbs to my ribs, I found muscles that hadn't ever been flexed
before. After a half a year I started getting into the best shape of my
life, and I had hardly noticed because I was concentrating on learning
the craft.
Martial
Arts and Discipline
My discipline began
to grow as well. Often I just didn't want to go, but I forced myself and
always felt better for it afterward, always. Our sensei (teacher) is a
blackbelt and former military man, so his brand of teaching certainly
involves discipline, but never more than anyone can handle. Furthermore,
to learn the various karate moves and forms, I began to develop discipline
over every miniscule movement of my body. And to perform each of the moves
properly, you need to have supreme control over your mind as well as your
body. This takes years of practice, but even the novice benefits from
each attempt.
My confidence
continued to grow, but not just confidence in fighting, but confidence
in my physical abilities, and each time I train, my confidence develops
even further. I have more faith in myself, I trust myself more.
Martial
Arts as a Journey
Another benefit
of training in the martial arts is that one begins to grasp the difference
between the goal and the journey, and why the latter is so much more important.
In this day and age of hyper-consumerism and quick fixes and TV, it's
easy to think that the goal is everything, regardless of how you get there.
Capitalism stresses achievement and profits at the expense of the process.
TV shows and commercials wrap everything up neatly and cleanly by the
end, without much real struggle. And we are bombarded with advertisements
of immediate relief or riches or good looks if we "just buy this
product".
Wwhat about
the process? What about the journey? What about the lifestyle? Everyone's
in such a rush to get somewhere or get something that many of us Westerners
miss our own lives and each of the present moments because we're so concerned
with the future. Training in karate slows one's life down a bit. It teaches
one how to enjoy the process, not the goal. It's a life long study, and
no one reaches blackbelt status quickly. That's the way it should be.
Once you
learn to enjoy the process, to enjoy the intrinsic goodness of practicing
and training, you begin to grasp one key to life. The journey is more
important than the goal.
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