Showing posts with label Martial Arts weapons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Martial Arts weapons. Show all posts

Saturday, February 4, 2012

SELF-DEFENSE Training in Arizona

My introduction to self-defense was in the 1960s. I signed up for karate classes at the Black Eagle Federation Kyokusin Kai Dojo in Sugarhouse (Salt Lake City). Not sure why I continued training at this school as I was trying to learn to defend myself so I would not get the .... beat out of me. Instead, I paid someone to do exactly what I was trying to avoid.

In Kyokusin Karate, we trained in kumite (sparring) at least once week fighting every person in the dojo, full contact, bare knuckle and feet, with absolutely no holds bared and no one to check to see if anyone forgot to remove a ruby ring or two. The only protection we had was blocking, hitting harder to discourage our opponents, and a athletic cup (more or less for show, as it didn't seem to do much). One of my friends, Steve, ran into a ruby ring and wore an impression of the carat weight stone for the next several weeks (above his right eyebrow). 
I learned the art of tameshiwari (breaking) in 1964 and still teach 
my students this art. Being a geologist helps me find good rocks to 
break with the hand, elbow, foot, knee or head. Breaking is a very
minor 
part of karate but used as a self-confidence booster.

The most important things I learned in these classes was to block very hard and use my blocks as strikes to get the attacker's attention. This would become very important to me later in life. We also learned to break rocks which became valuable in high school. One day, I was showing off to some students during PE by breaking a rock. The news spread like wildfire, and soon few would dare to cross my path. But a rock is a rock and not a person and breaking a rock means little. But back in the 60s it was almost unheard of. I suspect each time the event was told over and over it was likely embellished until the stone grew into a boulder.

Now that I have my own students scattered worldwide, I teach them to block hard, hit very hard, and most of all, to respect others. At the Hombu dojo in Arizona, we have a great group of martial artists.