Facts about Martial Arts for Kids - Part 5
Author: Paul M. Jerard Jr.
Date Posted: July 08, 2006
“Will my child become more violent from learning karate, jujitsu,
or another martial art?”
In a word, “No.” Children learn self-control by practicing martial
arts; and the code of conduct that is enforced, within the studio,
is carried outside into every day life. The average martial arts
school works with parents, and academic teachers, toward the goal
of optimum student success.
When you see a Karate demonstration team perform, that is not an
indicator of the life skills taught within the Karate class. It
is the “flashiest” component of Karate training, presented to capture
the public attention. Ten minutes of kids using ancient weapons,
breaking, and working in synchronized choreography, is more interesting
to the public, than a lecture, by me, about dealing with bullies
without violence.
However, let’s take a closer look at the ten minutes of flash. The
next time you see a martial arts demonstration team, remember those
children have to practice those techniques over and over again.
This requires self-discipline, goal setting, perseverance, and each
child being a team player.
There is no room for a “one way” personality on any martial arts
demonstration team. Such a personality would work against a good
public performance. In a typical Karate class, all of the above-mentioned
life skills are learned and much more.
Children learn much more about violence on the television, playing
with video games, and dealing with daily life, than they will ever
learn in a karate class. Even if a Karate teacher was the classic
“evil sensei,” that you may have seen in the Karate Kid movie or
on Kung Fu Theatre, most children can think of far worse violence.
All you have to do is watch the news, cartoons, listen to the radio,
or read a newspaper, to see things worse than unsupervised hand-to-hand
combat. So, the self-defense methods taught to children actually
pale in comparison to school shootings, bombings, wars, and drive-by
shootings.
Karate was created by unarmed civilians on the island of Okinawa
and was taught in secret among family members for their personal
protection. The philosophy, within a martial arts school, will not
always be the same, but the seeds of violence are not sown within
a martial arts setting.
All you have to do is look around you to see more, and far worse,
violence than learning self-defense - integrated with constructive
life skills. The fact is a martial artist is not a “street fighter.”
If that were a requirement, we would recruit the toughest kids in
North Providence.
As I explain to the children in my Karate and Jujitsu classes, “Never
forget the word, “artist,” means to be creative, to be an innovator,
and to think for yourself.” Children who learn martial arts are
more apt to be well adjusted and defuse a potentially violent situation.
On top of that, most children who study Karate, or any other martial
art, will not be “trouble makers.” The children we teach from the
Greater Providence, Rhode Island area have learned enough about
leadership, in our Karate and Jujitsu classes, to think for themselves.
For parents, the gift of martial arts training to their children
has many rewards, right now, and into their future.
© Copyright 2005 – Paul Jerard / Aura Publications
About The Author
Paul Jerard is the director of Yoga teacher
training at Aura in RI. He’s a master instructor of martial arts
and Yoga. He teaches Yoga, martial arts, and fitness. He wrote:
Is Running a Yoga Business Right for You? For Yoga students wanting
to be a Yoga teacher. www.yoga-teacher-training.org
Article Source: JKD Street Combat
- online collection of Parenting articles.
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