Your Martial Arts Ensemble
Posted: Sunday, July 12, 2009
by John Graden
http://www.johngraden.com
I have written several articles about Finding Your Own Voice
as a martial arts professional. Id like this article to focus on some typical martial artist
characters. When you meet these guys youll know they have not yet found their
own voice.
The Tough Guy
Once I saw the Tough Guy as a corner judge in a point match.
He refused to move. When a fighter complained, this guy threatened to pound
him. Martial arts has not made these guys better people, as much as it has
given them additional weapons to bully and intimidate. They need to be extra
tough and aggressive to make sure no one thinks they arent. This is someone my
grandmother would call a very small man.
Travis Bickle
Travis is the character played by Robert DeNiro in Taxi
Driver. Bickle doesnt do martial arts per se but transforms himself into a
militant vigilante. His was the classic scene in front of the mirror as he
pretends to confront someone with the line, You talkin' to me? You talkin' to
me? Then, who you talkin' to?
In high school, I wore karate pants, my karate school
T-shirt, and wooden Japanese sandals. I was like Travis in adopting a new
identity. I was "Karate Jock." I grew out of it. Some guys never do.
Typically, these people are more fringe martial artists than
hard core. They play-act like they are martial artists more than they actually
engage in structured training. I knew one who seemed to learn everything from
books. Somehow he got a black belt and taught students in his garage. His
living room was a weight gym/dojo. Travis Bickles are fascinated by the martial
arts but never seem to undergo extended training under one instructor or
system. Mind you, that wont stop them from getting a black belt.
At best, they are lifelong dabblers in the martial arts. At
the worst, well, they may not be far off from Travis Bickle.
Mr. Negative
Mr. Negative has seen everything and tried everything, but
nothing works for his school. He blames his area, his economy, the belt factory
down the street, or the current president for his schools struggles. He is
critical of everyone and everybody. He starts sentences with, The problem with
______ is . . ." Insert a name, style, system, idea, tournament, or
business idea in the blank, and you have Mr. Negative. Not a fun guy.
Crusty the Clown
With the movement toward personal development in the
classroom, some instructors work hard to look like perfect role models. They
talk like a rehashed motivational speaker: What are you passionate about now?
They try to come off as a hybrid Mr. Rogers and Robin Williams. Truthfully,
they remind me more of a character from The Simpsons named Crusty the Clown.
Crusty is a favorite of the kids, who idolize him and watch
every episode of his childrens TV show. But as soon as the camera is off, he
pops a beer, lights a cigarette, and starts complaining about the kids. Watch
out for Crusty the Clowns wearing black belts and making you laugh. Hold onto
your wallet, and hide your female students.
The Enlightened One
Did you ever speak with a high ranking black belt who seemed
to turn everything you say into a metaphor for nature or world peace? He
doesnt speak as much as give speeches.
Master Po
I know a guy who makes his wife call him Master. Another man
calls himself Grand Master. Thats nothing new, but one day his non-martial
arts wife said, All these people call you Grand Master, what title can I
have? Not exactly what Id call an authentic person.
The Retro-Warrior
Every conversation ends up a war story from the
blood-and-guts days. This guys dream is for it to be 1975 again. When the only
thing you have going for you currently is an event that happened decades ago,
you have stopped trying. The Retro-Warrior peaked a long time ago and does his
best to relive those times year after year, even as his school crumbles around
him. These guys are fun to spend time with because they often have great
stories. In fact, this reminds me of the time I was fighting in London and...
The Asian Wannabe
This is the freakiest of all martial arts characters. This
is a Caucasian who is so enamored of the Asian roots of the martial arts and,
even more so, of his Asian master that he actually begins to speak with an
Asian accent. Some people call it pigeon talk. I call it weird.
The Martial Arts Millionaire
Conversations with this guy start as an interrogation about
how many students you have and what you are grossing and end as a bragging
session all about money, money, money. Boring, boring, boring.
If I ever do this to you, you have my permission to choke me
out.