Finding Your Own Voice
Posted: Sunday, July 12, 2009
by John Graden
http://www.johngraden.com
In an advice
column, a 15-year-old boy wrote, I am 15, I have zits, my voice is still high,
and no girl wants anything to do with me. What should I do? The answer was
really good.
Its not just you. Most 15-year-old boys are gawky and
awkward and have zits. Girls your age are more interested in older boys. The
question isnt what can you do now to improve your odds with girls, because
there is really very little you can do now. The real question to focus on is:
what kind of 18 year-old do you want to be? What can you do over the next three
years to redefine yourself and create the person you think will have more
success? Can you start lifting weights? Take martial arts and get a black belt?
Get really good at some activity, other than video games or web surfing, so you
have something going for you?
Many of us have experienced or observed a metamorphosis from
the classic 98-pound weakling getting sand kicked in his face to a respected
martial arts Master. Martial arts is truly a great way to redefine yourself.
By embracing the martial arts to the degree you and I did,
we took major steps to redefine who we are and how we fit in the world. I thank
the heavens for putting me in proximity to Walt Bone and Hank Farrah so that on
February 12, 1974, I could take my first karate class.
I cant imagine what kind of life I would have led or what
kind of person I would be had my life not taken that turn. I love having a
career in the martial arts, being a black belt and a teacher. Even before
training, I used to read biographies of all of my sports heroes. My goal was to
become an athlete or a teacher. A career in the Martial arts provided me the
opportunity to do both, and I am forever grateful. My goal now is to simply
leave the martial arts in a better place than where I found it. Thats a goal
that motivates and rewards me daily.
When we learn from a specific instructor, its natural for
us to mimic somewhat his or her teaching methods, processes of control, and
attitudes about teaching and the martial arts. Walt Bone taught me to teach
through negative reinforcement. Never compliment a student. Always tell them
what they are doing wrong. Thats what I did for years. I became such an expert
at pointing out things that could be improved upon that I did the same thing
outside of school until a friend said I was hypercritical.
When Mr. Bone said it was an unwritten rule that no one
should open a school within five miles, I took that as the law. When Mr. Farrah
explained that the purpose of the square block is to block one attacker in
front of you with a modified side block and, at the same time, block another
attacker from the side with a rising block, that is exactly what I believed.
And, thats how I taught the square block for almost two
decades, until the day I was on a StairMaster in a gym at the Cooper
Institute, watching a karate class in front of me on the basketball court. The
instructor was very good, and the 10 or so green belt adults were very
attentive as he taught them the square block exactly as I was taught it and as
I still taught it. But as I watched, I couldnt help but think: thats the
dumbest thing Ive ever heard. I wondered how any of us could keep a straight
face while explaining this fantasy block.
Finding Your Own Voice is the process of questioning everything
you teach, and all the systems within your school, to make sure they represent
you and how you want to treat people. You want to make sure your program
authentically reflects your beliefs... that it doesnt simply regurgitate what
your instructor perpetuated on you. Just as an abused boy tends to become an
abusive adult, abusive teaching practices, insane rituals, faulty reasoning,
and myths can be passed on generation to generation until someone breaks the
cycle and finds his voice.
Finding Your Own Voice simply means you work to have a deeper
understanding of the system, so that you dont keep explaining the square block
as I did. You make the style serve your students, rather than the other way
around. Just because your beloved martial arts instructor said it doesnt mean
its true. Just because some guy said it in the 1920s doesnt mean its right
for today. Dont strive to become a clone of your instructor or the masters in
your system. Strive to be authentic as a person who uses martial arts as a way
of expressing himself or herself.