upnorthkyosa said:
I wanted to start a thread about kids and their martial arts fantasies...ie power rangers, ninja turtles, and for older kids...martial arts movies. Do you feel like these fantasies are beneficial to martial arts training? Do you think they may create an image of the martial arts that is too far away from the reality? Or is this the hook that brings our young ones into the arts?
My daughter (and now my son) wanted to be a ninja for Halloween this year. We've been playing with swords and shuriken and nunchaku...all plastic toys. Our games have been really fun and my hope is that it will lead to more serious training in the future. What do you think?
upnorthkyosa
I think the martial arts movies feed the imagination of the children. But I don't think this is the root cause that drives them into the dojos, although, it certainly helps. However, I think it begins before the movies.
Reflecting back on my childhood, I see two types of children that are affected by the movies. The first are the children who basically have a half hearted fascination with the movies because of it's cool factor. They tend to flutter from one fascination to another with no ryhme or reason. I think this probably represents the majority of children. The second group of children identify deeply with the heros in the movies and they want to emulate those heros. They too flutter from one fascination to another, but they all seem to have a common thread. IMHO
The movies draw both types of kids into martial arts I think. One is wanting to taste what they saw in the movies and once they have tasted it, they will move on. Then there is the other group of kids, that doesn't want to just taste it, they want to experience it. I think it is these children who stay and grow within the art.
What does all of my rambling mean? Well, I think that there are children who are born with the hero heart and naturally gravitate toward these things (which may describe why they were motivated to watch the movies), and there are others who are not born with the hero heart and prefer to get a taste of it, a sample if you will as they go through life, but they have no real desire to learn the arts.
I personally think that drive is not caused by the movies, but much earlier and may be why they watched the movies in the first place.
Lastly, I would like to add that I don't mean that only certain kids *can* be heros, because anyone can be a hero under the right circumstances. Just, there are people who naturally inclined to be that way. Not everyone has the desire or heart to be a Police Officer, Fireman, Soldier, etc.