"The ultimate aim of Karate lies not in victory or defeat, but in the perfection of the character of its participants." -- Gichin Funakoshi

Friday, September 08, 2006

Best Defense - No Be There

So far, being a brown belt is fun. We worked self-defense from multiple attackers last night. Hanshi started off by pulling 4 blackbelt guys and one brown belt guy onto the mat and positioning them in a circle. Then he called one of the blackbelt girls into the center of the circle. He said for the guys to attack and for her to defend - but he didn't tell her what techniques to use. I was thinking oh, no...he's gonna make us all fight from inside the circle and I have no clue what to do! Fortunately, by the time he called me out there, I had been able to watch a few blackbelts and work out a battle plan. Don't wait for the attackers to make the first move. You are surrounded, and the guys are obviously aggressive. Take out the biggest threat first. Go for a kick to the knee to take him down. It'll make the others think twice about coming after you. Don't stop moving. Rechamber and keep kicking. Defensive side kicks are a beautiful thing. Throw that baby up there and watch the guy run himself right into it. Don't be worried about keeping kicks high - on the street you'll want to aim for knee or groin, not head.

So anyway, I did pretty well. I know I suprised myself...and I'm pretty sure I even suprised Sensei-Hubby and Hanshi, too.

But of course, after we all had a turn, Hanshi took the center. And reminded us that "best defense - no be there." Size up your attackers. Pick the weakest link. As they move in on you, you slip past the weak link. You are no longer in the battle zone, and they are tripping over each other. It's actually rather amusing to watch - especially when he gives you the slow motion instant replay.

One of the blackbelts took a pretty tough kick to the floating rib while playing the part of an attacker. He's a fairly new blackbelt, and only 10 or 11 years old. And he tends to be a bit of a...well, ok, forget bit of a, he tends to be a big fat crybaby. So of course, the minute the kick landed, we all braced ourselves as he doubled over, screamed, and hit the floor. But then he did something that suprised us all. He calmed himself down and picked himself up. Hanshi reminded him to breathe. And he was good to go in under 2 minutes. I was so proud of him.

We have a tournament coming up soon. I don't know if I really want to compete in this one or not. It kind of sneaked up on me. Last tournament I picked the kata I wanted to run and worked it nonstop for over a month. Took second in my division. This time, I'm not even sure which kata I want to do. And I'm really nervous about being in the brown belt division. I don't know that I'll really be able to compete.

One thing is certain - I am not the slightest bit unsure of whether or not to spar at tournament. That's a great big resounding NO. I know I'm trying to better my sparring, but that's gonna happen in our dojo, not at a tournament where everyone is out to prove themselves and nobody cares about showing control. Besides, I've seen too many sparring matches at these tournaments that were not called fairly. "Point here for the perfected 'stop foot with chest' technique!" No thank you. I'm trying to boost my confidence in my sparring.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I agree. Hold off on the tournaments until you have the confidence you need. It's amazing that with each new belt, you feel less worthy of it. So green belt syndrome is a reality; what's with the lack of confidence with brown belt? Has your husband named that one? I'm sure I'll suffer from whatever that one is as well

~Amber~ said...

I think the Green Belt Syndrome doesn't completely wear off until first kyu, at which time the self-esteem does a 180 and a person seems to have a big red S on his chest.

Anonymous said...

I disagree. I think it just gets worse the higher you get. As a new black belt, I sometimes wonder how in the world I got that promotion. I feel like I don't know anything!

Once you reach the dan ranks, you realize how much there is truly left to learn.

frotoe said...

Its weird- I definitely think green belt syndrome doesn't wear off until 1st kyu. Thats when I started feeling like it was all coming more naturally to me. However- as soon as I passed my black belt pretest and started the testing cycle for Shodan I realized that all that confidence I had gained doesn't mean anything and I started feeling "not worthy" of promoting. It was a different feeling than the green belt syndrome to me, though. Its weird. I guess it all revolves around humility.

Mir said...

Confidence comes with practice, practice, and more practice.

Well done. Keep at the good work.