Cirdan wrote:
It is slang and often used as a vulgar derogatory term but depending on context can sometimes be humorous.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/dingleberry
din·gle·ber·ry (dnggl-br)
n. Vulgar Slang
1. A piece of dried feces caught in the hair around the anus.
2. An incompetent, foolish, or stupid person.
Bruno@MT wrote
"However, I have been training for 2 years now, and we always have people who have just started.
I'd have to have a really, really bad day before I'd be 'worst in class', which is what the statement was.
Ergo it doesn't happen 'many, many times'."
warning...thread drift to follow
When martial artists get tied to results rather than the process they increase the steepness of their path in my opinion. They often look toward their instructor and compare gifts and talents, they compare abilities and capabilities of others that are further along the path or that currently have greater talents, and I think most who where watching this from the outside would agree that they do this to their determent introducing fear and doubt into their language, actions and training. They start using negative imagery and vocabulary to describe their own practices and achievements.
By the same coin then but from the opposite side is those that look at others that are not as gifted or advanced on the training path as they are and compare to where they are currently at themselves. They see others that cannot yet do even the simplest of movements/techniques and feel pride of accomplishment. Pride of accomplishments is not necessarily a bad or good thing, it would depend on if the pride was based on what one overcame themselves compared to pride that they can do something that others cannot in my opinion. The risk of comparing the days achievements against the achievements of others who are currently weaker or less advanced or somehow otherwise disadvantaged is that it can and often does introduce arrogance, smugness and contempt into the language, actions and training of the person doing the comparing.
Both manifestations in my opinion can severely limit a persons progress and potential and just as importantly from an instructors point of view they can also limit the progress and potential of the training partners of said individuals. This is not deliberate self inflicted sabotage taken by an individual, but the result can be the same. It is often a gradual process that can change ones positive and healthy perspectives and behaviors and subtly alter them into negative and ultimately self destructive perspectives and behaviors.
Sorry for drift
Regards
Brian King