<Gasp> he was Kung Fu!
He was awful. I don't know if you ever read his book Spirit of Shaolin. But he doesn't get it. He really doesn't. In it, he describes bushido as a martial art.
Yes I can see that, but what we’ve noticed is the motivation to wear all white and have white swords to more closely emulate their anime crush rather than become good at the art; it’s more like cosplay. I suspect they want to learn a bit so they can doing a flashy resheathing at ‘Comics-are-a-Con’…impress their mates.
Yeah, I get that. I'm sure that describes a lot of beginners. The thing is that it's hard to tell on the front end who's going to shift from that to a genuine interest in the art. What I do know is that the shift doesn't happen without someone taking an interest.
A very good point, well made!
Thanks Gyakuto.
I think you should look around and you’ll see it is and increasingly so. Money gives the most opportunities
I've been looking directly at it for more than a decade now. I also work in higher education, supporting students with barriers to participation. In the United States. Believe me, I'm keenly aware of the advantages of money. And the universe's propensity for kicking people while they're down. All the more reason not to give up on them.
It happens about once a quarter. We noticed Damascus steel-bladed swords (with white scabbards) appearing at these times and wondered if the same one was being passed around (one person said their’s cost them £600!), so we photographed unusual features and they turned out to be different sword…illegal swords!
Huh. Well, maybe you're doing a social good by teaching people to take swords more seriously then.
That’s what we did and there’d be much sighing, acceptance and they’d never come again. We saw one person walking home with their sword strapped to their back! He should be forcibly sterilised to clean the gene pool a little.
Ouch. Sounds like a self-correcting problem to me. You tell them that's not how this works. If they come back, there's hope.
As I said, why would such abstract ‘talents’ be preserved and passed on? Perhaps having longer arms for throwing further, eyes wider apart for better visual depth deeper glenoid fossae to protect the shoulder joints, stronger rotator cuff muscles…it’d take a while for those to appear in an individual population, but they probably would. But that’s physical advantage rather than neural. I forgotten my point now, but any excuse to talk about Darwin’s incredible fact!
I'm no expert on Darwin. But isn't that part of what sets us apart as humans? That we don't just preserve that which improves our literal survivability?
[quote[I want to be untalented and in your class![/quote]
Well I haven't got a class currently. But if I did, it would be a hell of a commute. About 3,000 miles by my calculations. (I live not far outside of DC.)
Is that what they peddle?
Confidence? Sure. You said yourself that you sought it out after minor bullying.
I think many of us here followed that kind of trajectory, but we carried on practising the MA to reach our lofty heights of…whatever.
I opted for "not abysmal" personally.
After 30 years of it, you want to give up, though.
Some days, yeah. And I have done for the time being, but that was more down to medical issues and lack of time.
If you have a gaggle of them, it really is a disrupter.
Upstream, someone suggested separate classes. I like that suggestion.
Or could it be disheartening to see a peer doing the same things as you but getting better than you?
Possibly. You've been a professor. You know better than most that students' reactions to adversity express themselves in different ways. I have no illusions that everyone will persist. I also have no illusions about being able to tell on the front end who will and won't. I've been surprised, both in martial arts and higher ed, by who does.
Yes…
This is the best post and you have persuaded me to revise my teaching ideas should I ever get the urge again (very unlikely). Fantastic
@ap Oweyn!
I appreciate you reading that lot, Gyakuto. It's been good talking with you.