Your goals for 2017

dan.jaret

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A perfect split, in all directions, and a 180 degrees kick hold.
Move up at least one belt in kung fu and taekwondo.
Finish up all the levels of my training routines (training a routine that goes by levels to improve flexibility and kicks).
Get a house by the beach and a new car.
Buy that beloved piano I've been wanting for months.
Increase my income by 100%.
Remain in perfect health and wake up full of energy each day.

Share yours.
 

Gerry Seymour

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  • Grow the program to regular 10-person classes (about the limit of our space).
  • Add a Study Group day to the program.
  • Complete the rest of the new Shojin-ryu forms.
  • Shift my business model (for my primary business) to return to profitability, or replace it entirely.
  • Finally actually take some guitar lessons. I love my guitar, but I'm pretty sure she's bored with the one fingerstyle pattern and 3 chords I know.
  • Spend more time in the forest.
 

Transk53

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A perfect split, in all directions, and a 180 degrees kick hold.
Move up at least one belt in kung fu and taekwondo.
Finish up all the levels of my training routines (training a routine that goes by levels to improve flexibility and kicks).
Get a house by the beach and a new car.
Buy that beloved piano I've been wanting for months.
Increase my income by 100%.
Remain in perfect health and wake up full of energy each day.

Share yours.

Yeah, I would like a piano.
 

Buka

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Make it to 2018.

Figure out why BlueTooth keeps messing up in my car.

Visit roger Goodell's grave.

Get a better lens for my camera.

Get a brindle Staffordshire Bull Terrier puppy (female). With stinky puppy breath and a waggly tail.

Choke out just one more guy.
 

Gerry Seymour

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Been thinking for years that playing the piano seems like an instrument that would especially be very rewarding.
That's me and the guitar. Tell you what - you work on your piano, I'll work on my guitar. By the end of the year, we should both be able to play...some damned thing.
 

Transk53

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That's me and the guitar. Tell you what - you work on your piano, I'll work on my guitar. By the end of the year, we should both be able to play...some damned thing.

Sounds good. When I was around 10 or 11, in galaxy far far away. I had ago on a acoustic. Probably a lack many things at time prevented from sticking to it. Loved that Casio keyboard I had. Anyway waffling, really curious on what you play. Acoustic/electric, or both?
 

Gerry Seymour

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Sounds good. When I was around 10 or 11, in galaxy far far away. I had ago on a acoustic. Probably a lack many things at time prevented from sticking to it. Loved that Casio keyboard I had. Anyway waffling, really curious on what you play. Acoustic/electric, or both?
I have both. The acoustic sits mostly unused - it's an old Yamaha 12-string that used to belong to my grandfather, strung with only 6 strings (because I could never manage to finger any chords on 12). The electric is a semi-hollowbody Epiphone - a beautiful beast with redwood stain. I like it because I can practice while my wife is asleep in the next room by simply not using the amp.

I'd love to be able to play some bits of old folk music, a few soft rock/pop pieces, and a bit of jazz. At present, I can sort of play part of the James Bond theme, a bit of the Pink Panther theme, most of "Away in a Manger", a simple fingerstyle pattern, and not much else. Even with what little i can do, I find playing (especially the fingerstyle pattern) soothing and almost meditative.
 

Tony Dismukes

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I have both. The acoustic sits mostly unused - it's an old Yamaha 12-string that used to belong to my grandfather, strung with only 6 strings (because I could never manage to finger any chords on 12). The electric is a semi-hollowbody Epiphone - a beautiful beast with redwood stain. I like it because I can practice while my wife is asleep in the next room by simply not using the amp.

I'd love to be able to play some bits of old folk music, a few soft rock/pop pieces, and a bit of jazz. At present, I can sort of play part of the James Bond theme, a bit of the Pink Panther theme, most of "Away in a Manger", a simple fingerstyle pattern, and not much else. Even with what little i can do, I find playing (especially the fingerstyle pattern) soothing and almost meditative.
Whenever you make it into Lexington and we get a workout in, maybe I can give you some guitar tips. I'm not a pro by any stretch of the imagination, but I'm a passable amateur performer.
 

Gerry Seymour

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Whenever you make it into Lexington and we get a workout in, maybe I can give you some guitar tips. I'm not a pro by any stretch of the imagination, but I'm a passable amateur performer.
Tony, if any of your tips make it sound - even momentarily - like I know what I'm doing, I'll buy the beers.
 

Tony Dismukes

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Tony, if any of your tips make it sound - even momentarily - like I know what I'm doing, I'll buy the beers.
I have the same advantage in teaching music as I do teaching martial arts - I'm profoundly lacking in natural talent for either field and so I'm well acquainted with all the problems and pitfalls that an untalented student will encounter along the way.
 

Transk53

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You two should try a pair of 1210's and American House. When you untalented, you do it really wrong :D
 

Transk53

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I have both. The acoustic sits mostly unused - it's an old Yamaha 12-string that used to belong to my grandfather, strung with only 6 strings (because I could never manage to finger any chords on 12). The electric is a semi-hollowbody Epiphone - a beautiful beast with redwood stain. I like it because I can practice while my wife is asleep in the next room by simply not using the amp.

I'd love to be able to play some bits of old folk music, a few soft rock/pop pieces, and a bit of jazz. At present, I can sort of play part of the James Bond theme, a bit of the Pink Panther theme, most of "Away in a Manger", a simple fingerstyle pattern, and not much else. Even with what little i can do, I find playing (especially the fingerstyle pattern) soothing and almost meditative.

Old folk music, only listened to Irish. Finger style pattern? Jazz. Don't understand it for minute, or maybe a few seconds. Aside from NYC and Chicago House, Jazz seemed little noisy, if you see what I mean.
 

Gerry Seymour

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Old folk music, only listened to Irish. Finger style pattern? Jazz. Don't understand it for minute, or maybe a few seconds. Aside from NYC and Chicago House, Jazz seemed little noisy, if you see what I mean.
I'm a soft-jazz guy. I do enjoy some other types of jazz from time to time, but soft stuff (like Sade, The Crossing, Stanley Jordan) is what I really like. I also love blues guitar.
 

Transk53

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I'm a soft-jazz guy. I do enjoy some other types of jazz from time to time, but soft stuff (like Sade, The Crossing, Stanley Jordan) is what I really like. I also love blues guitar.

Sade? I am really shocked here, never expected that. Blues, only a little, aside from the obvious of course.
 

kuniggety

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Choke out just one more guy.

I'm about to head to Kauai, but if I make it to Maui, I'll give you a head's up for a beer and choke.

Goal:

BJJ: get my *** back on the matts and get a couple of stripes on that blue belt. I've started weight lifting but made far too many excuses for not being on the matts in BJJ. I think I only did around 50. I was pulling a lot of 60 hr work weeks making it difficult. Just changed jobs and then wife is about to be gone for 5 months, so it's a good chance to hopefully get 200+ hrs of matt time this year.

Language: sit down and get Thai script figured out so that I can leap frog my abilities with it. The same for Mandarin.
 
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Tony Dismukes

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Martial arts goals:
Continue refining my BJJ fundamentals, especially takedowns and guard passing.
Improve my cardio to the point where I can realistically enter a BJJ tournament. I haven't competed since I was a brown belt and I think it would be good for me to give it another try.
Do more stand up sparring. I've been too sporadic with that lately.
Build a solid foundation in Capoeira and earn my first cord at the Batizado in the Spring.
Make more progress in Wing Tsun - if @yak sao and his son ever move class back to the weekends.
Be more consistent with my mobility and strength & conditioning training.

Non-martial arts goals:
Get my household budget under control and pay down old bills
Continue my Portuguese study and get myself to the point where I can read a newspaper in that language.
Prepare for and pass at least a couple of professional certification exams.
Continue efforts I began over recent weeks to keep my apartment consistently neat so that I can invite guests over without having to allow time for frantic cleaning.

I'm not normally one for New Years resolutions, but these are mostly initiatives that I had begun over the last couple of months anyway, so it doesn't hurt to make a public commitment to continue them.
 
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