Xequat
Black Belt
I've had three or four. One taught me Shaolin-do in Lexington when I was nineteen, but I moved from UK (University of Kentucky) and driving an hour and a half each way every Monday or Friday got crazy.
Then, just a few years ago, I found another Shaolin-do teacher close to my home and I was ecstatic, so I joined up. He's a good teacher and I would recommend his school to just about anyone looking for a hell of a workout.
But the most influential is my current one, who teaches a few different jujitsu styles and Modern Arnis as an add-on. It was Joe Morris who taught me how to look at kata and make them useful for fighting, not just exercise and aerobics. He also taught (and still teaches) me how to use pressure points, locks, throws, and different hand strikes in different situations. I feel like it's a whole new perspective on all of the exercises I have done in the past with Shaolin-do. Also, through Joe's teachers and seminars in his teacher's school, I am learning additional things about healing, energy, meridians, meditation, etc, which I think is a really cool combination (even though I can't do a whole lot with my chi yet or meditate very well, but that's why I'm in class, I guess.) I was raised moderately conservatively and I'm a Taurus, so I feel like a total hippy sometimes in class, but that's what learning's all about. I really liike new stuff, but new perspectives on old stuff is even bettter to me.
And the reason I said 3-4? Near my hometown, there is an Adult Center, which is mostly a social gathering community place for retired folks. At the center, there is a Tai Chi instructor. I go to that class once a week and she teaches Tai Chi to older people. I am 30, and it's kind of funny to me because as she's teaching us the moves, mostly focusing on self-healing and relaxation, I'm going through the moves in my mind and imagining ways in which those moves can be used in a fight. She's talking about "dragons swimming" and "petting the peacock's feathers," and various other poetic names for motions and I'm thinking "ouch" and "oh my god, that's deadly." Again with the different perspectives, I suppose.
Then, just a few years ago, I found another Shaolin-do teacher close to my home and I was ecstatic, so I joined up. He's a good teacher and I would recommend his school to just about anyone looking for a hell of a workout.
But the most influential is my current one, who teaches a few different jujitsu styles and Modern Arnis as an add-on. It was Joe Morris who taught me how to look at kata and make them useful for fighting, not just exercise and aerobics. He also taught (and still teaches) me how to use pressure points, locks, throws, and different hand strikes in different situations. I feel like it's a whole new perspective on all of the exercises I have done in the past with Shaolin-do. Also, through Joe's teachers and seminars in his teacher's school, I am learning additional things about healing, energy, meridians, meditation, etc, which I think is a really cool combination (even though I can't do a whole lot with my chi yet or meditate very well, but that's why I'm in class, I guess.) I was raised moderately conservatively and I'm a Taurus, so I feel like a total hippy sometimes in class, but that's what learning's all about. I really liike new stuff, but new perspectives on old stuff is even bettter to me.
And the reason I said 3-4? Near my hometown, there is an Adult Center, which is mostly a social gathering community place for retired folks. At the center, there is a Tai Chi instructor. I go to that class once a week and she teaches Tai Chi to older people. I am 30, and it's kind of funny to me because as she's teaching us the moves, mostly focusing on self-healing and relaxation, I'm going through the moves in my mind and imagining ways in which those moves can be used in a fight. She's talking about "dragons swimming" and "petting the peacock's feathers," and various other poetic names for motions and I'm thinking "ouch" and "oh my god, that's deadly." Again with the different perspectives, I suppose.