Friday, 29 November 2013

forgotten words: Six Elements of Advancement in Tang Soo Do Training

Since finalising my class, it seemed the right time to sort out my filing cabinet full of the paperwork that I had accrued over the years, and i came across this little piece of work - I had forgotten all about having done it !

I contemplated splitting it up into its component parts as separate blogs, but instead I decided to put it all in here.....
it was entitled
Six Elements of Advancement in Tang Soo Do Training.


A student should not forget that whether it is Tang Soo Do or any other form of martial art, that all martial arts share the same historical evolution:
At some point in time, primitive man had to defend himself against his enemies. Primitive man had no weapons other than his body and limbs - When you have no weapon, you must become a weapon yourself; therefore the martial arts were born. The student beginning Tang Soo Do must understand clearly what he is studying and the purpose of his training.
A martial art is basically an art of warfare of personal self-defence. Martial arts training has many benefits and spin offs outside of this capacity. One is self-confidence and the other is improved health and well being through physical exercise and training. The one single element required to achieve this, however, is discipline. For a student to begin training with an attitude that he must either win or lose a fight is futile.
There are six dominant stages of development involved in cultivating the correct attitude towards the art of Tang Soo Do and its concept of training. A beginner should endeavour to develop the proper frame of mind before starting Tang Soo Do or any martial arts career.
To develop this frame of mind, the student needs to focus upon the following six key elements throughout his training career.

Awareness
Awareness is the first element - awareness, simply put, is being aware of what is available. For instance, you cannot begin correct training in Tang Soo Do without a suitably qualified instructor. It is impossible to learn the fundamental principles of focus, power and inner strength without proper guidance and supervision.
A beginner, by simply starting to train in Tang Soo Do  has taken one step towards awareness, as  he is now becoming aware of what is available in the many aspects of the art of Tang Soo Do.
Another example of awareness for the beginner is the realisation of his own potential; physical, spiritual and mental – quite possibly for the first time in his life he has become aware – conscious of that which is awakening within him.

“Before a man studies the philosophies of the orient, to him mountains are mountains and waters are waters; after he gets insight into the truth of philosophy through the instruction of a good master, mountains to him are no longer mountains and waters are not waters. But after this, when he really attains to the abode of rest, mountains are once again mountains and waters are waters.”  Unknown

Ambition
Ambition, the second element of developing an appropriate attitude, is very important in life, which includes career, work, aspirations, and the aims an individual hopes to achieve.
Whatever kind of work you do, you must say to yourself 'I am at this point today, with concentration, endurance, patience and effort, in two or three years I will come to this point in my life’, or ‘I will have achieved this level in my ambitions’. Without ambitions and target setting, a person will never have the ability to gauge their advancement and evaluate their areas of weakness.
Without a conscious effort to set targets and determine advancement, a person may perhaps, through inattentiveness and negligence, remain in the same starting position all their life.
In Tang Soo Do training, a person may begin as a white belt and plan their training to accomplish a black belt within a given time period, continually setting up short range targets for themselves, such as the interim Gup grades or mastering particular techniques.
Setting targets, whether they be long or short range, is an important aspect in gauging advancement and determining levels of skill in training or any aspect of daily life.

“You should have purpose, hope and courage continuously, as you had in the beginning, until you have reached your goal. If you do, you will achieve the desired end.”  Grand Master Hwang Kee, 1978

In mentioning the colour belt system, it is worth remembering that although belt ranks help a student set up targets, the belt itself means nothing more than a convenient method to keep their Dobahk top from flapping open, whether they are a white or black belt.
You are the result of your training, experience, and the targets that you have set for yourself in the art of Tang Soo Do. You are not the belt; the belt only marks time in relation to others, not yourself. People who brag about their ranks and have an exaggerated adoration for the belt system place too much confidence in things that stand outside of themselves. This is an indication of a serious lack of self-confidence and self-understanding. The belt only has meaning when it truly represents the skill and level of its owner. Nevertheless, a belt is still a belt, and some times, it is more important to tie up your top than support your pride.

Selflessness
The third element of development is selflessness. This is important because of what it asks of you and what it demands of you: What will you have to give up to acquire knowledge in Tang Soo Do?
The complaint most often heard is, "Well, I want to study the martial arts, but I don't have the time to devote to it" This excuse is one given by those who are already poor achievers. You can always recognise success by the sacrifice made and the price paid for it. Some students say they cannot learn because they do not have the proper place to train or the proper uniform. These are all excuses, not what you deep down inside, want and need to do.

In my own experience, I finish a hard day at work and when it comes time for training, I sometimes find that it is difficult to find the proper motivation and energy to get out and go training.  Everyone must push them self a little harder to get a little farther, as the age old saying goes: “There can be no gain without pain”. Do not dwell on the difficulty or the effort of training, just do it, after a time, you will be able to look back and see the advancement and see that the additional effort and pain was well worth it.
A personal self-sacrifice of mine is that of time; time for myself and time for my family. As precious as my time is, I still push all the limitations to the extent of their boundaries to ensure that I am always at my Dojang for my students, always at the functions for my instructor and Association and always ready to listen when asked.

Indulgence
Indulgence is the fourth element and probably the most deceptive and the most difficult to interpret. Many people are afraid of indulgence primarily because they have no way of controlling it. After you have achieved a desired level, you owe yourself some reward.
After gaining a new Gup grade, why not go out and have celebratory dinner and congratulate yourself, for instance. On the other hand, having trained for a number of years and reaching the black belt status, you should now be able to work out when you want and where you want. You have earned your status and no one can ever take that away from you.
Now you are in the position to develop new training methods for yourself. Nothing ever remains the same in your art. Tang Soo Do requires that you become innovative. You may now, for the first time, seek new training aids since you are no longer a novice.  However, you must never forget the traditions and roots that the art of Tang Soo Do has grown from, as these will always be present in the way of training. This is the proper perspective of indulgence: freedom to make a choice as a by-product of your discipline and training.
The major pitfall of this kind of self-indulgence is forgetting where you came from and where you gained those skills.
Remember that you may not know all there is to know about your own style. Self-indulgence has some limits. Reach them, expand them, and continue to grow with them.

Accomplishment
The next element in the chart of advancement is accomplishment. Accomplishment takes many forms and may, like beauty, exist only "in the eyes of the beholder". Accomplishment is your own interpretation. No one else can define it for you. Someone may say, "You won a trophy, what an accomplishment." Only you know how lucky you may have been to win or how you felt when you won it. Only you can determine whether you were at your best or not.
In life as well as in the martial arts, some people reach high levels of accomplishment early and some never accomplish anything. Age does not necessarily merit success.
You will be able to understand accomplishment at a point in your career in Tang Soo Do, but only you will know when that point comes and what you have really accomplished.

However, it is a progression with which only you can identify with by yourself. It may be as simple as the perfection of a front kick. As challenging as breaking a pile of bricks. Or as complex as creating a new Hyung for the syllabus in the art of Tang Soo Do.

“The benefit of reading varies directly with one’s experience in life. It is like looking at the moon. A young reader may be compared to one seeing the moon through a single crack, a middle aged reader seems to see it from an enclosed courtyard, and an old man seems to see it from an open terrace, with a complete view of the entire field.” Chang Chao

Obligation
The last element in a student’s development is Obligation.
After you acquire a substantial amount of knowledge, you are bound by duty to pass your knowledge on to other practitioners. You are also expected to help refine the art of Tang Soo Do. This element of development will show your sincerity and obligation towards the martial arts and the general good that results from its training. At this point, you will also understand and realise the power you possess over others. The power you have developed is an inner power because of your discipline and an external power because of your ability and skill. Your obligation will be to use your art only when you have no other choice. You must use only the amount of force necessary to overcome the obstacle that presents itself to you. The force required may be a peaceful compromise or a dynamic flying side kick. Your obligation is not only to others but to yourself also. You must always carry on your desire for knowledge and direction.

“It is said that the superior man has two things in which he delights, and to rule over the empire is not one of them.
That the father and mother are both alive and that the condition of his brothers affords no cause for anxiety, this is one delight. That when looking up he has no occasion to blush before men, this is his second delight.”   Mencius


The astute reader will by now have noticed that within the main elements of advancement in Tang Soo Do, that there has been no mention of power, strength and ability to perform techniques.
Naturally, these are important attributes in any martial art, but why should they be paramount in the advancement through the ranks?
In today’s modern way of training, too much emphasis is placed on physical strength and weakness and little regard is taken of the six aforementioned points, which if acquired and applied in the correct manner, say more about a person and their abilities than any number of strong or high kicks ever will.
You can quite easily walk into any drama school or dance studio and teach any of the participants there how to march up and down punching and kicking in a single day. They will look very ‘strong’ and will appear to have great ability - but where within that person are the special characteristics that make a genuine martial artist ? They can only be gained with years of dedication and grooming.

The young flexible student may well be able to make himself look like the perfect model student. However, when that student starts to age and his muscles and limbs do not perform quite as well as they used to, and enter into a slow spiral of deterioration, they will soon find the need to take notice of these six special elements.

After all the analysis of skills has taken place, we should remind ourselves that the purpose of Tang Soo Do training should be the enhancement of the physical and mental self.

When you sit alone, meditate on your faults.
In conversation, do not discuss the faults of others.

“Fishing baskets are employed to catch fish; but when the fish are got, the men forget the baskets. Snares are employed to catch hares; but when the hares are got, men forget the snares. Words are employed to convey ideas; but when the ideas are truly comprehended, men forget the words. Fain would I talk to someone who has forgotten the words.”  Chuang Tse


Thursday, 14 November 2013

Moving on

Today I have made my biggest decision ever - I will be giving up my Tang Soo Do class,
Purely because i no longer have the means to support it financially, it is unfortunate really in as much as that it was my class that gave me the determination to get out of my hospital bed and back to my beloved training, probably the only reason that I got my arm and leg to move was by carrying out TSD techniques and sheer determination and stubbornness not to let my stupid brain get in my way, I just ignored the pain in my shoulder that had been strained by the lack of muscle to support my arm and got on with it, I saw the number of students decline after I got back there - i can't blame them for doing that, what inspiration is an old man that hobbles around, cant speak properly and hasn't got the capability to tie his own belt properly and cannot remember the moves to the basic patterns ?
well, they never saw the way in which  I knew that my martial art training pulled me through it all and what I was really suffering was not physical pain, but distress in my head over what type of man I used to be and the old life that I had was gone forever (see the past entry with the light switch comparison) http://thedojang2013.blogspot.com/2013/10/when-life-turns-you-upside-down-all-you.html
So, I hear you say, what happened to perseverance and indomitable spirit ??
   well I had them, and i think I have had to let them pass me by, That's not good is it ?
How can I teach, hand on heart, and instruct young students in the way, that really has turned out not to be the way ( there is the irony, my first blog had that as its title - the way and not the way !!) thedojang.blogspot.com well, perhaps that was destiny written for me ten years ago !
I really think that honesty and integrity are paramount when standing in front of the class - I would even be happy joining in with the beginners, as i was really starting over again, and it made me feel good by admitting that and letting them see that I was only human too, the Masters belt didn't make me superior to any person, no matter what.(looking at it, is that humility coming out in my writing I wonder ?)
Well, I now have a new future to plan for - let's see where that leads me !!