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Master honour bestowed at Wick martial arts seminar

Vince Tait demonstrating techniques on KSD Martial Arts secretary Gary Beardsley at the seminar in the Assembly Rooms.

FOLLOWING the visit of two martial arts grand masters to Caithness, Vince Tait has been graded to fifth Dan Master.

 

KSD Martial Arts recently hosted the annual Northern Budo Alliance Bushi seminar in Wick Assembly Rooms where instruction was given by Soke Gunter Bauer, 10th Dan Hapkido (Grand Master), Soke Mark Kemp, 10th Dan Kempo JuJitsu (Grand Master), and Kyoshi Neil Hourston, seventh Dan (Master).

As well as the one-day seminar, the two grand masters instructed at a regular KSD training session in Castletown.

During the weekend, KSD chief instructor Mr Tait was under intense scrutiny as he sought to be graded to master level.

Following the award, Mr Tait said: “This is a real honour for me and I am delighted to have been deemed worthy of being promoted to master.

“I feel very proud. This is also a tribute to our club and the members who work hard as a team to support our activities.”

Grand Master Soke Gunter Bauer said: “Sabumnim Vince Tait runs a great club in the Far North of Scotland and brings an array of martial arts skills from a number of disciplines to KSD Martial Arts.

“Vince has dedicated a great deal of time both training and instructing in over 30 years of martial arts and has demonstrated the qualities required to become master.”

KSD Martial Arts club secretary Gary Beardsley hailed the visit a success.

He said: “It was great to work with the grand masters in Caithness. They travelled up from Manchester and as a club we feel that it is important that our students have access to instructors of this calibre without having to leave the area.

“Over 70 martial artists from Caithness and throughout the Highlands, including the Scottish Kempo Academy, Scottish Fighting Arts Society, and Bass Korean Martial Arts School, attended the event.”

Grand Master Soke Mark Kemp said the journey north had been worthwhile.

“We had a fantastic time and were impressed with the students and their level of commitment, I congratulate Sabumnim Vince Tait on his success and promotion to master.”

KSD Martial Arts meets in Castletown, Thurso and Halkirk. It is a modern scientific form of non-competitive self-defence with traditional values and is suitable for all ages and physical abilities.

Griffin continues teaching, honing martial arts craft

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Blue Springs, MO —

The amazing thing about Ed Griffin – or “Coach,” as most know him – isn’t that he’s a 78-year-old that could easily drop guys half his age in the blink of an eye.

Griffin, who teaches combat judo at Gautreaux’s Martial Arts Center in Blue Springs, is a ninth degree black belt in jujitsu and judo. Impressive in it’s own right, but what is truly phenomenal about Griffin is that he keeps finding ways to add to his repertoire.

Griffin might be nicknamed “Coach” for the way he loves to teach his martial arts students, but more than anything, he’s a lifelong student.

“I’m a coach because I’m a teacher and I learn from my students,” Griffin said. “I still want to learn.”

And Griffin has. Constantly. Ever since he delved into martial arts in 1953. In recent years, Griffin has honed his focus a softer more efficient style of judo. Sure, Griffin could whoop about anyone, and once upon a time he relished that ability.

“I used to knock people down and walk all over them and abuse them,” Griffin said.

But as Griffin reached his 60s, he started to realize the benefits of a more reactive style. Instead of aggressive power moves, he started practicing a reactive style that utilizes true body movements.

The pros of this technique were obvious. For one, it would allow Griffin to keep practicing even as he continued to age. He also found the style more stimulating.

“I can still do (power mechanics), but I wasn’t getting intellectual satisfaction from it,” he said. “I needed to study more. I needed to develop something better.”

Griffin’s now an expert on body angles. Lift an arm toward him and he’ll pull off a swift, seamless move that leaves you on the ground in half a second.

“It’s doing what the body wants to do,” he said. “It’s letting people fall where they want to fall. That’s it. That’s all there is to it.”

Griffin explains that the body naturally will fall at a 22 1/2 degree angle. Finding ways to move opponents in a position where that’s possible is key to the approach.

Griffin swears he never thinks about what maneuver he’s about to execute as an opponent nears him. Everything he does is instinctive and dependent on muscle memory. Just as he’s taught so many students over the years, he’s also trained his body.

 

Couple takes on their 70s kicking, thanks to self-defense classes

PALM BEACH GARDENS — Stanley and Adele Janow’s transformation from average to avenging takes seconds upon their arrival at Hwang’s Martial Arts.

The North Palm Beach couple visits the Fairway Drive studio to master the punching, kicking and choke-hold defenses of Krav Maga self-defense — the kind the Israeli army made famous — at their combined tender age of 147 years.

The Janows, 18 months shy of their 50th wedding anniversary, have taken private lessons twice each week since March. Their sweaty, spirited, vigorous workouts belie their ages — and, their instructor says, set an example other seniors can follow.

“The Janows are by far my oldest students,” said their instructor, Kristina Hwang, whose experience with the Janows has made her think of starting a self-defense class for seniors.

“The fantastic thing is they actually do physical self-defense moves and not just talking about safety. It’s given them a lot more mental and physical self-confidence.”

The Janows recommend taking self-defense — which they took up at the suggestion of their daughter, Lori Beth — to their peers.

“You need exercise, and you read in the paper all the time about elderly people getting mugged or attacked,” said Stanley, 77, who spent years as a chemist and a salesman and manager for a pharmaceutical company and who now runs his own business. “You need a natural defense to ward that off.”

Both Janows say they have received excellent health benefits from their self-defense training.

Adele, 70, said exercise such as Krav Maga can help seniors keep their minds sharp and avoid problems such as osteoarthritis, breaking bones and herniated disks. Stanley said his blood pressure, cholesterol and weight all are down since starting the workouts.

“Before starting, I was having difficulty twisting off the cap of my water bottle or getting out of my chair,” said Adele, an attorney and a retired speech therapist.

“Now, we are working on springing up off the floor into a vertical position.”

 


How did you get started doing self-defense training lessons?

Adele: ‘Our daughter suggested we do something so we would feel safer when going out which would also give us good exercise. I do pilates, too, but that’s not the same as this.’

Stanley: ‘My daughter knows I’ve always liked boxing. She thought I might like this. I was reluctant at first because I wasn’t exercising at all, but I liked how Kristina taught us. Had I come across an abusive instructor, I wouldn’t have come back.’

How did you two meet?

Adele: ‘He picked me up while I was working in an upscale restaurant in Boston while attending Emerson College. The owner had told me not to date any customers, but he said I could make an exception for Stanley.’

What’s the best feeling about taking this self-defense training?

Stanley: “I was an Army reservist during the Korean War. I used to think I could take on the world. Now, this training is giving me that same impulse like I know what to do in a tight situation.’

Junki Yoshida helps with YMCA fundraiser

Junki Yoshida, the man behind Yoshida’s Gourmet Sauces and named as one of the top 100 most respected Japanese in the world by Japanese Newsweek magazine, will be in Billings on Friday for the third annual Karate Tournament and Seminar.

The eighth-degree black belt of Japan Karate-do Ryobu-kai, will hold a karate seminar Friday as a fundraiser for the YMCA Strong Community Campaign. He will instruct a class of traditional Japanese karate, a style of karate to which he credits much of his success.

“I use a lot of philosophy of karate in my life,” Yoshida said. “Karate isn’t about destroying objects or causing pain. It’s about concentration and discipline. And determination.”

Yoshida, 62, from Kyoto, Japan, began studying and practicing karate at the age of 6 after a bully beat him down with a baseball bat. He said he was relentlessly teased by kids. But, he said, he finally realized that he had to turn his anger into determination.

By the time he graduated from high school, Yoshida was a second-degree black belt. In 1968, at the age of 19, he bought a ticket to Seattle, after failing college entrance exams, in hopes of chasing the American dream.

With $500 in his pocket, he worked odd jobs eventually earning his green card.

He enrolled at Highline Community College in Seattle, where he studied English and traded teaching karate lessons for tuition costs.

“Since I came to America, so many people have helped — I always must be giving back,” Yoshida said. “It doesn’t matter how small or how large, giving back is important.”

He said karate and martial arts is all about giving back to a community.

“It’s not about breaking boards and bricks and destroying objects like the Bruce Lee movies,” he said. “We try to avoid that in our teaching of traditional.”

Yoshida has been appointed Japan Karate Federation’s Chief Instructor for the States of Washington and Oregon, by Grand Master Yasuhiro Konishi in Japan. He oversees 13 dojos in three states. In addition to officiating at World Karate Championships, many of his students have represented the United States as members of the U.S. Karate Team under the U.S. Olympic Committee.

He has built a conglomerate of 18 companies ranging from transportation and global logistics, supply chain and packing engineering, restaurants, and an art gallery. He also has three television shows in Japan.

Aside from his entrepreneurial achievements, he also serves on many charitable boards including the Doernbecher Children’s Hospital Foundation and Ronald McDonald House Charities NW, as well as being a trustee for the Children’s Cancer Association.

Yoshida’s workshop will be held Friday from 6-7:30 p.m. at Billings Family YMCA, 402 N. 32nd Street. The workshop is $30 per person. All proceeds will provide financial assistance for low-income children and families’ YMCA memberships.

The YMCA Strong Community Campaign fundraising karate tournament will be held Saturday at Billings Family YMCA, 402 N. 32nd Street beginning at 7:30 a.m. The admission cost is $40 for individuals or $80 for a family.

 

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