Sunday, July 27, 2008

Come Monday

Come Monday –or any day you decide –you may wake up and realize that you have a new job, a duty, an obligation, and/or a mission. The subject is "self-defense," the definition of which is the key issue.

As a martial arts teacher –and a member (recognize it or not) of the international martial arts community, I present you with the opportunity to be something more than a fitness teacher, something more than a teacher of the arts of physical self-defense, more than an instructor in some classical or eclectic martial art, and something far more than a school owner with a particular gross income and student count and tax obligation.

Self-defense, in today's world, has little or nothing to do with kicks, punches, grappling, and bo-staff training. These aspects of the martial arts are the bowl that holds the mix –they are not "the cake." Self-defense in today's world is contained in what we do –or do not –consume. It is in our beliefs about ownership, about conflict, about relationships, about people with fewer resources that you or I, it is about anger and diet and attitude and community and the environment.

A young instructor inexperienced in life, without the understanding and knowledge that comes with life-experience, may have some difficulty in grasping this idea. Age and experience brings the appreciation of what is to have failures and lost dreams, with the burden and gift of being a parent, with the inevitability of losing those you love, and with the crazy brutality and injustice of war, of prejudice, of hatred, and of greed.

Without the educational foundation of history, of philosophy, and of all the things you learn along the path –a young martial arts teacher can be unaware of the value of everything on the periphery of "martial arts" that is not contained in the movements and techniques –and that is not practiced "on the mat" (and this doesn't, of course, apply to all young instructors, as some people are born aware).

If this last statement rings true to you –then perhaps you are ready to become a martial arts teacher cut from a new –and different –cloth. Perhaps you are ready to be a martial arts teacher with a sense of mission and obligation to the world.

To begin, you must first appreciate and understand that to be a MASTER teacher, you are not going to find your skills easily, nor will they come to you in a best-selling book, a box, a video, or in a weekend certification seminar. You're going to have to wake up and work and experience and network and be a part of something bigger than your "business" –something bigger than "the ring" or the arena.

Start with teaching anger management –and start that by really studying the subject (
www.angercoachonline.com). Move from there to embrace diabetes education (www.defeatdiabetes.org).

Why diabetes?

Well, besides the fact that it will touch the lives of 1 in 3 children in the next decade, it could be ANY health subject; your job is to become a master of integrating various topics, intelligently, into your school's curriculum and educational materials. From there you should develop the most active and visible acts-of-kindness program in your community. You must OWN this topic.

Next, tackle an aggressive environmental self-defense program. Read "Last Child in the Woods" by Richard Louv –and integrate environmental education with unstructured outdoor play with your students.

From there, custom design your own Ultimate Black Belt Test Program –and start living as a real master teacher.

I have lots of ideas, tactics, and strategies for making all of the above the very things that bring students to your schools.

Should you, Monday morning or any morning wake up and recognize that you are being called to action (and that it's going to make what you may do for a living a LOT more fun and rewarding), please don't hesitate to contact me.

Tom Callos 530-903-0286
The New Way Network
The UBBT 6 (taking members now)

No comments: