Friday, April 18, 2014

Quantity Vs. Quality


I draw a lot of instantaneous inspiration from quotes in The Karate Kid.  I know in a lot of ways it's cheesy 80s fluff, but I also think that the script served as a vehicle for a lot of Robert Mark Kamen's philosophy on the martial arts.  One such scene has Daniel sitting with Mr. Miyagi eating his birthday cake, and Daniel remarks that he's worried he doesn't know enough karate for the tournament.  Mr. Miyagi agrees with him, but follows with "trust the quality of what you know, not the quantity."

That struck me as an excellent reminder for all of us.  The martial artists that have affected me the most in my time training have waxed philosophical again and again on the idea of developing excellent basics.  They have said, "Good basic technique makes good karate."  And I agree wholeheartedly.  It also occurred to me that I've seen white belts practicing good karate, and I've seen black belts practice karate that is not so good.  I've also seen that practicing good karate is a daily decision--on any given day, we can let the world bog us down.  If we do, chances are we will be training without balance, and our karate probably won't be so good.

Five years ago, I finished my master's degree in music.  It was a weird time in my life because the conferring of that degree, Master of Music, felt like an odd oxymoron.  At that point in my life, I had only realized how much I truly didn't know about music.  And it continues today--the more I learn, the more I learn what I still have left to learn, which is a lot.

As I'm sure is patently obvious by now, I'm an over-the-top, never-coming-back martial arts geek.  I just can't get enough of the stories, techniques, clinics, forms, and the list goes on and on.  Also, one of the things that I have enjoyed about advancing in rank is the new stuff I get to learn.  It's never-ending that way.  I've found the more I focus on learning in martial arts, the more the arts will teach me.

But, then we come back to the quality of what I'm learning.

I have realized that I will never achieve the perfect front kick.  Never--perfection is impossible (see my post on "Yoshu" to read more about this).  But, instead of seeing that pursuit as fruitless, I've learned that even from a white belt kick, I am learning more about how my body works, how to build my strength, and how the basic elements of that kick can be applied to more complex techniques.  The same holds true for basic punches, blocks, beginning forms, stances, and all of the stuff we learn right away.

It seems to me that mastery comes from accepting that there is always something to learn.

We all have different interests and desires when it comes to our training in the martial arts.  We also have different ideas on how our standards should be built and evaluated.  But, I think we can all agree on the necessity on strong fundamentals.  If we follow the pursuit of fundamental technique, I believe those "mystic secrets" that still live in the world's view of the arts will become simple expressions of practical basics.

I love learning about the martial arts.  There is absolutely nothing I've learned that has diminished my enjoyment of training.  I've also found that I can spend my whole life learning about the arts, and I may one day get my hands on 1% of what there is to know.  I think that would be time well spent.  Now, if you'll excuse me, I've got a hankering to give my center punch a tune-up.

OSU!

(Note:  I'm applying the quality vs. quantity expression to my posts as of late.  I know they're few and too far between, but I have some good ideas brewing right now.  Be on the lookout for much more training thoughts and musings on philosophy once the academic year ends!)

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Tournament


It's been a big day of karate!



Today was the WYKKO's National Championship in Atlanta, our traditional tournament.  Basically, this is a closed tournament where all of the organizers, judges, and competitors were from World Yoshukai Karate, which amounts to a pretty excellent experience.


So, you may wonder, why have a closed tournament?  Well, the WYKKO has four big tournaments a year:  the WYKKO National Championship in Atlanta, Superfights in Oxford, The Sunshine Classic in Panama City, and the Southeast Regional in Dothan.  So, we have one closed tournament, one full-contact tournament, and two open tournaments a year.  Open tournaments are a lot of fun and a great bonding experience for practitioners of different styles, but the major benefit of a closed tournament is the competitors know that they are being judged on a WYKKO scale.  The judges know the kata the competitors will draw from, the fighting will be organized and scored in impeccable Yoshukai style, and for one day of competition, we're looking at and experiencing all things World Yoshukai.  It's a pretty amazing time.
 

So, for me, this was a new experience because I was still a kyu grade at the last traditional tournament.  Since I have a recital this Wednesday, I did not compete to protect the vocal instrument, but I still learned a ton from judging competition all day.  I got to sit for 3 kata and weapons divisions apiece, two point sparring divisions, and four semi-knockdown divisions.  And prior to this, I had very little experience judging.  To be perfectly honest, I still have very little experience, but I have a world of a lot more than I had a few hours ago.
 

One of the especially nice factors this year was a short small-group clinic Shihan Torruella gave us right before we started judging.  It was brief but full of practical, no-nonsense information.  A big thing that I'm learning about judging is that with organized, trained judging, not only does the tournament flow better, but the competitors can feel good about competing in a clean, professionally-run event.  This was particularly important when it came down to the fighting divisions.  Disorganized point-fighting takes FOREVER, and is really not that much fun to watch or sometimes participate in.  Organized, professionally-run point fighting is fast-paced, exciting, and keeps the competitors on their toes.
 

But with the shop talk aside, what a tournament comes down to is the overall spirit of those competing.  Athens Yoshukai had a great showing today, and although we were in smaller numbers this year, the group was just as eager to help with setup and breakdown as always.  We got some solid feedback, and best of all, we got to spend the day with our fellow WYKKO martial artists. 
 

Now, we get to look forward to our weekend of training with Master Culbreth, and then from there, on to Summer Camp!  OSU!